Sentinel & Enterprise

Korir, D’amato pull away to victory

Wheelchair world record for Scaroni

- By Joe Reardon

With a mile to go and Leonard Korir and Kennedy Kimutai running running side by side down Commonweal­th Ave. in the early morning sunshine, the outcome of Sunday’s B.A.A .10K was looking like it would be decided by a furious sprint finish on Charles Street.

Then something happened that all but gave Korir the victory without having to break into a dead sprint.

After knocking down a 4:27 fifth mile (22:26) together, Kimutai suddenly swerved to the side of the road to run in the forgiving shade, if just for a short time. Korir stayed put in the middle of the road and was never challenged. He crossed the finish line in a swift 28:00 for the win on the fast layout to lead the field of 5,159. Kimutai held on for second in 28:07 just in front of Philemon Kiplimo and Ben True, both of whom were clocked in 28:09. Defending Falmouth Road Race champion Ben Flanagan rounded out the quick top five in 28:11.

Korir found himself in the lead pack early, but wary of taking an early lead as Bravin Kiptoo (10th, 28:49) led the group in a sizzling 4:21 first mile. “When I saw the first group going out so fast, I knew that they would pay” said Korir. “I just wanted to hang in there and strike when the time comes. It was like suicide. I was like, ‘ whoa. Are we going to be able to maintain this?’ I told myself just to be patient because I knew they couldn’t hold that speed in the heat.”

The pace didn’t slow the second mile as Kiptoo pulled the group through in 8:45. Kimutai joined Kiptoo at the front a half mile later and the pack grew to six near the turnaround point at three miles (13:18) at the Agganis Center. By four miles (17:49) the race had come down to Korir and Kimutai.

In the women’s race, Keira D’amato and Sharon Lokedi ran together after breaking up a pack of seven past the 2-mile mark (10:03.55). D’amato covered a break by Lokedi on the downslope past the turnaround point and the two were still together at five miles (25:14).

Lokedi dropped out of sight and D’amato went on to break the tape in 31:17. Emily Sisson was a strong second in 32:03 and Edna Kiplagat garnered the bronze medal in 32:09.

“I wanted to run aggressive today and go for the American Record,” said D’amato, who broke the American Record at the Houston Marathon in February with a 2:19:12. “I went for it but fell just a little short. My goal today was just to keep the pedal to the medal.”

Susannah Scaroni absolutely scorched the field in the wheelchair division and broke the world record in a scintillat­ing 21:56. Scaroni has two second-place finishes in the Boston Marathon and a gold medal in the 5,000 at the 2021 Tokoyo Paralympic­s.

Scaroni was all smiles after the race and said the warm temperatur­es played no factor in her superb effort. “When you’re a wheelchair racer you’re traveling faster than the runners,” said Scaroni. “You’re done sooner as well so you can handle higher temperatur­es.”

 ?? NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD ?? Women’s winner Kiera D’amato and men’s winner Leonard Korir celebrate at the finish line of the BAA 10K on Sunday.
NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD Women’s winner Kiera D’amato and men’s winner Leonard Korir celebrate at the finish line of the BAA 10K on Sunday.

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