Kenyan athletes chase ‘Virgin Money’ in London Marathon

Athletics
By JONATHAN KOMEN | Apr 20, 2017
Kenya athletes at the 2016 Chicago Marathon Abel Kirui, of Kenya, wins the Chicago Marathon, Sunday, Oct. 9, 2016, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

It’s a do-or-die when the 37th Virgin London Marathon gets underway on Sunday.

Kenya has produced the winner of the men’s London Marathon 11 times in past last 13 years and their dominance in the race doesn’t look likely to subside in the showdown on Sunday morning –despite a classy field that features Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele, the world’s second fastest marathoner of all time.

Chicago Marathon’s flat course has 31 turns; New York City has 26 turns, Boston has three turns while Berlin’s flat course has 17 turns.

Abel Kirui, the two-time world marathon champion, returns to London streets after bagging silver in 2012 London Olympics and is out to re-affirm his comeback.

He staged a splendid comeback on his return since 2012, winning Chicago Marathon last October.

Kirui longs to perform well and pick the bragging rights to the IAAF World Championships that runs in London on August 4-12.

“I have prepared well. This is race is critical as I really want to make the team for the world championships. I will work hard and give it my best. The weather here in London looks good and hope it remains good on Sunday,” Kirui told Standard Sports on phone from London yesterday.

Interestingly, Kirui and Bekele are managed by Jos Hermens of Global Sports Communications in Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

It will be a perfect mix if Kirui does well and gets Athletics Kenya’s call up for London Worlds with Boston Marathon winner Edna Kiplagat –the duo who have won IAAF World Championships twice.

London Marathon, which marks the start of 2017/2018 Abbott World Marathon Majors series, is run on a flat course that has 19 turns and Kirui (2:05.04) faces a mountain Bekele, who has 2:03.03 set in Berlin last year.

They will square it out with Ethiopians Tesfaye Abera (2:04.24), Feyisa Lilesa (2:04.52) and Tilahun Regassa (2:05.27) alongside Amsterdam Marathon winner Daniel Wanjiru (2:05.21).

Eritrea’s Ghirmay Ghebreslassie (2:07.46), the world marathon champion and Abraham Tadesse (2:06:40) of Switzerland are also in the mix.

Mary Keitany, the three-time New York Marathon winner, also longs to become first woman to win London Marathon three times as she chases the ‘Virgin Money’.

Share this story
Arteta urges Arsenal to seize destiny in crucial Spurs showdown
Mikel Arteta has urged Arsenal F.C. to “write their own destiny” in the north London derby against Tottenham Hotspur F.C. after slipping in the Premier League title race.
Title-hungry Leopards seek to bounce back to winning ways
AFC Leopards will be aiming to return to winning form this weekend as the SportPesa Premier League resumes with a decisive round of fixtures.
Magical Kenya Open: Jastas Madoya reveals what fuels his passion for golf
The spiritual player advises young people to cultivate discipline if they want to reach the lofty heights of playing in the MKO in future.
NOC-K signs strategic MoU with Japanese Olympic Committee
The deal aims at strengthening high-performance systems, athlete development, sports science collaboration, and leadership education between Kenya and Japan.
Youthful Kinoti Kiara crowned African fencing champion
Kiara beat Egypt’s Hamza H. Abuhalwa, Mohamed El Bounjaimi of Morocco and Togo’s Ilan Tchaa Arou to the continental title.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS