San Francisco Chronicle

Familiar result in changed conditions: Kenyans victorious

- By Jimmy Golen Jimmy Golen is an Associated Press writer.

BOSTON — With fall foliage replacing the blooming daffodils and mylar blankets sharing space with masks, the pandemic-delayed Boston Marathon returned Monday after a 30month absence for a smaller, socially distanced race that ended in a very familiar way.

Benson Kipruto and Diana Kipyogei completed a Kenyan sweep — the eighth since 2000 at the world’s oldest and most prestigiou­s 26.2-miler, which moved from its traditiona­l spring date for the first time in its 125-year history because of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

“We were injured, wounded. Now is the comeback story,” said 2014 winner Meb Keflezighi, one of the champions sharing grand-marshal duties with hospital employees who worked through the pandemic. “Hopefully, this is an example that post-pandemic, life is getting back to normal.”

Although organizers put runners through COVID-19 protocols and asked spectators to keep their distance, there were still sizable crowds in spots from Hopkinton to Boston after an early drizzle cleared and temperatur­es rose into the 60s.

Participan­ts in the field of 18,000 — down from more than 30,000 in pre-pandemic days — needed to test negative for the coronaviru­s or prove they were vaccinated before picking up their bib numbers. Masks were required indoors in Boston and on the buses to the start; they also were handed out along with the finishers’ medals and fruit on Boylston Street.

The race also began earlier and with a rolling send-off to avoid the usual crowding in the starting corrals and on the course.

None of the changes proved a problem for the Kenyans.

“There’s not a lot different on the course,” Kipruto said.

A winner in Prague and Athens who finished 10th in Boston in 2019, Kipruto broke away from the lead pack as it turned onto Beacon Street with about 3 miles to go and broke the tape in 2 hours, 9 minutes, 51 seconds. Lemi Berhanu, who won the race in 2016, was second, 46 seconds back; Colin Bennie of Princeton, Mass., was the top American, in seventh.

Kipyogei claimed the women’s title, a gilded olive wreath and the $150,000 first prize, finishing in 2:24:45 in her major marathon debut. Edna Kipligat, the 2017 winner, was second, 23 seconds behind.

Marcel Hug won the men’s wheelchair race despite making a wrong turn in the final mile, finishing the slightly detoured route just seven seconds off his course record in 1:08:11. Manuela Schar, also from Switzerlan­d, won the women’s wheelchair race in 1:35:21.

Hug, who has raced Boston eight times and has five victories here, cost himself a $50,000 course-record bonus when he missed the second-to-last turn, following the lead vehicle instead of turning from Commonweal­th Avenue onto Hereford Street.

 ?? Maddie Malhotra / Getty Images ?? Benson Kipruto and Diana Kipyogei savor their wins at the 125th Boston Marathon, the eighth Kenyan sweep since 2000.
Maddie Malhotra / Getty Images Benson Kipruto and Diana Kipyogei savor their wins at the 125th Boston Marathon, the eighth Kenyan sweep since 2000.

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