Houston Chronicle

Olympic champ keys sweep by Kenyans

- By Scott Cacciola and Alexandra E. Petri

BOSTON — It was not until 1972 the Boston Marathon’s organizers allowed women to race as official entrants. Before then, those who were brave enough to defy the ban were often jeered or forcibly pulled off the course. Among the rationales cited? That women were “physiologi­cally incapable” of running 26.2 miles.

It all seems so painfully misguided now, of course, but that pockmarked piece of the event’s history was worth rememberin­g Monday as Peres Jepchirchi­r of Kenya and Ababel Yeshaneh of Ethiopia charged through Kenmore Square, in the shadow of Fenway Park, not far from the finish line. The rest of a decorated women’s field had splintered in their wake, and now Jepchirchi­r and Yeshaneh went back-andforth, trading the lead several times as they staged a memorable duel.

Finally, with one last push, Jepchirchi­r lengthened her stride to create some separation as she sprinted to the finish, her narrow win coming 50 years after women first vied for Boston Marathon glory. Perhaps the only person surprised by the outcome was Jepchirchi­r.

“I was not expecting to win,” said Jepchirchi­r, the reigning Olympic champion. “But I’m feeling grateful, and now I can say that I believe in myself more.”

For the first time since 2019, the Boston Marathon returned to its traditiona­l slot on the calendar. Until the coronaviru­s pandemic, the marathon had been staged every April since 1897. But in 2020, the race was canceled for the first time. And last year, the race was pushed to October, when it competed for elite entrants with a cluster of other marathons.

Order was restored this year, as a full field of about 30,000 participan­ts — runners, wheelchair racers, para athletes, hand cyclists — formed a giant wave from Hopkinton, Massachuse­tts, to Boston on a cool, sun-splashed day.

No one shined brighter than Jepchirchi­r, 28, who finished in 2 hours, 21 minutes, 1 second, just four seconds ahead of Yeshaneh. Mary Ngugi of Kenya placed third after running a smart race: She knew enough to pace herself when Jepchirchi­r and Yeshaneh pounded the gas, blowing away the field.

“I’m glad I didn’t follow them and just die,” Ngugi said.

Establishi­ng herself as the most formidable female marathoner on the planet, Jepchirchi­r has now won her last five marathons and three in the past eight months: After surviving extraordin­arily hot conditions to win at the Tokyo Games in August, Jepchirchi­r won the New York City Marathon in November. Now, after another triumph, she is already looking ahead.

“I still have more to do,” she said.

Kenyans swept the men’s podium. Evans Chebet, 33, won his first world marathon major when he broke clear of a large pack, finishing in 2:06:51. Lawrence Cherono was second, and Benson Kipruto, last year’s winner, was third.

The pack began to dissolve behind Chebet after he covered the 22nd mile in 4:27, a prepostero­us tempo. Crushing his opposition only seemed to spur him forward.

“My counterpar­ts were nowhere close to me,” he said through a translator, “and that gave me the motivation and the determinat­ion to hit it off and seize the win.”

On Monday, fortune largely favored the brave — but not everyone. CJ Albertson, a 28-year-old California­n who trains for marathons by doing marathons, pushed the pace from the start.

“My only chance to really win or be up there in the top is to kind of break some people,” he said. “I had the mindset that I’m invincible, and you kind of have to run like that.”

The problem: “There are limits,” he said.

Albertson faded to a 13th-place finish in 2:10:23, which was still a personal best. Scott Fauble, 30, was the top American man, in seventh. “I think I do well with hills,” he said.

Nell Rojas was the fastest American woman, finishing 10th in 2:25:57.

Manuela Schar of Switzerlan­d won the women’s wheelchair race, cruising to her fourth victory in the event, and Daniel Romanchuk of the United States won the men’s title for a second time in Boston.

Many runners were drawn to this year’s race by the opportunit­y to accomplish a one-of-a-kind feat: running back-toback Boston Marathons mere months apart.

“It feels almost a little bit too soon,” said Joyce Lee, who was running her sixth Boston Marathon after serving as guide for a visually impaired runner in the October race.

Sport is seldom immune from global politics, and this year’s marathon was no different. Amid the war in Ukraine, runners from Russia and Belarus were barred from competing by the Boston Athletic Associatio­n, which organizes the race. (Citizens of Russia and Belarus who are residents of other countries were still allowed to take part.)

And there were, as always, reminders of the terror that tore through the marathon nine years ago. Henry Richard, 20, crossed the finish line at 2:52 p.m., and the timing could not have been more poignant: It was around that time in 2013 when two bombs exploded and killed Richard’s 8-yearold brother, Martin, and two other people, and wounded 264 others.

“I know Martin would have been doing it with me,” Richard said after the race Monday. “That’s all I could think about.”

Richard finished in 4:02:20.

 ?? Maddie Meyer / Getty Images ?? Olympic gold medalist Peres Jepchirchi­r of Kenya crosses the finish line to win the profession­al women’s division of the 126th Boston Marathon on Monday. Jepchirchi­r clocked in at 2:21:01.
Maddie Meyer / Getty Images Olympic gold medalist Peres Jepchirchi­r of Kenya crosses the finish line to win the profession­al women’s division of the 126th Boston Marathon on Monday. Jepchirchi­r clocked in at 2:21:01.

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