5:54 AM
Through 33 turns, past Big
Ben and the Tower of London and enough other historical attractions to fill a
guidebook, Tiki Gelana of Ethiopia never relented, running through a downpour
at the start and a drizzle toward the end, capturing the gold medal in the
women’s marathon in an Olympic-record time of two hours, 23 minutes, seven
seconds on Sunday. The 5-5, 106-pound Gelana, niece of the 2000 Olympic
marathon winner, Gezhagne Abera, and the winner this year at Rotterdam , broke
away from Kenya’s Priscah Jeptoo with just over a half-mile to go, and then
held off a final late counter-surge by Jeptoo not even a water stop from
Buckingham Palace. The race did not include
world record-holder and British icon Paula Radcliffe, who is injured, but that
was of no issue to the 24-year-old Gelana, who prevailed in the closest Olympic
marathon ever.
Jeptoo’s silver medal time
was 2:23:12. Tatyana Petrova of Russia was a surprise bronze medalist,
bettering her personal-record time by almost 90 seconds with Through a finish
of 2:23:29. Well beyond the halfway point, a lead pack of more than 20 were
clustered, among them Americans Shalane Flanagan and Kara Goucher. But Gelana,
who ran the second half in under one hour and 10 minutes, and Kenyans Jeptoo,
Mary Keitany and Edna Kiplagat broke away, and Petrova joined them. Flanagan, the bronze
medalist at 10,000 meters in Beijing, wound up 10th, crossing in 2:25:51.
Goucher clocked 2:26:07 and placed 11th. We all have perceived boundaries about
what we are capable of,” Flanagan said. “I am capable of better.” The third American in the field, Desiree
Davila, withdrew after two miles with a hip ailment. Source (DAILY NEWS)
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