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Though not running at Paula Radcliffe's world record pace, Tomsecu-Dita thumbed her nose, as she has throughout her marathoning career, at the notion that marathon front-runners never win. Paying little heed to the marathon gods and her recuperating health - she had fought a cold and fever since last Tuesday - the tall Romanian built up a lead of over a minute at the halfway mark over the pack of pursuers.
Tomsecu-Dita said afterward her husband and coach Valeriu told her to take a wait-see attitude to the race.
"You can see what you feel to 10K and if you feel better you can go faster," she said of his advice. "A lot of people they tell me you don't need to go so fast in the first half. I try to go fast to run under the Romanian record. It was very hard for me because the wind was in the front. The wind was a little strong."
Top U.S. finisher Marla Runyan, seventh in 2:28:33, was happy with her performance.
"I came here with a goal of 2:26 so that really means I wanted to run 2:25," the two-time Olympian on the track admitted.
"The training was only half of what it could have been," she said, referring to the six short weeks she had between returning from the Athens Games and Chicago.
While Runyan hoped a sub-2:25 performance might make it clear to her that the marathon, rather than the track, is where her competitive future lies, she offered that today's performance would probably keep her marathon focus.
"If I'd have run a little faster it would have been easier to say 'Yeah this is that I want to focus on,' she said of the marathon. "I enjoy the training for it and the race itself. I do think 2:23, 2:24 is in me."
Runyan ran through 13.1 miles with 2004 Olympic Trials fourth place finisher Blake Russell. U.S. Mastesr record-holder Jenny Spangler, the 1996 Olympic Trials Champion, followed the pair by 15 seconds at halfway (1:13:48).
Russell couldn't keep Runyan's pace and finished 9th overall in 2:32:04, the second American. Spangler, 41, crossed the finish line 10th overall (third U.S.) in 2:33:36, within a minute of her record-breaking time last year.
On a beautiful fall day in Chicago, 33,194 runners started the race.
27th LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon
Chicago, IL, Sunday, October 10, 2004 MEN
1) Evans Rutto (KEN), 2:06:16, $180,000
2) Daniel Njenga (KEN), 2:07:44, $80,000
3) Toshinari Takaoka (JPN), 2:07:50, $55,000
4) Jimmy Muindi (KEN), 2:08:27, $35,000
5) Khalid Khannouchi (USA/NY), 2:08:44, $35,000
6) Marilson Dos Santos (BRA), 2:08:48, $10,000
7) Stephen Kiogora (KEN), 2:09:21, $7,500
8) Scott Westcott (AUS), 2:13:08
9) Ben Maiyo (KEN), 2:13:17
10) Paul Koech (KEN), 2:13:20
11) Brian Sell (USA/MI), 2:13:22, $9,000
12) Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot (KEN), 2:14:23
13) Martin Dent (AUS), 2:15:35
14) Wilson Chepkwony (KEN), 2:16:09
15) Clint Verran (USA/MI), 2:17:28, $8,000
16) James Koskei (KEN), 2:18:40
17) Luke Humphrey (USA/MI), 2:18:49, $7,000
MASTERS MEN (40+)
1) Craig Fram, 46, (USA/NH), 2:29:36, $2,500
WOMEN
1) Constantina Tomescu-Dita (ROM), 2:23:45, $135,000
2) Nuta Olaru (ROM), 2:24:33, $72,500
3) Svetlana Zakharova (RUS), 2:25:01, $47,500
4) Joyce Chepchumba (KEN), 2:26:21, $30,500
5) Albina Ivanova (RUS), 2:28:22, $15,000
6) Shataye Gemechu (ETH), 2:28:28
7) Marla Runyan (USA/OR), 2:28:33, $10,000
8) Derartu Tulu (ETH), 2:30:21
9) Blake Russell (USA/CA), 2:32:04, $9,000
10) Jenny Spangler, 41, (USA/IL), 2:33:36, $12,000
11) Malgorzata Sobanska (POL), 2:35:24
12) Nicole Stevenson (CAN), 2:39:12
13) Yasuko Hashimoto (JPN), 2:40:34
14) Willetta Page (USA/CA), 2:45:20, $7,000
15) Rachel Moritz (USA/CA), 2:46:43, $6,000
MASTERS WOMEN (40+)
1) Spangler (see above)
For complete results, go to: chicagomarathon.com
Time-to-Run Marathon section
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