Daily Mail

Kipchoge can light up unique Marathon day

- By RIATH AL-SAMARRAI

WITH a pair of garish moonboots on his feet, Eliud Kipchoge will take a bouncy step into the unknown when a London Marathon like no other commences in silence tomorrow. There is a whiff of intrigue over the Kenyan’s attempt to set a world record across 19.6 laps of St James’s Park, but, with a forecast for rain, it is a reduced possibilit­y. If he does do it, and Kipchoge (below) has avoided any such prediction­s, it will stand as a win of sorts for mankind in a sticky year; if he falls short of his own mark of two hours one minute and 39 seconds then a wider victory is that this race took place at all. This postponed 40th anniversar­y will not take its usual place with 750,000 spectators on the streets of the capital and will occur almost six months later than planned behind blacked-out fences at St James’s Park. Only 600 or so people will have access, including 500 event staff and media, and 94 entrants in the elite men, women and wheelchair fields. While the women’s race could be one for the ages, and Kipchoge offers promise in the men’s even after Kenenisa Bekele withdrew yesterday with a calf problem, the flavour has been drained through the loss of the mass-participat­ion race. It has survived in a virtual form, with 42,283 runners plotting courses of 26.2miles in 109 countries. As Hugh Brasher, the race director, explained it earlier this week: ‘I hope we can be a beacon of light in the darkness.’ The event will still collective­ly raise tens of millions of pounds. The men’s race has been stripped of Mo Farah, who has returned his focus to the track. He will run as a pacemaker for British runners trying to hit the Olympic qualifying time, though there are those who wonder if he is also there to meet appearance criteria of his Nike contract. As ever, Nike dominate this race. Kipchoge, 35, will have the advantage of their controvers­ial Alphafly Next% shoe, the one he wore to break two hours for an unofficial record last year. Defending champion Brigid Kosgei leads a stacked women’s field alongside world gold medallist Ruth Chepngetic­h and 2018 London winner Vivian Cheruiyot. The three Kenyans will pursue Mary Keitany’s women’s world record of 2:17:01, set in 2017. TV: LIVE tomorrow on BBC 2 from 7am.

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