MarathonGuide.com Logo - Marathon Directory, Marathons, Marathon Results, News and More Click Here: Please visit our Sponsor facebook icon  twitter icon
Site Map
 
   Marathon Press Releases
 

Press Release - Odds And Ends - 4/8/18

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

               Ethiopians Jemal Yimer And Buze Diriba Win 
               2018 Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile

1984 Olympic Gold Medalist Joan Benoit Samuelson sets single-age and age 
group records for women 60-64.

April 8, 2018, Washington, DC: On his first trip to America, 21-year-old 
Jemal Yimer broke away from a dwindling lead group in the last mile of 
today's Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile Run to win the race in a time 
of 46:17. His compatriot Buze Diriba won the women's race in 53:45 after 
finishing second here the past two years. In a race full of stories, 
another highlight was 60-year-old Joan Benoit Samuelson's single-age and 
60-64 age group record for women of 1:07:56. 

Given the dire weather forecast of snow on Saturday night earlier in the 
week, runners and race organizers were delighted to awake to clear blue 
skies and peak cherry blossoms this morning. While it was a cold 35 degrees 
at the start, conditions were ideal for racing, though it was a bit too 
windy for really fast times up front.

This year's race, often called The Runner's Rite of SpringĀ®, was the 
Professional Road Racing Organization's (PRRO) 2018 Championship event as 
well as the Road Runners Club of America (RRCA) National Championship. As 
such, there was a total of $14,900 paid to eligible runners, on top of the 
usual $90,000 in prize money and bonuses on offer. As broken down below, 
today's actual payout totaled $79,900.

A large pack of over 20 men ran together through five miles, with 15 men 
still side-by-side at seven miles, when eventual third place finisher 
Philip Langat dropped the pace from 4:37 to 4:26 over the eighth mile. This 
had the effect of reducing the single-file line of leaders to just five 
runners. Langat continued to push the pace, and was joined at the front by 
eventual second-place finisher Aweke Ayalew Yimer and winner Jemal Yimer. 
At the finish, times were close for the top three, with Aweke Ayalew Yimer 
running 46:22 and Langat running 46:25, in comparison to Jimal Yimer's 
46:17. Top American Chris Derrick, who ran at the front of the pack through 
10 kilometers before dropping to as far back as eighth place, rallied to 
finish fifth overall in a time of 46:53.

Jimal Yimer, who is looking forward to a little sightseeing in our Nation's 
Capital before heading home, won a total of $10,500 - $8,000 for the 
overall win, and $2,500 for becoming the 2017-2018 PRRO Champion. He also 
became the 2018 RRCA National 10 Mile Champion. Aweke Ayalew Yimer, from 
Burundi, won $4,000 for his second place effort; Kenyan Philip Langat won 
$2,000 for third place; Kenyan James Kibet won $1,500 for his 46:36 fourth 
place effort; Chris Derrick won a total of $6,000 - $1,000 for fifth place 
and $5,000 for being first American; early pace setter Edwin Kibichiy, of 
Kenya, won $900 for his 46:55 sixth place effort; and Libyan Mohamed Hrezi 
won $800 for his 46:58 seventh place run. American Abbabiya Simbassa won a 
total of $4,400 for his 47:04: $700 for eighth place, $2,500 for second 
American and $1,200 for being the first male RRCA Road Scholar or Run Pro 
Camper (Simbassa was a RunPro Camper in 2016).

Rounding out the top-ten overall were Americans Matthew McClintock - ninth 
in 47:10 - and Andrew Colley, tenth in 47:12. McClintock's check for the 
day totaled $2,100 ($600 for ninth overall and $1,500 for third American), 
while Colley's totaled $1,500 ($500 for tenth overall and $1,000 for fourth 
American).

Josh Izewski won $800 for his 47:26 as fifth American: Tyler McCandless was 
sixth American in 48:34 and won $600; Kiya Dandena was seventh American in 
48:37 and won $400; John Crain ran 49:16 to win $300 as the eighth American 
runner; Luke Puskedra won $200 for his 49:28 ninth place American finish; 
and Mark Leininger won $200 for his 49:30 tenth-place American effort. 

Through the middle miles of the women's race, Ethiopian compatriots Buze 
Diriba and Hiwot Gebrekidan, who won here last year, took shelter behind 
four other runners: Ethiopians Hiwot Yemer and Alemitu Hawi, American Diane 
Nukuri, and Kenyan Vicoty Chepngeno. At the finish, Diriba prevailed in a 
time of 53:45 to win $18,000 and the titles of 2017-2018 PRRO Champion and 
2018 RRCA National 10 Mile Champion. Diriba's payday was considerably 
larger than men's winner Jemal Yimer's $10,500 because, as the winner of 
the 2017 Lilac Bloomsday 12K PRRO Circuit Race, she won the PRRO Super 
Bonus of $10,000, which only winners of 2017-18 PRRO Circuit Races were 
eligible to win.

Gebrekidan, who finished just three seconds behind Diriba in 53:48, won 
$4,000; Yemer ran 53:51 to finish third and win $2,000; Hawi was fourth in 
53:53 and won $1,500; Nukuri won a total of $6,000 for her 53:56 fifth 
place overall ($1,000) and top American finish ($5,000); while Chepngeno 
won $900 for her 53:59 sixth place effort.

American runners rounded out the overall top-ten, with Emma Bates finishing 
seventh overall and second American, and winning a total of $4,500 for her 
54:45 run ($800 for seventh, $2,500 for second American, and $1,200 for 
being the first female RRCA Road Scholar or Run Pro Camper - she was a 2017 
RRCA Roads Scholar grant recipient). Bethany Sachtleben ran 54:59 to win 
$2,200 for her eighth place overall ($700) and third-place American finish 
($1,500); Samantha Bluske ran 55:19 and won $1,600 ($600/$1,000); and 
Alaphine Tuliamuk was the final "double dipper," winning $1,300 total 
($500/$800) for her tenth place overall and fifth American 55:43 run.

The next five American women also took home American Development Prize 
Money: Sydney Devore was sixth American in 55:44 ($600); Katy Moen was 
seventh in 56:04 ($400); Lindsay Flanagan was eighth in 56:30 ($300); 
Amanda Marino was ninth in 57:13 ($200); and Anna Farello was tenth 
American in 57:28 ($200).

In addition to Joan Benoit Samuelson's stellar record run, two other 
Olympic medalists ran well today. Matthew Centrowitz, who won Olympic Gold 
in the 1500 Meters in Rio in 2016, ran 50:38 as a hard training run; Meb 
Keflezighi, Silver Medalist in the Marathon in Athens in 2004, ran 58:01 to 
pace a large group of runners hoping to break 60-minutes. 

Ben Beach, running his 46th Cherry Blossom Ten Mile, and looking forward to 
running his 52nd consecutive Boston Marathon in just eight days, finished 
in a time of 1:50:03.

In the Credit Union Cherry Blossom 5k Run-Walk, presented by Hood Cottage 
Cheese, Logan Yu ran 16:05 to win, Hibah Abuhamdieh won the women's race in 
20:24, and 93-year-old Dixon Hemphill ran 1:06:44 to finish a Cherry 
Blossom event for the 30th time since 1984, and up his total miles run at 
the race to 245.

In the male push-rim wheelchair race, John Payne won in a time of 1:08:06. 
There were no women push-rim wheelchair competitors.

Over 27,000 runners submitted applications to participate in the 2018 
Credit Union Cherry Blossom 10 Mile and 5K Run-Walk, and the list of 
accepted runners represented all 50 states and 14 foreign countries. There 
were 16,661 official finishers in the Ten Mile and 2,529 in the 5K 
Run-Walk.

The 2018 event marked the 17th year of title sponsorship by Credit Union 
Miracle Day. Since 2002, over $8 million has been raised for the Children's 
Miracle Network Hospitals, including $380,000 from this year's race.

About the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile: 

The Credit Union Cherry Blossom, organized by Cherry Blossom, Inc., a 
501c(3) chapter of the Road Runners Club of America, is known as "The 
Runner's Rite of SpringĀ®" in the Nation's Capital. The staging area for the 
event is on the Washington Monument Grounds and the course passes in sight 
of all of the major Washington, DC Memorials. The event serves as a 
fundraiser for the Children's Miracle Network Hospitals, a consortium of 
170 premier children's hospitals across North America. About one-third of 
the funds raised support Washington, DC's own Children's National 
("Children's Hospital"). The event also funds two $5,000 Road Runners Club 
of America "Roads Scholar" grants designed to support up-and-coming U.S. 
distance running talent.

The event is a proud member of the PRRO Circuit (PRRO.org), a series of 
non-marathon prize money road races in Tampa, FL; Washington, DC; Spokane, 
WA; Utica, NY; and Pittsburgh, PA, with the 2018 PRRO Championships to be 
hosted by the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile on April 8. The circuit 
is committed to a drug-free sport and funds Clearidium to conduct drug 
testing at all circuit events in compliance with the standards of 
international and U.S. drug testing authorities.

In addition to being sanctioned by USA Track & Field and the Road Runners 
Club of America, the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Run has earned Gold Level 
Inspire Certification from the Council for Responsible Sport in recognition 
of its legacy of commitment to sustainability and thoughtful resource 
management. To learn more, visit www.CherryBlossom.org. 

Credit Union Miracle Day, Inc., a consortium of credit unions and credit 
union suppliers in partnership with CUNA Mutual Group and PSCU, is the 
title sponsor of the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile Run 5K Run-Walk 
and Kids' Run. Hood Cottage Cheese is the presenting sponsor of the 5K 
Run-Walk. Supporting sponsors include Baroody Camps, E-Trade, Garmin, 
Gatorade, GEICO, Gold's Gym, Mamma Lucia, MedStar Sports Medicine, Navy 
Federal Credit Union, Old Ox Brewery, Potomac River Running, Suburban 
Solutions, and Under Armour.

About America's Credit Unions:

Credit unions provide consumers choices for financial services such as 
checking accounts, investments and loans of all kinds including mortgages. 
Funds are federally insured, but unlike banks, there are no stockholders at 
credit unions. Earnings are returned to member-owners in the form of lower 
loan rates, higher savings rates, low or no-fee products and services. The 
credit union philosophy of placing members' needs first is why more than 
113 million Americans do their banking at one of America's 5,800 credit 
unions. Credit unions are for everyone - no matter where you live, there is 
a credit union to meet your needs.

                                     ###

 

Some Ads

Become an Advertiser

Click Here: Please visit our Sponsor

Click Here: Please visit our Sponsor

Click Here: Please visit our Sponsor

Click Here: Please visit our Sponsor

Become an Advertiser



All material Copyright ©2000-2024 MarathonGuide.com LLC (MarathonGuide.com). All rights Reserved.
Please Contact Us for more information.

MarathonGuide.com makes no representations as to the accuracy of information on this site or its suitability for any use. | privacy policy | refund policy