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Meb
Keflezighi - First American on his debut and 9th overall
with 2:12:35
"The last 10-K, it just wasn't there.
My splits got pretty slow," Keflezighi said afterward. "I
guess I hit the wall. Mark Carroll went by in Central Park, and
said, 'Let's go, Meb,' but I couldn't pick up the pace with him."
Keflezighi professed to be somewhat disappointed in his time, and
when asked about running another marathon, answered, "I'm not
anxious to. I like the 10-K better."
Marla Runyan - First American women on her debut
and 5th overall with 2:27:10
Stargardt's
disease, the ailment that has left Runyan with minimal vision, created
the possibility of problems in a marathon. But Runyan has won national
titles in track and has done well in shorter road races, and she
had few problems here.
Marathon organizers assigned a cyclist to follow her.
Runyan, a 33-year-old California native who
lives in Eugene, Ore., was queasy after the race. Still, she was
her usual cheerful self.
"I had a lot of fun out there today,"
she said of a test that few others consider fun. "It was muscular
fatigue that kept me from running faster. If I had more strength
in my legs, I could have finished stronger. "I really enjoyed
it until about 24 miles, but actually it was a great experience
to have, with all that crowd support. I love that. It surprisingly
didn't feel as long as I thought it would have seemed like. It was
going by pretty quickly. "I wouldn't do anything different
in terms of tactics. I had to run my own race. I couldn't get too
caught up at the end and die."
"I wrote down a goal of 2:28 and a fifth-place
finish," she said. "But I really thought finishing fifth
in this field was a long shot, so it couldn't have been much better."
Athlete summary
McCANN The Commonwealth Games champion from Australia finished
in 2:27:51, impressive because her collision with Jevtic left her
with a scraped knee and a limp.
LORNAH KIPLAGAT The Kenyan might have run considerably faster
than her 2:28:41 had she not dropped back after the Madison Avenue
Bridge, the last of the five bridges on the course.
PETROVA The winner here two years ago struggled home this
time in 2:29:00 because of leg cramps. "As
soon as I tried to improve my pace," she
said, "they would come back."
Joyce Chepchumba - Kenya 1st with 2:25:56
Chepchumba finally added New York to her Triple Crown, having won
Chicago and London previously. This was her 4th attempt at winning.
"I have been trying and trying and trying,"
she said. "People everywhere were
cheering and cheering. This was worth it for me to win here."
Rodgers Rop - Kenya 1st with 2:08.07
Late in the race Rop grabbed his right side,
feeling a stitch. Last year, he was to succumb to the winner and
he had promised it would not happen this year by stating before
the race, "If the leader pushes,
I will go with him, even if I die by the roadside"
Confident that the stitch would dissipate, convinced that his
competitors had weakened, Rop made a final move in a race of clever
and forceful surges to win.
Go to : The race report

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