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Kenyans use high-energy tunes to drive them to Suzuki Rock 'N' Roll Marathon titles
June 3, 2002
Courtesy: Toni Reavis/Running USA
On a typical San Diego morning with a
welcome marine layer hanging over the low sixty degree city,
Kenyans Sammy
Korir and Alice Chelangat took top honors at the 5th Suzuki Rock
`n` Roll
Marathon, earning them over $70,000 in cash and Suzuki prizes,
including an
XL-7 SUV. Nearly 21,000 participants followed the two champions
to the
historic Marine Corps Recruit Depot finish line, making this the
largest
gathering in event history.
For Korir it was his sixth marathon title in ten career starts,
and he came
within two seconds of his sixth sub-2:09, averaging 4:50 per
mile over the
last 10K. Korir's 2:09:01 winning time was the second fastest
ever in San
Diego, only twenty-seven seconds off Philip Tarus' 1999 course
record. But
his 30:04 final 10K was by far the quickest homecoming, 1:14
better than
Tarus' 1999 run.
"When we reached 22 miles I tried to push and I realized no one
was coming,"
said the champion of his effort. "I hope I proved myself with my
performance
today."
Korir's last two miles, 4:46 and 4:49, were the best back-to-
back miles of
the day, and put the polish on his 1:23 winning margin over
fellow Kenyan
Stephen Ndungu, the two-time Los Angeles Marathon champion.
As he pulled away from a stubborn Ndungu and a debuting Kenyan,
David Ruto,
with a 4:49 22nd mile, Korir heard the band along the side of
the road
playing Bachman Turner Overdrive's classic, "Taking Care of
Business".
"The music helped to energize me along the course," remarked
Korir who had
dropped out of the Rotterdam Marathon in April with a tight back
at 30K.
Ndungu took second for the second straight year. His 2:10:23
represented a
four second personal best over his winning time in Los Angeles
in March. The
1998-1999 Suzuki Rock 'n' Roll Marathon champion, Philip Tarus,
sprinted past
training partner David Ruto in the final 100 meters for third.
Kenyans
claimed the top ten places at the race.
Pre-race women's favorite, Alice Chelangat, trained with two-
time race
champion and course record holder, Margaret Okayo, in Brescia,
Italy, hoping
to challenge the 2:25:05 mark set here by Okayo in 2001. But a
tight right
calf muscle cropped up the day before the race limiting her
ability to push.
"I did not know when or if it would go away," said Alice of her
problem, "but
the longer the race went, the better it was feeling."
Russians Irina Safarova and Olgo Kovpotina joined Chelangat
through 15
kilometers in 52:47, a 2:28:45 pace. By 20K, Kovpotina found the
pace too
taxing, and at the half-marathon point, beginning a loop around
scenic
Mission Bay park (1:14:06), only Safarova remained with the
young Kenyan.
While Chelangat focused entirely on the San Diego race, Safarova
had
previously run the London Marathon on April 14th, taking 11th in
2:29:20. She
had also won the 2001 California International Marathon and
finished third in
Long Beach earlier in the year.
Sensing she had to put Chelangat away early, Safarova surged at
191/2 miles,
putting 15 meters on Alice. But Chelgangat responded
immediately, closing the
gap and accepting the challenge. By 23 miles it was the Kenyan
with a
punishing move, and now the 32 year-old Russian couldn't handle
it.
"I wanted to push the pace, but my legs would not go," chuckled
the affable C
helangat after her 2:29:56 win. "The best thing for me was
hearing the music
and hearing the people cheering 'go, go, go'. The people here
are so friendly
- they helped me to run faster today."
Safarova finished second, fifty seconds behind Chalangat in
2:30:46, followed
by 1999 champion Irina Bogacheva, who closed fast to grab third
in 2:31:33,
also winning the Masters competition.
The record field of runners and walkers were inspired by more
than 40 bands
and 40 high school cheerleading squads along the course and were
treated to a
Sugar Ray post-race concert at Coors Amphitheatre.
5th Suzuki Rock 'n' Roll Marathon
San Diego, CA, Sunday, June 2, 2002 MEN
1) Sammy Korir, 30, Kenya, 2:09:01, $10,000 plus Suzuki XL-7
SUV, DF40 Outboard Marine Engine, Eiger QuadRunner ATV, Intruder
Volusia 800 Motorcycle
2) Stephen Ndungu, 35, Kenya, 2:10:24, $5,000 plus Aerio SX
Sport Crossover Vehicle
3) Philip Tarus, 27, Kenya, 2:11:34, $3,000 plus Intruder
Volusia 800 Motorcycle
4) David Ruto, 22, Kenya, 2:11:38, $2,500 plus DF40 Outboard
Motor
5) John Kiruiki, 33, Kenya, 2:12:51, $2,000 plus Eiger
QuadRunner ATV
6) James Wainaina, 20, Kenya, 2:13:34, $2,000
7) Benson Mbithi, 23, Kenya, 2:13:48, $1,300
8) Eric Kimaiyo, 32, Kenya, 2:13:49, $1,200
9) Joseph Kibor, 29, Kenya, 2:14:36, $1,100
10) James Karanja, 25, Kenya, 2:14:59, $1,000 WOMEN
1) Alice Chelangat, 25, Kenya, 2:29:56, $10,000 plus Suzuki
XL-7 SUV, DF40 Outboard Marine Engine, Eiger QuadRunner ATV,
Intruder Volusia 800 Motorcycle
2) Irina Safarova, 32, Russia, 2:30:46, $5,000 plus Aerio SX
Sport Crossover Vehicle
3) Irina Bogacheva, 41, Kyrzygstan, 2:31:33, $3,000 plus
Intruder Volusia 800 Motorcycle, plus $1,000 first Masters
4) Olga Kovpotina, 32, Russia, 2:38:45, $2,500 plus DF40
Outboard Motor
5) Natalya Galushko, 30, Belarus, 2:39:08, $2,000 plus Eiger
QuadRunner ATV
6) Hellen Kipkoskei, 33, Kenya, 2:40:44, $2,000
7) Irina Suvorova, 30, Russia, 2:41:15, $1,300
8) Janice Posey, 34, Tuba City, AZ, 2:49:35, $1,200
9) Lori Ready, 25, CA, 2:50:22, $1,100
10) Gadessa Edato, 29, Ethiopia, 2:51:52, $1,000 For full results and more, visit www.RnRMarathon.com
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