2018 Tokyo Marathon: Dickson completes fifth consecutive podium finish

Athletics
By DENNIS OKEYO | Feb 26, 2018
Dickson Chumba of Kenya holds up the winner's trophy during the awards ceremony following his victory in the Tokyo Marathon in Tokyo on February 25, 2018. / AFP PHOTO
 

Chumba saves the day, but Kipsang bid falters

Defending champion Wilson drops out after just 15 kilometres.

Kenyan’s Dickson Chumba reclaimed top honours at the 2018 Tokyo Marathon yesterday on a day defending champion Wilson Kipsang failed in his mission to set a new world record.

He bowed out of the race after just 15 kilometres.

Chumba made his victory intentions clear with 5km left when he sprinted and dropped compatriots Amos Kipruto and Gideon Kipketer to convincingly triumph in two hours, five minutes, and 30 seconds.

The victory was Chumba’s fifth podium finish on the trot and his second Tokyo Marathon title.

Chumba, 31, worked as a gardener before turning professional in 2008 under Claudio Berardelli in Kapsabet.

He made his marathon debut with a runner-up finish at the 2010 Madrid Marathon. In 2015, he won the Chicago marathon in a time of 2:09.25.

Cheered by the home crowd, Japanese Yuta Shitara made a surprise package cruising past Kipruto and Kipkeker in the final stages of the race to finish second in 2:06.10, dropping a massive three minutes from his previous personal best and Japanese national record.

For his troubles, he earned $936,000 (Sh95 million) which was set by the organiser.

Kipruto timed 2:06.33 and Kipketer (2:06.47) to finish third and fourth respectively.

Another Japanese, Hiroto Inoue, finished fifth in 2:06.54.

In last year's Berlin Marathon, Kipsang 35, was bidding to break Dennis Kimetto’s world best mark of 2:02.57, but dropped out at the 30km mark. He was also unlucky this time round as he threw in the towel at the 15km mark. In the women's race, Kenyan’s Hellah Kiprop was outside podium when she finished fifth in 2:28.58. Ethiopian Birhane Dibaba won the race.

Share this story
Nairobi City Marathon pairs air sensors with 5,000-tree legacy plan
The cornerstone of this year's sustainability drive is the strategic installation of four specialised air quality control sensors on Nairobi City Marathon route.
Guardiola quit '100 times' before leaving, says Man City chairman
Manchester City chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak has revealed Pep Guardiola was on the verge of quitting "100 times" before finally leaving at the end of this season.
New-look Harambee Stars face Lesotho test
McCarthy confident of building a strong team ahead of Afcon qualifiers.
Who will be crowned league's best?
Champions Gor Mahia expected to dominate awards after record-extending 22nd title.
How Ekaru has scaled sporting heights to become a proud Olympian
Prolific players Moim and Murambi have played a part in shaping Ekaru.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS