The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Beijing half marathon runners disqualifi­ed after controvers­ial finish

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BEIJING The top three in Sunday's Beijing half marathon have been stripped of their medals, organisers said, following an investigat­ion into the finish that saw China's He Jie controvers­ially win.

The race's bizarre finish saw He cross the line first after the Kenyans Robert Keter and Willy Mnangat, and Dejene Hailu from Ethiopia, seemed to deliberate­ly allow him to win.

Footage of the conclusion to the race went viral.

"Today the 2024 Beijing Half Marathon Organising Committee issued a decision on the investigat­ion and handling of the men's race results," a state media report said.

It added: "The trophies, medals and bonuses will be recovered.”

The four runners had stuck together throughout the course of just over 13 miles (21 kilometres) around the streets of the Chinese capital.

But He, the 2023 Asian Games marathon gold medallist, won by one second after his supposed rivals appeared to slow down towards the finish and waved him out in front.

All four were "punished" and their results cancelled, China's state broadcaste­r CCTV reported.

Mnangat had told the BBC that the African trio were pacemakers, although their bibs did not say that.

The race investigat­ion said that Mnangat, Keter and Hailu had not been properly registered as pacemakers for He, so their actions on the finish line breached competitio­n rules.

The Chinese Athletics Associatio­n said earlier this week they had met, issuing a statement vowing to make improvemen­ts to the sport in the country.

Sunday's incident received significan­t attention on Chinese social media site Weibo, with some users criticisin­g what they saw as an "embarrassi­ng" result.

"This will certainly be the most embarrassi­ng championsh­ip in He Jie's career,"

one wrote.

"With such a major organiser and such a well-known event, this really pushes sportsmans­hip to the ground in shame," the post said.

Long-distance and marathon running has boomed in recent years among China's middle class, but there have been numerous instances of cheating and poor organisati­on.

In 2018, at a half marathon in the southern city of Shenzhen, 258 runners were found to have cheated, including many who took shortcuts.

Traffic cameras caught them darting through trees to join a different part of the race.

In 2019, a woman was filmed riding a green rental bike in the Xuzhou Internatio­nal Marathon in eastern China.

She was ordered by race officials to dismount the bike, only to get back on again afterwards. iol

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