Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Ethiopia's Gelana Sets Women's Olympic Marathon Record

Flanagan, Goucher finish 10th and 11th in London on rainy day

LONDON - (August 5, 2012) - Team USA's Shalane Flanagan and Kara Goucher of Portland, Ore. finished within 16 seconds of one another as they crossed the finish line in 10th and 11th place, respectively, in the women's Olympic Marathon during a rainy Sunday morning.

The 26.2 mile race was won in an Olympic record of 2 hours, 23 minutes, 7 seconds by Ethiopia's Tiki Gelana, 24, who pulled ahead of runner-up Priscah Jeptoo of Kenya over the final half mile. Jeptoo finished in 2:23:12, with Tatyana Petrova Arkhipova of Russia taking third in 2:23:29.


Flanagan and Goucher positioned themselves at or near the front of the large lead pack from the start of the race, winding through the narrow, rain-soaked street of London.

Training partners in Portland, Goucher ran in a red cap, Flanagan in black, to fend off the rain. Running an even pace, they passed through 5K in 17:20 and 10K in 34:46 as more than 50 women ran together in a pack that stretched to 10 seconds from front to back. The leaders hit 15K in 52:11, and at 17K, 16 women remained within just 1 second of each other.

By the 25K mark, a lead pack of six started to pull ahead, with Flanagan running in 7th four seconds behind the leaders, and Goucher in 12th another two seconds back. Over the next two kilometers, Flanagan tried to regain contact with the pack, but by the 28K mark, only five remained in the lead: Arkhipova, Gelana, Jeptoo and Mary Keitany and Edna Kipagat of Kenya with Mare Dibaba of Ethiopia running just off the pack in 6th.

The race began in earnest after the 30K mark as the women began trading positions. Reigning world champion Kiplagat struggled to maintain the pace and fell off of the pack, only to rally and fall back again. Meanwhile, Flanagan ran without the assistance of a pack as she tried to close the gap on Kiplagat.

After 35K Flanagan moved ahead of a fading Dibaba and Kiplagat, who ultimately fell back to finish 23rd and 20th, respectively. But as some of the favorites became casualties, two new women slipped into the mix with Xiaolin Zhu of China and Tetyana Gamera-Shmyrko of Ukraine speeding past Flanagan.

In the final 2K, as Flanagan began to tire, Valeria Straneo of Italy and Albina Mayorova of Russia moved past Flanagan, dropping her to tenth. Goucher began to close the gap on her training partner with the two ultimately finishing 16 seconds apart. Flanagan was 10th in 2:25:51 and Goucher 11th in 2:26:07.

Today's race marked Flanagan's third race at the 26.2 mile distance and her second-fastest time after her 2:25:38 U.S. Olympic Trials record this January in Houston. This was the sixth marathon of Goucher's career and only one second off of the time she ran at the Olympic Trials.

"There were some really tough spots. It was tough just to let people pass me, and I had no oomph to go with them. I tried to react, like in a track race, but it is really different for me in the marathon. You already have a lot of miles in your legs and it is so, so, so hard. I could feel myself cramping, but it is what it is. The fans were amazing; I couldn't even hear my own thoughts. The fans were just deafening. It was a lot of fun besides cramping and feeling awful," said Flanagan, the 2008 Olympic 10,000m bronze medalist.

American Desiree Davila (Rochester Hills, Mich.) dropped out with a hip injury after completing the initial 2.2 mile loop.

Olympic Games
London, GBR, Sunday, August 5, 2012

Women's Marathon
1) Tiki Gelana (ETH), 2:23:07*, Gold
2) Priscah Jeptoo (KEN), 2:23:12, Silver
3) Tatyana Petrova Arkhipova (RUS), 2:23:29, Bronze
4) Mary Keitany (KEN), 2:23:56
5) Tetyana Gamera-Shmyrko (UKR), 2:24:32
6) Xiaolin Zhu (CHN), 2:24:48
7) Jessica Augusto (POR), 2:25:11
8) Valeria Straneo (ITA), 2:25:27
9) Albina Mayorova (RUS), 2:25:38
10) Shalane Flanagan (USA), 2:25:51
11) Kara Goucher (USA), 2:26:07
DNF Desiree Davila (USA)
*Olympic Record (previous record, 2:23:14, Naoko Takahashi (JPN), Sydney 2000)


this article Courtesy of Running USA wire





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