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Boston Marathon
Synopsis by Larry Eder, Shooting Star Media; Photos by Victah/Photo Run April 19, 2004 Boston, MA For the Washington Running Report
The Women
The 108th running of the Boston marathon added a new tradition
to a race that is the synonym of the word "tradition." Twenty
thousand three hundred runners, the second largest field in
Boston history, were met with no wind and a starting temperature
of 85 degrees. For the first time, the women's start was 29 minutes before the
open and elite men's marathon start. Elfenesh Alemu of Ethiopia
took the lead at 5k, in a time of 18:01. Alemu and Catherine
Ndereba of Kenya (photo left), the 2000, 2001 Boston champion,
ran neck and neck through 55 minutes at 10 miles, 20 miles in
1:50:10 and they were together at 40k, in 2:16:36. At two hours,
eighteen minutes, Catherine Ndereba made a definite move, and
put some sixteen seconds between her and Alemu before the
finish (2:24:27). Ndereba's third win was the hardest, as she was in definite pain
at the end of this race. The duel between Ndereba and Alemu made
the women's start a huge success.
The Men
On the men's side, the pack hit 5k in 15:29, with former
champions Rodgers Rop and Robert Kiprotich Cheriyiut leading,
then hit ten miles in 49:44, breaking up the pack from 15 to
seven. Rodgers Rop, Timothy Cherigat, and Robert Cheriyuit ran
hard from ten miles to twenty miles, hit in 1:39:10. The hills
of Newton, from miles 16-21, were the deciding factors, plus the
horrible heat. Timothy Cherigat (photo left), whose training partner, Evans
Rutto, won London just yesterday, showed that a third time is a
charm. Cheriyuit broke Cheborer, Rodgers Rop, and Robert
Cheriyiut. Cheriyuit and Rop dropped out at 25 miles. Cherigat
kept his form and pushed miles 22 to 24 and by 24 the race was
his. He did not falter. Timothy Cherigat won the marathon in 2:10:37, which was amazing
considering the terrible heat. A note for running geeks--both
Cherigat and Ruto are coached by Dieter Baumann, the former
coach of Utta Pippig.
U.S. Finishers
The first American man was Christopher Zieman, who was 13th
overall,
running 2:25:45, and who has a personal best of 2:24.
Christopher is from Felton, CA. He is 32 and this is his
fifteenth marathon. Eric Post of Fairfax was second in
2:29:13!Mary Ann Protz of St. Petersburg, FL was the first U.S. woman;
she ran 2:57:58 and
finished fifteenth. Ruxton, MD's Lee DiPietro was sixteenth
overall and the second U.S. woman!
Complete Results for Local Finishers
See Local Finishers
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