Cape Argus

Oceans mark safe despite R1m prize

Top runners say emphasis on winning, not fast time

- MATSHELANE MAMABOLO

DEFENDING CHAMPION Lungile Gongqa, former winner Mike Fokoroni and perennial favourite Ludwick Mamabolo agree, the Old Mutual Two Oceans course record that’s now been standing for 30 years is in no danger of falling next weekend.

Fast as this trio of the Nedbank Running Club are, and as determined as they are to win the “world’s most beautiful marathon” next Saturday, they concurred that Thomson Magawana’s time from back in 1988 will still be standing at brunch time on Easter Saturday.

Magawana completed the 56km race in a lightning-fast time of 3:03:44 and the closest anyone has got to that mark was when Zimbabwean Marco Mambo triumphed in 2005 with a 3:05:39. Magawana actually holds the second fastest time in the race, a 3:05:31 that he set in 1987.

Incredibly though, the fact that the mark has been standing for so long and will continue to do so, is not because it is too fast.

“It’s a time we can easily beat,” Mamabolo said yesterday at the Nedbank Club’s farewell function and new kit reveal for Two Oceans.

“The problem is that these days we run for money and not for time.”

It’s a sentiment that was expressed by both the defending champion Gongqa and the man he deposed last year, Fokoroni.

“I think there’s not many runners who are prepared to run alone and go for the record. All we chase is a win because at least that brings money instead of going for the record and then bombing out,” said Nongqa whose win last year was a massive six minutes slower than Magawana’s record.

Fokoroni says he made a vain attempt at the mark. “We’ve tried before to break the time. It is a little tough but not impossible. But it won’t fall this year because these days we don’t race. There’s a big focus on the money, so we hold back to ensure that we don’t kill ourselves too early.”

Ironically, the sponsors have since dangled a R1m carrot for the record to be broken.

Surely, if their logic that the runners are now focused on making money, that should see the competitor­s pushing harder?

“I’d love to do that,” Fokoroni said “If I can win that million I’ ll be very rich especially back home in Zimbabwe.”

Mamabolo, yet to win the race, says he hardly bothers himself about the opposition. “I always just run my own race. But people always watch each other. They see Mamabolo and they then run at his pace even though they don’t know whether I am racing or just training. I have no doubt that the sponsors will still have their R1m after next weekend,” he laughed.

The Nedbank runners are hellbent on completing yet another clean sweep in the men’s and women’s categories and over both the 56km and half-marathon. “We’ve got a strong squad as usual. And they are, as (former Sports) Minister Mbalula once said, a bunch of winners. We expect great things and we believe we’ve got a chance to win all four titles at Two Oceans,” coach Nick Bester said “But it will be tough.”

 ?? BACKPAGEPI­X ?? GREAT MEMORIES: Lungile Gongqa wins the men’s race at the 2017 Two Oceans Marathon.
BACKPAGEPI­X GREAT MEMORIES: Lungile Gongqa wins the men’s race at the 2017 Two Oceans Marathon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa