Barsosio, Kiprotich break records in Sydney - Capital Sports
Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Features

Barsosio, Kiprotich break records in Sydney

Barsosio cut the tape in two hours, 24 minutes and 33 seconds, slashing some four-and-a-half minutes from the previous race record set by Makda Harun Haji two years ago.

SYDNEY, Australia, Sep 16 – Stellah Barsosio and Felix Kiprotich were in emphatic form, slashing significant chunks off the course records at the Sydney Marathon in Australia on Sunday.

Barsosio cut the tape in two hours, 24 minutes and 33 seconds, slashing some four-and-a-half minutes from the previous race record set by Makda Harun Haji two years ago.

More than that, Barsosio’s was the fastest time run in Australia since the Sydney Olympic Games and now sits as third-fastest ever behind the gold medallist then, Naoko Takahashi, 2:23:14, and silver medallist Lidia Simon, 2:23:22.

Fittingly, the Sydney marathon is a legacy event from the Olympic Games. Its early editions were run over the Olympic course.

Kiprotich, for his part, produced the first sub-2:10 in the Sydney race clocking 2:09:49. This was 89 seconds faster than the previous race record, 2:11:18 by Gebo Gameda Burka.

Though it did not beat the Australian all-comers’ record of 2:07:50 set by Japan’s Yuta Shitara earlier this year at Australia’s other IAAF Gold Label race, the Gold Coast marathon, his performance is just the third sub-2:10 other than on Gold Coast.

The other two also came with medals attached, Robert de Castella’s 2:09:18 in winning the Brisbane 1982 Commonwealth Games marathon, and Juma Ikangaa’s 2:09:30 in second place.

-Strong line up

Even in a strong line-up, Barsosio stood out as the one to beat in the women’s field.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

She had the fastest entry time – 2:23:36 in Rotterdam this year – and her four most recent marathons had produced times of 2:23:43 (fifth in Paris), 2:25:00 (ninth in Frankfurt), 2:33:23 (second in Singapore) and then her PB for second in Rotterdam.

The race was taken out at a steady pace of about 72 minutes for the first half. Barsosio was content to sit with a lead pack of five women in which the most aggressive was her Kenyan compatriot Bornes Kitur (third in Osaka this year).

Bahrain’s Tejitu Daba and a third Kenyan, Josephine Chepkoech, were also in the lead group.

Into the second half of the race, however, it was all Barsosio. Sticking with the pacemaker, she steadily built her lead to more than two minutes at the finish.

Her only difficulties were with her drinks bottle late in the race – she quickly doubled back to get it – and some hesitation on corners as the course wound its way around the Sydney harbour-front in the closing stages.

These turned out to be insignificant, however, and Barsosio’s 2:24:33 saw her well clear of Chepkoech (2:26:43) and Daba (2:28:22).

-Similar pattern 

The men’s race followed a similar pattern as Ben St Lawrence and then 2:08 performer Joseph Aperumoi led through the first 25 kilometres.

St Lawrence went to almost half-way at which point the group was on course to go just under the record set by Gameda Burka in 2014.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

By the time Aperumoi’s work was done at 25km, there were just five in the leading group – Kiprotich, Michael Kunyuga, defending champion Elijah Kemboi, Silas Too and the only non-Kenyan, Saturo Sasaki of Japan.

Kiprotich, who has run 2:05:33 this year, made his decisive move at 29km. His surge took him clear as he ran the next five kilometres, which drops down to the waterfront, in the fastest split of the race, 14:55. The 15 seconds gained there was almost precisely his ultimate winning margin.

At 35km, the lead was 23 seconds to Kunyuga with Sasaki another 17 seconds back, well clear of Kemboi and Too. Kunyuga kept chasing, despite being clearly hindered by uncertainty on some of the turns in the closing stages, but was never charging at the leader.

And Kiprotich never faltered. Despite showing more obvious signs of the strain, he maintained form through to the line to win in 2:09:49. Both Kunyuga and Sasaki were also under the old record.

Both winners added record bonuses equal to first-place prizemoney to double their earnings on the day.

Advertisement

More on Capital Sports

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, Oct 27 – DStv and GOtv subscribers are in for a treat of the world’s best football this week as the 2020-21...

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, May 25 – There is light at the end of the tunnel. After failed promises over the last three years since its...

Football

NAIROBI, Kenya, Sep 6 – Gentrix Shikangwa scored with two minutes left as Vihiga Queens sailed to the final of the CECAFA regional qualifiers...

NFL

NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug 13 – Kenya’s history making Daniel Adongo, the first Kenyan to play in America’s National Football League (NFL), is now living...

© 2024 Capital Digital Media. Capital Group Limited. All Rights Reserved