Arab Times

Kenyans sweep Boston Marathon titles

Kirui, Kiplagat shine in strong wins, good day for US

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BOSTON, April 17, (AP): The Kenyans are back in Boston after a relative lull that saw them shut out in the world’s most prestigiou­s marathon twice in the past three years.

More surprising­ly, so are the Americans. Geoffrey Kirui won the 121st Boston Marathon on Monday, pulling away from three-time US Olympian Galen Rupp with two miles to go to give Kenya its first men’s victory in five years. Edna Kiplagat won the women’s race to complete the Kenyan sweep.

They were followed closely by Americans who grabbed two of the top four women’s spots and six of the top ten for men — the first time that’s happened since the race went profession­al in 1986.

The GCC Athletics Championsh­ip Champions Kuwait honoured upon their return from Saudi Arabia.

“It’s so exciting to see Americans being competitiv­e here,” said Rupp, the Olympic bronze medalist who was making his Boston debut. “It’s a real exciting time. And it’s awesome to see American distance running on the upswing and being competitiv­e in these races.”

Kirui finished in 2 hours, 9 minutes, 37 seconds to claim a silver trophy, a guilded olive wreath from Marathon, Greece, and the $150,000 first-place prize. Rupp was 21 seconds back, and Japan’s Suguru Osako an additional 30 seconds behind him.

Rounding out the top 10 were runners from California, Arizona, Colorado, Oregon and Utah.

Kiplagat won her Boston debut in 2:21:52, adding the victory to two world championsh­ips and wins in London, New York and Los Angeles. She pulled ahead of Rose Chelimo of Bahrain in the Newton hills to win by 59 seconds.

American Jordan Hasay, making her debut at the 26.2-mile distance, was third and Desi Linden was fourth — the first time since 1991 that two US women have finished in the top four.

Kenya had won either the men’s or women’s race every year since 1991 before being shut out in 2014 and again last year. In fact, Kenya had taken both titles six times since 2000, so dominating the top 10 that Boylston Street began to look like a Great Rift Valley training run.

But Ethiopia has surpassed its East African neighbors on Patriots’ Day the past four years, earning its first sweep in 2016. In December, Kenyan Rita Jeptoo was stripped of her title for failing a drug test and it was handed instead to Ethiopia’s Buzunesh Deba.

The American drought reached al-

Edna Kiplagat (left) and Geoffrey Kirui, both of Kenya, hold a trophy together after their victories in the 121st Boston Marathon on April 17, in Boston. (AP)

most three decades from the time Lisa Larsen-Weidenbach won in 1985 until Meb Keflezighi ran down Boylston Street to raucous chants of “U-S-A!” in 2014, the year after the finish line bombings killed three people and wounded more than 260 others.

Keflezighi, 41, finished 13th this year in what he said will be his last competitiv­e run in Boston. He plans to run the New York Marathon, which he won in 2009, one last time in the fall before retiring. The warm temperatur­es that hit 79 degrees at the 20-kilometer mark in Natick slowed the runners, but the strong tailwind was a boost — especially in the wheelchair races.

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