
07 Sep Kenyans make history as records tumble in the biggest ever London Marathon
Kenyan maestros Eliud Kipchoge and Brigid Kosgei delivered landmark performances to illuminate another record-breaking edition of the Virgin Money London Marathon as more people than ever before finished the 39th edition of the world’s greatest race on Sunday.
Kipchoge cemented his reputation as one of the finest athletes of all time when he became the first elite man ever to win the London Marathon on four occasions, elegantly striding to victory in the second quickest time in history, a superb course record of 2 hours 2 minutes 37 seconds.
Already the world record holder, the 34-year-old Olympic champion delivered his latest astonishing masterclass after his compatriot Kosgei had clocked the ninth fastest time ever of 2:18:20, the 25-year-old making her own bit of history as the youngest-ever women’s winner thanks to the race’s fastest-ever second half of 66:42.
“I’m happy to win on the streets of London for the fourth time and to make history,” said Kipchoge after majestically dismissing his final three pursuers over the last two miles and joining Ingrid Kristiansen as the only four-time winner of the elite event.
“The crowd in London is wonderful and that spirit pushed me. From the first kilometre to the last, everybody is shouting.”
Records tumbled in the para athletics races too as Australia’s Michael Roeger smashed the T46 global mark for arm amputees and El Amin Chentouf set new world figures in the T12 class for vision-impaired athletes.
London also saluted a pair of ground-breaking champions in the T54 wheelchair contests, as 20-year-old American ‘rocket man’ Daniel Romanchuk enjoyed his fourth Abbott World Marathon Majors victory in six months to take the men’s crown, and the indefatigable 34-year-old Manuela Schär completed a fantastic ‘grand slam’ of all six Abbott World Marathon Majors races by sealing her second London win.
Such performances for the ages placed a fitting exclamation point on a day when Britain’s favourite race again took mass-participation running to a new level, with a record 42,906 starters and no less than 42,549 finishing on The Mall by 19:00, eclipsing 2018’s record total of 40,273 by more than 2,000.
With such huge numbers, the event easily passed its £1 billion fundraising milestone, celebrated through the day’s #ThanksaBillion campaign, as the unprecedented thousands endured the 26.2-mile adventure to raise millions for charity.
Tennis legend Sir Andy Murray, arguably Britain’s greatest-ever sportsman, pushed the red button to launch the men’s and mass field starts after admitting that he would like to be an ace in the London Marathon himself one day.
He would have loved to see his fellow sporting knight, Sir Mo Farah, achieve his treasured ambition of winning the London Marathon but the 36-year-old, despite setting a British record for 30km en route, could not live with Kipchoge’s searing pace and had to settle for fifth in 2:05:39, nearly half-a minute outside the European record he set in Chicago last year.
But there was good news for Britain too, as Callum Hawkins and Charlotte Purdue produced huge personal bests to clinch top 10 places and qualify for this year’s World Championships and next year’s Tokyo Olympic Games.
Behind the elites, came the masses, including the event’s perennial fastest celebrity, Chris Newton, as the 45-year-old former world track cycling champion clocked an outstanding 2:45:24 with model Nell McAndrew the quickest woman celebrity in 3:15:08.
No Comments