Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

American woman third in marathon

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LONDON — Kenyan marathoner Geoffrey Kirui took a quick glance over his shoulder, just to see if anyone was possibly closing the gap.

Nobody remotely in sight. He crossed the finish line on Tower Bridge in easy fashion, 82 seconds ahead of his closest pursuer.

A few hours later, a much different scene unfolded in the women’s race. That marathon practicall­y ended up in a sprint as Rose Chelimo had to pull away from twotime world champion Edna Kiplagat for a seven-second victory.

A blowout and a close call in a marathon doublehead­er at the world championsh­ips Sunday.

“I was not expecting to win today,” said Chelimo, who is from Kenya but now competes for Bahrain. “I tried my best and I managed to become the world champion.”

In the morning, Kirui bided his time and saved his strength for a late surge that sent him to the runaway victory in 2 hours, 8 minutes, 27 seconds. In doing so, he earned Kenya its fifth world title in the men’s marathon.

“This is the best moment of my career, easily,” said Kirui, who also won the Boston Marathon in April.

Chelimo and a few other runners remained tightly packed late into the women’s race. And when Kiplagat took off, she wondered if she had the strength to catch the Kenyan again. She did. “This is one of the best days in my life,” said Chelimo, who finished in 2:27.11.

The real competitio­n was for the silver medal, where Kiplagat barely held off hard-charging American runner Amy Cragg. It was a big day for Cragg, who took third to earn the first women’s world marathon medal for the United States since Marianne Dickerson placed second in 1983.

A medal for Cragg was very much in limbo, too, with four racers vying for the podium down the stretch.

“I was like, ‘This is the moment I’ll remember — whether or not I pushed to get closer or gave in,’” said Cragg, who is married to former University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le track and field standout Alistair Cragg. “It was really painful. I decided to go for it.”

Kirui had such a big lead he spent the last part of the race waving to the crowd as he made his way across the finish line. He won 1:22 ahead of Tamirat Tola of Ethiopia. Alphonce Simbu of Tanzania finished third.

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