US/Eastern=>April 26, 2024, 8:50am
Register
login
Stay Connected, Know What's Going On!
Subscribe Your Email here
 
Photo Gallery
Event Schedule
Opinions
Ajabu TV
Ajabu Market
 
HEADLINE NEWS..:
Kenya's Keitany wins 3rd straight marathon in New York
Keitany
PHOTO:Mary Keitany of Kenya, pictured in 2015, has the longest New York City Marathon women's win streak since Norway's Grete Waitz took five in a row from 1982-1986 ./COURTESY
 

By:
DAILY MAIL

Posted:
Nov,06-2016 21:38:38
 
Kenya's Mary Keitany captured her third consecutive New York City Marathon women's title on Sunday, pulling away just past the halfway mark on the way to an overwhelming triumph.

Keitany won in an unofficial time of two hours, 24 minutes and 26 seconds, well off the New York women's course record of 2:22.31 by Kenya's Margaret Okayo in 2003.

Keitany, the second-fastest woman in marathon history behind Britain's Paula Radcliffe, has the longest New York women's win streak since Norway's Grete Waitz took five in a row from 1982-1986.

With plenty of time to prepare for her 26.2-mile Big Apple run after not being selected to compete at the Rio Olympics, Keitany cruised to the $100,000 top prize.

Keitany was in a pack of 14 after five miles led by Ethiopia's Buzunesh Deba, twice a New York runner-up and Boston podium finisher without a win at either.

Keitany, whose personal best is 2:18:37, accelerated the pace and by the 10-mile mark the lead group had trimmed to herself, Kenya's Joyce Chepkirui and Ethiopia's Aselefech Mergia.

By mile 12, Mergia was falling back and at 15 miles, Keitany had opened a 10-second lead. By mile 16, Chepkirui's gap was 33 seconds back and growing and Keitany surged to the finish alone.

Eritrean Ghirmay Ghebreslassie, the reigning world marathon champion, captured the 40th New York City Marathon men's title on Sunday, the first winner from outside Kenya since 2010.

Eight days shy of his 21st birthday, the prodigy accelerated at the halfway mark and overwhelmed his rivals to run alone over the final miles to win in two hours, seven minutes and 51 seconds.

Kenya's Lucas Rotich was second in 2:08:53. Stanley Biwott, last year's New York champion, was out before the halfway mark.

Source: