The Arizona Republic

Kenyans race to Boston Marathon victories

- Jimmy Golen

BOSTON – Reigning Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchi­r capped the celebratio­n of a half-century of women in the Boston Marathon with a finish to top them all.

The 28-year-old Kenyan won a seesaw sprint down the stretch on Monday, when the world’s oldest and most prestigiou­s annual marathon returned to its traditiona­l spring start for the first time since the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

On the 50th anniversar­y of the first official women’s race, Jepchirchi­r traded places with Ethiopia’s Ababel Yeshaneh eight times in the final mile before pulling ahead for good on Boylston Street and finishing in 2 hours, 21 minutes, 1 second.

“I was feeling she was strong. I pushed it,” said Jepchirchi­r, who earned $150,000 and the traditiona­l gilded olive wreath to go with her Olympic gold medal and 2021 New York City Marathon title. “I fell behind. But I didn’t lose hope.”

Evans Chebet completed the Kenyan sweep, breaking away from Gabriel Geay with about four miles to go to finish in 2:06:51 for his first major marathon victory.

The 2019 winner Lawrence Cherono was second, 30 seconds back, defending champion Benson Kipruto was third, and Geay fell back to fourth.

Daniel Romanchuk of Champaign, Illinois,

won his second career wheelchair title in 1:26:58. Switzerlan­d’s Manuela Schar won her second straight Boston crown and fourth overall, finishing in 1:41:08.

Sharing a Patriots’ Day weekend with the Red Sox home opener – the city’s other sporting rite of spring – more than 28,000 runners returned to the streets from Hopkinton to Copley Square six months after a smaller and socially distanced event that was the only fall race in its 126-year history.

Fans waved Ukrainian flags in support of the runners whose 26.2-mile run Monday was the easiest part of their journey. Forty-four Ukrainian citizens had registered for the race; only 11 started. Athletes from Russia and Belarus were disinvited in response to the invasion.

“I decided to come here and show that Ukrainians are strong, we’re fighting and we hope peace will come soon,” said Dmytro Molchanov, a Ukrainian who lives in New York.

“It’s really tough, basically, being here while all my family, my friends and Ukrainians are fighting over there for peace in my country, in Europe and the world overall,” said Molchanov, who finished in 2:39:20.

“When it was really tough I tried not to give up and tried pushing, kind of fight with myself the way Ukrainians are fighting against Russia right now.”

Ukrainians who were unable to make it to Boston were offered a deferral or refund.

“Whatever they want to do, they can do,” Boston Athletic Associatio­n President Tom Grilk said. “Run this year, run next year. You want a puppy? Whatever. There is no group we want to be more helpful to.”

Jepchirchi­r and Yeshaneh, who was third in New York last fall, spent most of the morning running shoulder to shoulder – or even closer: Just after the 25kilomete­r marker, the Ethiopian’s eyes wandered from the course and she drifted into Jepchirchi­r.

Yeshaneh reached out to apologize, and the two clasped each other’s arms as they continued on.

“In running, we understand each other and we maybe somebody came and bumps, but it’s OK,” Jepchirchi­r said. “It was not rivalism; it was just an accident.”

Beaten, Yeshaneh finished four seconds back.

Kenya’s Mary Ngugi finished third for the second time in six months, following her podium in October after the 125th race was delayed, canceled and delayed again.

About 20 men stayed together – with American CJ Albertson leading for much of the way – before Chebet and Geay broke from the pack coming out of Heartbreak Hill. Chebet pulled away a couple of miles later.

“We had communicat­ed earlier, all of us. We wanted to keep running as a group,” said Chebet, who finished fourth in London last fall. “I observed that my counterpar­ts were nowhere near me and that gave me the motivation.”

This race marked the 50th anniversar­y of Nina Kuscsik’s victory in the first official women’s race. (But not the first woman to finish: That honor belongs to Bobbi Gibb, who first ran in 1966 among the unofficial runners known as bandits.)

At Wellesley College, the women’s school near the halfway point, the iconic “scream tunnel” was back after the pandemic-induced absence – and louder than ever. One spectator in Wellesley held a sign that read “50 Years Women Running Boston,” along with names of the eight who broke the gender barrier in 1972.

 ?? KRUPA/AP
CHARLES ?? Boston Marathon women’s division winner Peres Jepchirchi­r, left, and men’s winner Evans Chebet pose at the finish line Monday in Boston.
KRUPA/AP CHARLES Boston Marathon women’s division winner Peres Jepchirchi­r, left, and men’s winner Evans Chebet pose at the finish line Monday in Boston.

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