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Cherono, Kenya Win Gold at World Half Champs - Women's Recap

Published by
RunnerSpace.com/RoadRacing   Mar 29th 2014, 4:38pm
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Cherono Leads Historic Kenyan Sweep at IAAF World Half Marathon Championships

Published by the IAAF on March 29, 2014

Kenya, as expected, produced a totally dominant performance in the women’s race at the 2014 IAAF/AL-Bank World Half Marathon Championships in Copenhagen as they reclaimed individual and team honours from their Ethiopian rivals.

Gladys Cherono led them home in a season’s best of 1:07:28 ahead of silver medallist Mary Wacera Ngugi, who clocked a personal best of 1:07:43, and Sally Chepyego Kaptich, who also produced a personal best on this flat and fast course in 1:07:51.

Event favourite Lucy Wangui Kabuu just missed out on individual medals as she clocked 1:08:36, five seconds ahead of Mercy Jerotich Kibarus, who completed for Kenya the historic feat of securing all team members in the top five positions; a first at the World Half Marathon Championships.

The last challenger to drop away from the Kenyan charge, Ethiopia’s Netsanet Gudeta, finished sixth in a personal best of 1:08:45.

The race had got underway in bright sunshine, a temperature of about 14°C lightened by a breeze. And despite her protestations the day before, Italy’s Valeria Straneo was soon pushing the pace at the front, just as she had during the marathon at the previous summer’s IAAF World Championships in Moscow.

By the second mile the field had elongated, with those around the Italian including Croatia’s Lisa Stublic, but the Kenyans and Ethiopians were waiting.

Shortly before the 5km mark, which was passed in 16:04, the Kenyans made their move. It was overwhelming.

Before long, the camera was lingering on a row of five runners in the same shirts, their arms and legs pumping in unison, issuing the unspoken message: “Pass us if you dare.”  Four Ethiopians were ranged behind them, along with Straneo and France’s Christelle Daunay.

But in the event, no one dared – or was in a position to dare. Straneo, determined to stay on an even pace, drifted off the leading group, eventually finishing eighth in 1:08:54. Daunay also found the pace too hot, and eventually took seventh place in 1:08:47.

 



Read the full article at: www.iaaf.org

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