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Press Release - London Marathon - 4/23/23

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

            Kiptum makes marathon history to win London's crown

     Kenya's newcomer smashes the course record to win the men's title 
                       on his London Marathon debut

Kelvin Kiptum produced a stunning performance to make marathon history in 
London this morning as the young Kenyan surged away from a field full of 
champions to smash the course record in only his second attempt at the 
distance.

Kiptum ran the quickest debut ever when he clocked 2:01:53 in Valencia just 
five months ago, and came to London as the young pretender, the newcomer 
among a line-up of more experienced men.

But the 23-year-old pretender became the master on London's wet roads as he 
laid down a race for the ages, powering clear over the last 10 kilometres 
to win by almost three minutes in 2:01:25.

It is not only the second fastest of all time over 26.2 miles, but the 
first sub-2:02 time on the London course, more than a minute inside Eliud 
Kipchoge's 2019 mark and just 16 seconds outside his world record. Six 
months ago Kiptum had never run a marathon, but now he holds two of the 
five fastest times ever.

"I'm very happy to run the second fastest time in history," he said 
afterwards. "My preparation was good, and I was very happy to race in 
London. The cheering gave me great motivation."

It wasn't just Kiptum's time that caught the eye, but manner of his 
victory, for he dominated the race from the start, leading through almost 
every check point before kicking in an incredible second-half surge timed 
at 59:45, by far the fastest ever.

At one time even Kipchoge's world-beating mark was in danger, but Kiptum 
finally tired in the last couple of miles.

"I thought I could run 2:03, even 2:02," said Kiptum. "But I didn't think 
I'd be close to the world record. Even in the last few miles, I wasn't 
thinking about it. Maybe next year."

Fellow Kenyan Geoffrey Kamworor was the best of the rest, the two-time New 
York City Marathon champion taking second in a personal best of 2:04:23, 
almost three minutes behind, while Ethiopia's Tamirat Tola was third in 
2:04:59, the world champion hampered by the rain.

"I just couldn't keep pace with Kelvin after he pulled away," said the 
resigned Kamworor afterwards.

Nor could anyone else, and no surprise for Kiptum looked supremely 
confident from the moment four-time champion Kipchoge sent the elite field 
on its way from Greenwich.

Among the cast of 30 runners were two of the three men who have ever run 
this distance quicker than 2:02, a first for any race, plus three who have 
broken 2:03 and six sub-2:04 runners.

But Kiptum seemed undaunted by the talent around him, leading nine men 
through the speedy early stages and over Tower Bridge to pass halfway in 
61:40, a touch outside their target time, but with the course record well 
in their sights.

It wasn't going to fall to the great Ethiopian, Kenenisa Bekele, for the 
fastest man in the field soon began to lose touch, the 40-year-old outrun 
by his younger rivals. None younger than Kiptum, who slowly began his 
charge around the Isle of Dogs, picking up speed to reach 30K near Canary 
Wharf in 1:27:23, a 14:30 5K split that shredded the group.

It was now that Kiptum kicked, pushing so hard that he missed his drink at 
the feed station. Undeterred, he threw in 4:33 and 4:23 miles to mile 20, 
leaving the bunch in tatters. He quickly opened a yawning gap on the 
suddenly strung-out line of chasers, powering on through Rainbow Row and 
down the Highway with five hard miles in front of him and an empty wet road 
behind.

Kamworor was now clear in second, but there was no catching Kiptum, whose 
5K split to 35K clocked in at a scintillating 13:49. He now had victory in 
his sights and history in mind as he continued to pound on through the 
puddles, passing the crowds on along Victoria Embankment and Big Ben to 
reach the Finish Line in The Mall.

He broke the tape with fingers pointed skywards in triumph, before 
collapsing to the tarmac in utter exhaustion.

Last year's runner-up Leul Gebresilase was fourth with Seifu Tura fifth 
while Emile Cairess was the first Briton home, the 25-year-old living up to 
his promise with a finely judged debut run that took him past Sir Mo Farah 
into sixth in 2:08:07 - a time that makes him the second quickest Briton on 
London's course.

Farah was third among the domestic athletes, finishing ninth overall in his 
final London Marathon, just behind Phil Sesemann and a place ahead of his 
old friend and training partner Chris Thompson.

"I'm very proud to have run in London," said Farah. "This is where I grew 
up. It was a great crowd, and if it wasn't for them, I would have dropped 
out. It was a big deal."

"It was a privilege to share the road with a British legend," said Cairess.

It was a privilege to watch Kiptum, too, as London's marathon newcomer 
announced himself as the man of the future.

                                      ###

 

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