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| Photo Credit: AP. |
BERLIN (AP) — He’s done it again. Two-time Olympic champion Eliud Kipchoge bettered his own world record in the Berlin Marathon on Sunday.
The Kenyan
star clocked 2 hours, 1 minute, 9 seconds to shave 30 seconds off his previous
best mark of 2:01:39 set on the same course in 2018.
“My legs and
my body still feel young,” the 37-year-old Kipchoge said. “But the most
important thing is my mind, and that also feels fresh and young. I’m so happy
to break the world record.”
Ethiopia’s
Tigist Assefa unexpectedly won the women’s race in a course record of 2:15:37 –
18 minutes faster than she had ever run before. It was the third fastest time
ever.
“I wasn’t afraid of my rivals, even though
they had faster times than me,” the 26-year-old Assefa said.
Kenya’s
Rosemary Wanjiru was second on her debut in 2:18:00 – the second fastest debut
ever run – just ahead of Ethiopian runner Tigist Abayechew in 2:18:03.
Kipchoge and
Assefa’s combined time of 4:16:46 ensured the marathon was the fastest ever.
The men’s record has now been set eight times in a row in Berlin, favored by
runners for its flat course.
It’s
Kipchoge’s fourth win in the city, equaling the record set by Haile
Gebrselassie. The Ethiopian great – like Kipchoge now – also set two world
records (in 2007 and 2008) in Berlin.
Conditions
in the German capital were ideal for fast racing – cool, around 52 degrees (11
degrees Celsius) after a night of showers, with no more precipitation and no
wind. Some 45,527 runners from 157 nations were registered to take part in the
first Berlin Marathon without restrictions since the coronavirus pandemic
began.
Participant
numbers were reduced by nearly half under strict restrictions last year, and
the 2020 race was called off due to the pandemic.
Kipchoge set
off at a furious pace on Sunday, covering the first 10 kilometers in just 28:23
and clocking 42:32 at the 15k-mark, hinting at a sub two-hour attempt. He broke
the two-hour barrier in Vienna in 2019 when he ran 1:59:40 in a race that did
not conform to regulations.
Defending
champion Guye Adola and Ethiopian compatriot Andamlak Belihu managed to keep
pace, initially, but Adola dropped back a few meters as Kipchoge was clocking
kilometer-splits of between 2:47 and 2:50.
Kipchoge and
Belihu completed the half marathon in just 59:51. Adola and Kenyan runners Abel
Kipchumba, Mark Korir and Bethwel Yegon followed in 1:01:25.
“I planned
to go out fast in the first half,” Kipchoge said.
The last
pacemaker dropped off at the 25k-mark, leaving Kipchoge on his own, but Belihu
remained on his heels.
Kipchoge
slowed somewhat in reaching the 30k-mark in 1:25:40. Belihu was unable to keep
up and followed 21 seconds behind before dropping further back.
By this
stage it was just a question of whether Kipchoge would break his own record. He
did.
Compatriot
Mark Korir was second, nearly five minutes behind, followed by Ethiopian runner
Tadu Abate. Belihu, who had stayed longest with Kipchoge, finished fourth in
2:06:40.
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