Kenyans Jepchirchir and Chebet rule at Boston Marathon
Sprint to the finish confirms Jepchirchir as one of the most dominant marathon runners in history
19 April 2022 - 14:32
byChris Gallagher
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Kenya's Evans Chebet and Kenya's Peres Jepchirchir celebrate with trophy after winning the elite men's and women's race. Picture: REUTERS/FAITH NINIVAGGI
Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir edged a thrilling sprint finish to win the women’s Boston Marathon on Monday, as fellow Kenyan Evans Chebet dominated a stellar field to claim the men’s title.
With about 1.6km remaining, Jepchirchir moved ahead of Ababel Yeshaneh but the Ethiopian refused to bow and retook the lead before the pair battled down the final stretch.
Jepchirchir, who won in New York in November, needed every ounce of energy to break the tape in 2hr 21min 01sec, four seconds ahead of her rival.
“Above all, I was feeling she was strong and I pushed it, I feel I’m tired. I go behind, but I didn’t lose hope,” Jepchirchir told reporters. “The course is tough but thank God I managed to win the race.”
Kenyan Mary Ngugi finished third.
The win confirmed Jepchirchir as among the most dominant marathon runners of all time, as she became the first athlete to claim Olympic gold along with the Boston and New York titles.
Chebet picked up his first major victory in 2:06:51, with compatriots Lawrence Cherono and Benson Kipruto second and third.
A huge leading pack stuck together through 35km before Chebet pulled away, securing an 18sec advantage over 2019 winner Cherono with 1.6km left.
The bells of the Old South Church rang and a roar came up from the crowd along Boylston Street as he ran towards the finish line.
“At the beginning I was not confident, I didn’t know that I would come out as the winner,” Chebet told reporters. “When I went to London, I came in position four. And when I went to Paris, I was in position four. Today, I am really happy that I am actually the winner.”
The fastest field in the race’s history started in Hopkington in perfect conditions with temperatures hovering at 10°C as the world’s oldest annual marathon returned to its traditional spring date for the first time in three years.
Paralympian
The wheelchair races featured dominant performances from two of the sport’s most reliable podium finishers.
Tokyo Paralympic marathon silver medallist Manuela Schar of Switzerland defended her title in the women’s race, seizing the early lead before breaking the tape in 1:41:08.
American Daniel Romanchuk pulled away from compatriot Aaron Pike by the 20km mark, crossing the finish line in 1:26:58 to pick up his second Boston title.
“The crowd was amazing. We start earlier than the runners but everyone was out there screaming so that helped me a lot,” said Schar.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Kenyans Jepchirchir and Chebet rule at Boston Marathon
Sprint to the finish confirms Jepchirchir as one of the most dominant marathon runners in history
Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir edged a thrilling sprint finish to win the women’s Boston Marathon on Monday, as fellow Kenyan Evans Chebet dominated a stellar field to claim the men’s title.
With about 1.6km remaining, Jepchirchir moved ahead of Ababel Yeshaneh but the Ethiopian refused to bow and retook the lead before the pair battled down the final stretch.
Jepchirchir, who won in New York in November, needed every ounce of energy to break the tape in 2hr 21min 01sec, four seconds ahead of her rival.
“Above all, I was feeling she was strong and I pushed it, I feel I’m tired. I go behind, but I didn’t lose hope,” Jepchirchir told reporters. “The course is tough but thank God I managed to win the race.”
Kenyan Mary Ngugi finished third.
The win confirmed Jepchirchir as among the most dominant marathon runners of all time, as she became the first athlete to claim Olympic gold along with the Boston and New York titles.
Chebet picked up his first major victory in 2:06:51, with compatriots Lawrence Cherono and Benson Kipruto second and third.
A huge leading pack stuck together through 35km before Chebet pulled away, securing an 18sec advantage over 2019 winner Cherono with 1.6km left.
The bells of the Old South Church rang and a roar came up from the crowd along Boylston Street as he ran towards the finish line.
“At the beginning I was not confident, I didn’t know that I would come out as the winner,” Chebet told reporters. “When I went to London, I came in position four. And when I went to Paris, I was in position four. Today, I am really happy that I am actually the winner.”
The fastest field in the race’s history started in Hopkington in perfect conditions with temperatures hovering at 10°C as the world’s oldest annual marathon returned to its traditional spring date for the first time in three years.
Paralympian
The wheelchair races featured dominant performances from two of the sport’s most reliable podium finishers.
Tokyo Paralympic marathon silver medallist Manuela Schar of Switzerland defended her title in the women’s race, seizing the early lead before breaking the tape in 1:41:08.
American Daniel Romanchuk pulled away from compatriot Aaron Pike by the 20km mark, crossing the finish line in 1:26:58 to pick up his second Boston title.
“The crowd was amazing. We start earlier than the runners but everyone was out there screaming so that helped me a lot,” said Schar.
Reuters
Women’s pioneer makes history at Boston Marathon
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