AFP/London

Eliud Kipchoge led a Kenyan clean sweep of the podium places as he won the men’s London Marathon yesterday in a time of two hours, four minutes and 42 seconds.
The final mile saw former world 5,000 metres champion Kipchoge sprint clear of Wilson Kipsang, last year’s London winner, with world record-holder Dennis Kimetto finishing in third place.
Victory saw Kipchoge add the London title to his wins in last year’s Rotterdam and Chicago marathons.
“It was a tough race. My training paid off and it went to plan,” said Kipchoge.
The 30-year-old who went up in distance after his world title success on the track in Paris in 2003, beat a field featuring the three-fastest marathon runners of all-time.
His winning time yesterday was well outside Kipsang’s London record of 2hrs 04 mins and 29 secs set last year but as he waved to the crowd in sight of the finish, it was clear that he was delighted by victory alone.
Kipsang’s time of 2:04:47 made him the quickest-ever London runner-up, surpassing Stanley Biwott’s 2:04:55 last year. Kimetto came in third this year in a time of 2:05:50, with Biwott in fourth place.
In the women’s race, there was a shock win for Tigist Tufa as the Ethiopian ended fours years of Kenyan domination in London.
Tufa was only the ninth-fastest competitor in the elite women’s field but pulled clear just over a mile from the finish.
The 28-year-old even had time to wave to the crowd down as she won by some 18 seconds from Kenya’s Mary Keitany in a time of 2:23:22.
Keitany, the winner of the race in 2011 and 2012, just did enough to hold off Tufa’s compatriot, Tirfi Tsegaye, in the battle for second place.  
Tufa, the 2014 Shanghai Marathon champion, was the first Ethiopian to win the London women’s race since Derartu Tulu in 2001, with a 25th mile completed in just 5mins 07 secs enabling her to make a decisive breakaway in overcast and cool conditions.
“I’ve always dreamed about winning the London Marathon and I can’t say how happy I am that this has come true,” said Tufa who beat a field featuring the Kenyan quartet of defending champion Edna Kiplagat, Keitany, half-marathon world record holder Florence Kiplagat and Priscah Jeptoo, the London winner in 2013.
Edna Kiplagat finished down the field in 11th place.
The 2015 London Marathon also marked British distance-running heroine Paula Radcliffe’s farewell to the event.
No longer among the elite competitors, but running among the main field, the 41-year-old was bowing out on the same course where in 2003 she set a women’s world record of 2:15:25 that still stands.
However, Radcliffe’s career has been blighted by a series of injuries in recent years, with illness and fitness problems helping deny her an Olympic title. Radcliffe crossed the line on Sunday in a time of 2:36:55.
“Down the last mile I thought, ‘I don’t care about the time’. I just wanted to thank as many people as I could,” Radcliffe told the BBC after embracing husband Gary Lough and their two children, daughter Isla and son Raphael, at the finish.
“There was a big sign at Embankment saying ‘we will miss you’, but it won’t be as much as I will miss you.”
In the wheelchair races there was an American double, with Joshua George holding off Britain’s six-times London champion David Weir in a sprint finish, while Tatyana McFadden surged away in the women’s event to win the event for a third successive year.
Results
Men:
1. Eliud Kipchoge (KEN) 2hr 04 mins 42sec; 2. Wilson Kipsang (KEN) 2:04:47; 3. Dennis Kimetto (KEN) 2:05:50
Women: 1. Tigist Tufa (KEN) 2:23:22; 2. Mary Keitany (KEN) 02:23:40; 3. Tirfi Tsegaye (ETH) 02:23:41

Kenya’s Rotich, Ethiopia’s Hailu top in Hamburg
Kenya’s Lucas Rotich won a wet Hamburg Marathon yesterday while Meseret Hailu of Ethiopia topped the women’s race. Rotich clocked 2 hours 7 minutes 17 seconds on a rainy morning in northern Germany, half a minute ahead of Eritrea’s Ghirmay Ghebreslassie (2:07:47), with another Kenyan, Stephen Chebogut, third in 2:08:01.
Hailu topped the women’s race in 2:25:41 from Kenya’s Sylvia Kibet (2:26:16) and Beata Naigambo of Namibia (2:27:28).
The winners were far off the course records from Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge (2:05:30), and Ethiopia’s Netsanet Abeyo (2:24:12) at the 30th edition of the race in the city bidding for the 2024 Olympics.



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