South Wales Evening Post

KITATA’S TITLE IN HUGE SHOCK

-

ELIUD Kipchoge’s reign as the king of the London Marathon came to a shock end as Shura Kitata emerged from the rain and the gloom to become the new champion.

In a stunning upset Kipchoge, who had won all of his previous four London Marathons and had not lost over the distance in seven years, dropped alarmingly off the pace around the 22-mile mark.

Kipchoge, the 35-year-old world record holder, had no answer as a seven-strong lead group edged away from him, and he ended up finishing in eighth.

Sir Mo Farah, who was part of the race as a pacemaker, admitted he was astounded by Kipchoge’s defeat.

“It was a shock for all of us. We had expected him to win by miles, considerin­g what times he has run,” Farah told the BBC.

“But that happens, it’s sport. It was a good field. It’s part of racing, it’s part of sport, it happens.”

Instead Ethiopian Kitata snatched it in two hours, five minutes and 41 seconds, pipping Kenya’s Vincent Kipchumba on the line after a thrilling sprint finish.

A faster race was predicted due to the nature of the course – 19.7 laps of St James’s Park rather than the traditiona­l street route – but the incessant rain and autumnal temperatur­es put paid to that.

With Kipchoge’s great rival Kenenisa Bekele, the second fastest marathon runner in history, missing through injury the stage looked set for a fifth victory for the Kenyan superstar.

But despite the slow pace he came up short and Kitata took full advantage.

Kipchoge revealed that he had a problem with his right ear which hampered his race and ultimately cost him the chance of another win.

“I’m very disappoint­ed but, all in all, this is sport,” he said. “I got a blocked ear the last 15km. I tried to keep going and make sure I finished, to show there is always hope in the world. It’s not the end of the world.

“This is sport and we need to embrace ourselves. I want to congratula­te the top finishers for bringing hope to the streets of London at this time of Covid-19.”

This year’s competitor­s pounded just four streets of London rather than the traditiona­l route from Blackheath to Buckingham Palace, with no crowds and no fun runners due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The home straight remained the same, down The Mall, and it staged a nailbiter as Kitata got the better of Kipchumba by a second. Kitata revealed he had taken the advice of Bekele, who was runner-up last year. He said: “Kenenisa trained me and advised how I should run this race. I trained for the same course. I am very happy to win the race.”

Jonny Mellor was the first British man across the line in a time of 2:10:38, and compatriot Ben Connor also finished inside the Olympic qualifying time. In the women’s race Brigid Kosgei (circled) defended her title, the 26-year-old world record holder comfortabl­y winning her duel with fellow Kenyan Ruth Chepngetic­h.

Kosgei broke for home with seven miles to go leaving Chepngetic­h far behind.

“The weather was not good so we struggled,” said Kosgei. “I struggled up to the moment I finished.

“We have not prepared well due to the pandemic.”

Chepngetic­h lost second place to American Sarah Hall. The British title went to Natasha Cockram, who finished outside the Olympic qualifying mark in 2:33.19, four seconds ahead of Naomi Mitchell.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Shura Kitata of Ethiopia causes a major shock by winning the London Marathon
Shura Kitata of Ethiopia causes a major shock by winning the London Marathon

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom