Sport

Bekele was not wearing ‘Breaking2 shoes’, say Nike

Bekele was not wearing ‘Breaking2 shoes’, say Nike

April 25, 2017 | 08:49 PM
Ethiopiau2019s Kenenisa Bekele runs during the Menu2019s elite race at the London marathon in London. (AFP)
The running shoes that Kenenisa Bekele blamed for his struggles in Sunday’s London Marathon were not the revolutionary new model designed for use in the Breaking2 attempt on a sub-two hour marathon, manufacturers Nike said yesterday.Track superstar Bekele was on world record pace and looking strong at halfway during Sunday’s race but then dropped back dramatically before staging a superb recovery to finish second behind Kenya’s Daniel Wanjiru. He later said that his problems had been caused by blistering from new shoes and that he had to change his running style to enable him to pick up his pace.It was thought at the time that triple Olympic champion Bekele was wearing Nike’s new Zoom Vaporfly Elite shoes, which will be worn by Eliud Kipchoge, Lelisa Desisa and Zersenay Tadese in their attempt to run a sub-two-hour marathon in Italy next month.However, Nike said on Tuesday that Bekele was wearing their Zoom Vaporfly 4% shoes and that the Vaporfly Elite were being used only by the three Breaking2 athletes.“As he has done in previous marathons, Bekele ran in the Zoom Vaporfly 4%, in which he set an Ethiopian record and the second-fastest time in history on a record-eligible course in Berlin,” a spokesman said.“We are working closely with Bekele to understand what happened.” Radcliffe urges Griffiths not to rush in search for coachJosh Griffiths, the fastest Briton at the recent London Marathon, must not rush into a search for a coach, women’s world marathon record holder Paula Radcliffe has said. The self-taught amateur beat elite runners and became the fastest British male to complete the marathon with a time of two hours 14 minutes and 49 seconds on Sunday and will be named in Great Britain’s team for the World Championships. Radcliffe, a former Olympian and the women’s world record holder for marathons with a time of two hours, 15 minutes and 25 seconds, said that Griffiths must take his time before hiring a coach. “I would not rush into getting a coach because whatever he is doing is working well,” Radcliffe told British media. “It can become a weight when you make a breakthrough, so he needs to keep working and build on this at championships.
April 25, 2017 | 08:49 PM