Kiprotich stuns the world; wins Olympic marathon gold
Uganda's
Stephen Kiprotich stunned a strong Kenyan team to win the men's Olympic
marathon, handing his east African nation only their second ever gold medal.
Kiprotich
timed 2hr 08min 01sec on the spectacular course around the streets of central
London, with two-time defending world champion Abel Kirui claiming silver in
2:08.27.
Another
Kenyan, long-time leader Wilson Kipsang, took bronze in 2:09.37.
It was
Uganda's second ever Olympic gold medal after John Akii-Bua won the 400m
hurdles in the 1972 Games in Munich, with the east African country's only other
medal a bronze from 400m runner Davis Kamonga in 1996.
"I am
very happy to win a medal for my country," beamed Kiprotich. "I love
my people. Ugandans are very happy because we hadn't won a medal in marathon
races.
"The
pace was too fast and I knew I could not run away from them so I just had to
keep up with them (Kipsang and kirui).
"I tried
to settle and then I had to break away because I wanted to win this
medal."
Brazilian
Franck De Almeida went through 10km in 30:38 in a race billed as a battle
between Kenya and Ethiopia.
But the
Ethiopian team's tactics were dealt an early blow with Dino Sefir falling well
off the pace, as Kipsang reeled in the Brazilian pace setter.
Kipsang, the
2012 London Marathon winner then built up a lead on the peloton, going through
the halfway mark in 1:03.15, 16sec ahead of the chasing pack.
The Kenyan
built that lead up to 30sec on the stunning course, designed to take in as many
of the British capital's main sights as possible.
By the 23km
mark in sweltering conditions, a second Ethiopian, Getu Feleke, was beginning
to flag and had fallen off the chasing pack's pace.
In front of
thousands of spectators packed 10-deep in some places, Kiprotichset off in
pursuit of Kipsang, splintering the pack in the hunt for a podium place.
Kirui and
Ethiopia's Dubai marathon winner Ayele Abshero followed, and the trio cut
Kipsang's lead to just 11sec, and then pulled level at 25km.
Abshero
struggled to stay level and dropped 36sec by the 30km stage, Brazilian Marilson
Dos Santos overtaking him into fourth.
As the
leading trio went through the gilded, covered Leadenhall Market for the final
time with 7km to go, the Kenyans upped the pace to shake off Kiprotich.
Japan's
Kentaro Nakamoto and the sole American left in the field, Eritrean-born Meb
Keflezighi, were in position to challenge for a podium should anyone hit the
wall in the final few miles.
But up front,
the two Kenyans were caught napping as Kiprotich showed a dramatic change of
pace to surge to the front in an audacious ambush at 32km, and was quickly 200m
ahead.
Kiprotich,
who has moved to the famed Eldoret region of the Kenya's Rift Valley to train
with former world 5000m champion Eliud Kipchoge, accelerated away, a brief look
back over his shoulder confirming his position at the head of the field.
Going into
the final 2km, the 23-year-old Ugandan was 20sec ahead of Kirui, and he had
enough time to grab an Ugandan flag on his last time entering the Mall, in the
shadow of Buckingham Palace, draping it around his shoulders as he crossed the
line for a convincing victory. Moses
Walubiri and Agencies
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