|
..
Ethiopians dominate Dubai
marathon
-Haile wins, but no
jackpot
January 22, 2010, Dubai, UAE - Haile Gebrselassie won the
Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon for the third
time in a row this morning, clocking 2:06:09, and again raking in $250,000, the
richest prize in marathoning.
But a back problem, which required intensive pre-race physiotherapy, ruled out a
World record attempt from the start, and when two of his lesser known
compatriots – Chala Dechase and Eshetu Wendimu - caught him in the final stages
of the race, it looked like a massive upset was on the cards.
But the experience of close to 20 years of record breaking pulled Gebre through
to his eighth victory in ten completed marathons, with an average time of
2:05:40, easily the most consistently excellent marathoner in history, all
capped by his superlative World record of 2:03:59 from Berlin 2008.
Dechase was second in 2:06:33, a personal best by two minutes, and Wendimu was
third, the same as last year, but this time two minutes faster in a personal
best 2:06:46.
“This night was not a good night for me,” said Gebrselassie, “I slept in a wrong
position, on my stomach, and when I woke up, I knew I had a problem, it was not
good. I called my physiotherapist, and he came and cracked my back, and said,
‘what have you done?’”
“I was surprised at how humid it was at the start, but I still tried to run
fast, but at halfway, I decided just to win the race. When the pacemakers
dropped at 30k, I tried to go, but I couldn’t change a gear, so I waited for the
second group, and just tried to win. I heard the crowd and knew where the finish
was, and I was able to win.”
“This is not an indication I’m old, I still think the World record can be broken
here, but these things happen.”
Daska takes an upset in women’s race
The upset was reserved for the women’s race. An Ethiopian won, as expected, but
it was Mametu Daska rather than favourites, Bezunesh Bekele, who was fourth, or
Askale Magarsa, who finished sixth.
A group of eight reached halfway together, but then began to break up, with only
Daska, debutante Aberu Shewaye and last year’s third placer, Kenyan Helena Kirop
left in contention at 35k. A kilometre later, Kirop was dropped, and Daska and
Shewaye continued their struggle until less than two kilometres from home.
Despite being violently sick in the finishing straight, Daska held onto the 50
metres lead she had forged in the last kilometre, to collapse across the finish
line, in 2:24:18, another personal best, ahead of Shewaye’s debut clocking of
2:24:26. Kirop was again third, in 2:24:54, a personal best for her. The prize
money was the same as for the men.
Conditions had been more clement than expected, the humidity dropped as the race
progressed, and the temperature only rose a degree from 17C (62F) between start
and finish. And although the direct sun will have made it uncomfortable for the
runners in the second part of the race, Gebreselassie has to add the misfortune
of a bad back to the overenthusiastic start two years ago – a first half in
61:45, well under World record pace – and a downpour last year, making it a hat
trick of horrors affecting an record attempt, in contrast to the much more
satisfying victory treble.
Pat Butcher (organisers) for the IAAF
MEN -
1. Haile GEBRSELASSIE, ETH 2.06.09
2. Chala DECHASE, ETH 2.06.33
3. Eshetu WENDIMU, ETH 2.06.46
4. Abiyote GUTA, ETH 2.09.03
5. Debele TULU, ETH 2.09.43
6. Abraham CHELANGA, KEN 2.10.28
7. Dejene YIRDAW, ETH 2.10.50
8. Lonard MUCHERU, KEN 2.11.08
9. Japhet KOSGEI, KEN 2.11.20
10. Yimane MEKONNEN, ETH 2.12.39
WOMEN -
1. Mametu DASKA, ETH 2.24.18
2. Aberu SHEWAYE, ETH 2.24.26
3. Helena KIROP, KEN 2.24.54
4. Bezunesh BEKELE, ETH 2.26.05
5. Isobella ANDERSSON, SWE 2.26.52
6. Askale MAGARSA, ETH 2.27.29
7. Tedesse YESHIMEBET, ETH 2.27.45
8. Genet GETANEH, ETH 2.30.23
9. Woyshinet TAFA, ETH 2.32.06
10. Shuru DIRIBA, ETH 2.32.36
Source: IAAF
|
|