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Monday, December 23, 2024

Kenya’s Wesley Kiptoo ties Falmouth Street Race course document 


Kenya’s Wesley Kiptoo and Hellen Obiri dominated the Asics Falmouth Street Race on Sunday, topping the boys’s and ladies’s podiums respectively by matching a number of the quickest instances within the 51-year historical past of Massachusetts’ famed seven-mile course.

Kiptoo crossed the end line in 31:08 to match the document set by fellow Kenyan Gilbert Okari in 2004. Main a pack that included John Korir, Edwin Kurgat and David Bett, Kiptoo ran a blistering 4:17 opening mile. By the point he hit the 5-km mark, he had a 12-second lead. By 10 km that lead had doubled.

“I stayed constant,” mentioned Kiptoo, who completed fifth in final 12 months’s race. “The course is sort of up and down and I really like that it challenges me.”

Kiptoo, an NCAA champion at Iowa State College who trains in Flagstaff, Ariz., will make his marathon debut on the Chicago Marathon in October. Korir completed second in 31:34 whereas Kurgat, one other Iowa State grad, took third to finish the Kenyan sweep. Utah-based Clayton Younger was the highest American, ending fifth in 32:02.

The ladies’s race

The ladies’s race ended with one other profitable New England go to for Obiri. The reigning Boston Marathon champion and winner of this month’s Seaside to Beacon 10K in Maine, Obiri took a extra conservative opening method than Kiptoo, overlaying the primary 5K in 15:59 with Cynthia Limo, Buze Diriba and Vicoty Chepngeno on her heels. Simply earlier than the midway level, Obiri made her transfer, overlaying the subsequent 5 km in 15:15 and cruising to a 19-second victory in 35:13. Obiri tied for the second-fastest time in race historical past and the quickest since 2002.

“I used to be pondering possibly I ought to make my transfer at 4 miles,” mentioned Obiri, a two-time world champion and two-time Olympic silver medallist who will probably be operating the New York Metropolis Marathon on Nov. 5. “The uphill was horrible for me, however I knew after that it was all downhill, and it was an unimaginable end.”

Bank of America Chicago Marathon © 2022 Bank of America Chicago MarathonKevin Morris
Emily Sisson/Picture: Kevin Morris

American marathon record-holder Emily Sisson of Windfall, R.I., moved into second place simply previous the 10-km mark to complete as runner-up in 35:32. That’s the quickest time ever by an American lady in Falmouth. Limo of Kenya was third.

“I’m all the time a bit bit extra nervous racing within the marathon construct,” mentioned Sisson who can be operating Chicago this fall. “I really feel drained, however it offers me confidence that I can race effectively. My purpose was to get as near Hellen as I might.”

The wheelchair race

The wheelchair division featured dominant performances by the game’s two greatest names. The lads’s race was gained for the fifth time by Maryland’s Daniel Romanchuk, who took 25 seconds off his personal course document to complete in 21:23. People Miguel Jimenez-Vergara and Hermin Garic had been second and third, respectively.

Ladies’s winner Susannah Scaroni was the third wheelchair finisher throughout the road, coming in 30 seconds earlier than Garic. Her successful time of 24:38 broke the course document she set final 12 months by 52 seconds. She was practically 5 minutes forward of second place. 2021 Falmouth Champion Emelia Perry was second and Hannah Babalola took third.

Practically 10,000 runners took half in Sunday’s race.

 



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