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Press Release - London Marathon - 10/4/20

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

          Mellor and Cockram defy the rain to take British titles

Jonny Mellor and Natasha Cockram came out on top in tense two-way tussles 
to win the British marathon titles at the 2020 Virgin Money London Marathon 
today.

Mellor lived up to his pre-race favourite tag as he shrugged off the 
challenge of marathon first-timer Ben Connor in last few miles to place 
13th overall in the elite men's race in 2:10:38, cementing his claim to 
join Callum Hawkins on the British marathon team for next year's Tokyo 
Olympics.

Connor also put himself in the frame for Olympic selection as he beat the 
qualifying time of 2:11:30, finishing a weary-but-happy debutant in 
2:11:20, 15th overall.

Cockram was also 13th, claiming the women's UK crown in 2:33:19, following 
a hard-fought victory over surprise of the day Naomi Mitchell, who was just 
four seconds behind after pre-race favourites Steph Twell and Lily 
Partridge both dropped out.

Mellor was the only Briton on the men's Start Line with the Olympic 
standard under his belt having clocked 2:10:03 in Seville earlier this 
year. He wasn't quite as fast in the cold, wet conditions of central 
London, but his confident victory over a field of 14 British hopefuls was 
every bit as impressive.

"I knew with the conditions today it wasn't really about times," he said. 
"I really wanted to get first across the line, so I'm delighted to have 
achieved that.

"It gives me the confidence that I can go to a trial race and finish in the 
top two, which will be the main goal for next year [to get] into the 
Olympics. I've got the time now so I can focus on really racing."

The race rapidly boiled down to a group of five, ably paced by British 
record holder and Olympic 10,000m champion Sir Mo Farah. The tall Connor 
was prominent among them, with Mellor tucked in alongside training partner 
Ross Millington, plus Charlie Hulson and Chris Thompson.

When Farah moved aside at 30km there were still four in the hunt, 
Millington having fallen back. Thompson and Hulson also began to struggle 
as Connor and Mellor opened a gap with 5km to go.

Mellor, running his fifth marathon, always seemed comfortable and he began 
to push ahead as Connor entered unchartered territory. Behind him 2017 
champion Josh Griffiths emerged to take third, but the day belonged to the 
top two.

"Ben's a top lad," said the admiring Mellor of his rival. "I've trained 
with Ben over the years. He's a top, top guy, so I'm really pleased for 
Ben, he deserves that."

"That's what I wanted coming into today. I would have been delighted with 
anything under 2:11:30," said Connor.

"Me and Jonny used to be training partners a couple years ago, so it was 
great to have him alongside for most of the race. He pushed on quite a bit 
and pushed me to get the pace.

"We've just got to see what the Olympic selection is from the trial races 
now. I'm going into them with an Olympic qualifying time, so that's one box 
ticked."

If it was a good day for Connor, it was a bad one for his partner, Lily 
Partridge, who had been tipped for a top-two spot alongside Twell. While 
that pair dropped out, it was Mitchell and Cockram who emerged through the 
puddles to battle for the crown.

Cockram made her move soon after halfway, when she left the struggling 
Partridge adrift, only to find the powering Mitchell surging past to open a 
20-metre lead. But Cockram dug in and re-took the advantage with two laps 
remaining.

Mitchell was having the race of her life, however, and she rallied in the 
final circuit to close on Cockram, who just hung on to become the British 
champion.

"I didn't give up, I kept going and just pushed through," said Cockram. "My 
legs were a bit sore by the end. On the last lap I couldn't really feel 
much but I just kept pushing."

For the 28-year-old victory was especially sweet after a troubled build-up.

"I think it's given me a lot of confidence because last year I couldn't 
even run and I wasn't even sure if I would make the Start Line," she said. 
"I haven't worked out in a couple of weeks either, I've just been on the 
cross trainer. Let's hope the next build-up goes a bit smoother than this 
one."

It was Mitchell who provided the biggest shock of the day, however, the 
26-year-old taking four minutes from her personal best to beat a host of 
more fancied rivals.

The Reading athlete has made staggering progress over the last few years, 
improving from a 3:01 finish in London two-and-a-half years ago, to 2:48:01 
in April 2019 to 2:37:51 in Frankfurt last October.

She made another great leap forwards this morning with a performance that 
puts her in the frame for an Olympic place next year.

"I really hope I can get another race like this with some laps, that would 
be brilliant," she said. "I'm just going to see if I can get in and see 
what I can do.

"With five to go I was feeling strong but my coach said just keep it 
comfortable, don't try anything crazy. I knew Natasha would have it in her 
at the end."

Tracy Barlow was the third British woman home just ahead of Tish Jones in 
15th place.

As for Twell, the only British woman on the Start Line with the Olympic 
standard to her name, she was off the pace from the start and called it a 
day shortly after halfway as an old plantar fasciitis injury flared up.

Twell ran a Scottish record 2:26:40 in Frankfurt last October and was 
hoping to seal her claim for Tokyo selection.

"I have been managing my plantar fasciitis and the conditions didn't help 
my body run to its maximum today," said Twell. "I wanted to see what I 
could do off the shape I'm in, but it wasn't the right race for me today. 
Right now I feel a bit sore."

At that point Partridge looked all set for a strong performance, but her 
challenge fell away shortly after 30km.

"I just started to cramp up around 16 miles," she said. "I didn't feel too 
bad, but in these conditions in a marathon, it's never really going to get 
better.

"I think it's just one of those days. It's obviously frustrating, but 
there's no way I'm risking anything ahead of next year."

                                    ###

 

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