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Press Release - London Marathon - 10/3/21

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                        Marathon joy returns to capital:
     Participants unite in London and all over the world in an uplifting 
                          celebration of togetherness

Thousands of people united on the streets of the capital over 26.2 miles to 
finish the 2021 Virgin Money London Marathon on Sunday 3 October – exactly 
889 days after the event last saw its ribbon of head-bobbing humanity wind 
round the Greenwich-to-Westminster course.

In a fitting and uplifting celebration of the event's #WeRunTogether 
campaign, 35,300 people had crossed the Finish Line on The Mall by 18:30 on 
Sunday, as thousands more across the globe joined the party by completing 
their marathon challenge virtually during a 24-hour window – making the 
41st edition a truly memorable occasion.

After last year's elite only-race around St James's Park, the return of a 
mass field of club runners, celebrities and charity fundraisers to the 
London Marathon's traditional route was both a joy and a huge relief for 
Event Director Hugh Brasher and his team, whose tireless aim has been to 
pull humanity together, bring joy back to the streets of the capital, and 
once again give charities a chance to raise much-needed funds.

"We've really missed the togetherness after being more divided than ever," 
said Brasher. "We are bringing people together one step at a time, both 
here today and globally.

"Our core value is #WeRunTogether and it has been a hugely complex 
challenge to do that, with so many scenarios considered. The amazing team 
strives extremely hard, day by day, to get it right."

It was Brasher himself who predicted this could be the most competitive 
marathon in history, and it proved so as the elite fields delivered 
stunning performances to fit the occasion – with five women going under two 
hours 19 minutes for the first time ever, and three men finishing in under 
2:05.

Kenya took the honours in the women's race for the sixth consecutive time, 
as Joyciline Jepkosgei deposed her compatriot, the hat-trick-chasing 
defending champion and world record holder, Brigid Kosgei, while Sisay 
Lemma handed Ethiopia its second win in successive years by taking the 
coveted men's crown.

The powerful Jepkosgei came agonisingly close to the London course and 
women-only world record in 2:17:43, while Lemma led home the men in 
2:04:01, a time only bettered on this course by four men.

Meanwhile, there was a recordbreaking Swiss double in the elite wheelchair 
races as Marcel Hug and Manuela Schär both set new course records, and 
Charlotte Purdue qualified for the 2022 World Championships by winning the 
British women's elite race in 2:23:26, becoming the third-quickest British 
female in history in the process.

Leeds doctor Philip Sesemann provided the shock of the day as he celebrated 
his 29th birthday by taking the British men's title on his marathon debut, 
placing seventh in the elite race overall, just behind last year's champion 
Shura Kitata.

Before today's elites came tomorrow's, as thousands of young athletes from 
across the country battled for honours in the Virgin Money Giving Mini 
London Marathon, held over the final 2.6K of the course from Temple Place 
to The Mall.

Among the winners was Illias Zghoundi, who followed in the tracks of his 
idol and David Weir by taking the boys under-17 wheelchair crown, and 
Northern Ireland's Nick Griggs, who overcame a case of Covid three weeks 
ago to win the boys under-17 title: "I had an unbelievable race 
considering," said the understated Tyrone runner afterwards.

It was an unbelievable day for many others too, not least former England 
cricket captain Andrew Strauss, who ran in memory of his late wife Ruth, 
saying afterwards: "It's just an amazing event, and a special thing to have 
run together."

It was a theme echoed by many finishers, including former elite women's 
winner and today's women's race starter Liz McColgan, who said: "It's a 
great honour to do it today, it's bringing life back to the city."

Perhaps Ever Present Chris Finill best captured the mood of the day as he 
completed his 40th race in 3:10:15: "It's great to have it back," he said. 
"The sun has come out and the mood of London is lifted."

Indeed it is.

                                     ###

 

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