Belfast Telegraph

Radcliffe admits to mixed feelings as Kosgei breaks marathon record

- BY SEAN INGLE

crossed the restart line. A drivethrou­gh penalty was posted but Young ignored it, and later was demoted from fourth to 12th.

It allowed Coates to take a one-point lead into the final round but he had qualified poorly and was back in 10th with Young in third. And in a race punctuated by more safety car periods, Young forced his Stobart Motorsport Clio to the front and won ahead of Coates.

The elated Methodist College pupil said: “It’s just unreal — to win this title is something else.”

Harper had already been crowned Carrera champion ahead of yesterday’s finale but signed off with his eighth victory, winning the second of the two races after climbing from seventh to finish second in race one. PAULA Radcliffe’s world marathon record, which had stood imperiousl­y for over 16 years, has been obliterate­d by Brigid Kosgei at the Chicago Marathon.

The 25-year-old Kenyan ran 2:14:04 to beat Radcliffe’s best of 2:15:25 by an astonishin­g 81 seconds.

The whispers all week in Chicago had been that Kosgei was intending to make a serious assault on Radcliffe’s time. In cold and sunny conditions — perfect for the marathon — she knew the attempt was on, especially when the winds died down yesterday morning.

Kosgei (below) immediatel­y set out her stall by going through five miles in 25:10, way inside world record pace.

Some feared that she had massively overcooked her pace and would eventually boil over. But even though Kosgei slowed her pace she still went through halfway in 66:59, over a minute faster than Radcliffe’s time in setting her world record in 2003.

There was a moment when Kosgei appeared to not quite be as comfortabl­e, but when she ran the 5km between 25km and 30km in 15:45 it was clear that the record was in her grasp. And so it proved.

Afterwards, an elated Kosgei admitted: “I am feeling good, and I am happy because I was not expecting this. But I felt my body was moving, moving, moving so I went for it.”

Meanwhile, Radcliffe, who posed for photograph­s with the Kenyan afterwards, admitted it was a bitterswee­t moment.

“If you had told me when I set it in 2003, that it would last that long I wouldn’t have believed it,” she said. “But I always knew this time would come — and when I saw how fast Brigid was running I knew the record would go if she could maintain her pace.”

If there is one question mark over Kosgei’s thundering achievemen­t it is that her agent, Federico Rosa, has had a high number of athletes who have been banned. They include Asbel Kiprop, the former world 1,500m champion, Jemima Sumgong, the 2016 London marathon and Olympic champion, and Rita Jeptoo, who won this race in 2013. However, there is no suggestion of wrongdoing by Kosgei or Rosa.

Some will also point out that Kosgei was wearing the Nike Next% training shoes, which have been estimated to give between 60-90 seconds of performanc­e benefit over other shoes. But on a stunning day in Chicago, few appeared to care as she blasted into the history books.

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