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Press Release - RAK Half-Marathon - 2/14/14

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                     Special Depth - But What if...
 
Astonishing strength in depth of results but only after painfully slow 
starts, were the underlining features of the 8th RAK Half Marathon, with 
the victories of Ethiopia's 2013 Boston Champion Lelisa Desisa in 59:36 and 
last year's London Champion Priscah Jeptoo in 67:02, inevitably topping the 
early world rankings for the year. Both received just the boost they need 
as the defence of their respective titles approaches, but a blend of 
admiration and frustration was the toxic mix left for observers who 
realised not far in to the race, that an opportunity was being missed on 
this clear, still, Friday morning in the UAE.

The distinct feeling of "What if...?" was the result of the men covering 
their first 5k in a  pedestrian 14:31, while the women relatively speaking, 
were even slower, reaching that mark in 17:14 - virtually training pace for 
many of them. Well before half way, both races livened up, but despite the 
front-running efforts of Bernard Koech (4th in 56:43) and eventual winner 
Jeptoo, in the men's and women's races respectively, the chance for 
super-fast times had already been lost.

After that initial reluctance to attack the distance, things livened up 
markedly in the men's race, with Koech, Desisa and eventual third placer 
Wilson Kiprop pushing the tempo, resulting in a 10k split of 28:30 after a 
14:01 segment for the pack of ten. This was more like it and when the 
leaders reached 15k in 42:38 (14:08), with only Jacob Kendagor and Ibrahim 
Jeilan tailing off, a sub-60 minute clocking looked on the cards yet again.

That middle 10k had taken a meagre 28:09, but there was no let-up as Koech, 
under the hour in his last four half marathons, continued to be the 
aggressor. Sadly for him, he did little to dent the form of several rivals 
however, the main beneficiaries being eventual winner Desisa and Eritrea's 
late developer Nguse Amlosom. This pair cut loose with 3km to go, with 
initially the unheralded Amlosom, despite a modest best of 60:46, looking 
the better of the two. A kilometre later though, the marathon strength of 
Desisa enabled him to dig deeper and he won the critical gap of a few 
metres that he would eventually hold to the line.

The pace from 15km to 20km (14:02) meant the 15k after the slow start, was 
covered in a vicious 42:11 (28:10 second 10k) with the final 1.1km taking 
Desisa just 2:56 - or about 2:40 for the final kilometre. But while the 
pair drew clear, there was little room for error; behind them the next six 
athletes battled on gamely and it was here that the results were special. 
Wilson Kiprop's 59:45 garnered third but behind him, Koech was 4th just one 
second down, Bernard Kipyego was another second back, Micah Kogo set a PB 
of 59:49 in 6th, Feyisa Lilesa was 7th in 59:51 and Paul Lonyangata set a 
fastest-ever 8th place time of 59:54. Never before have eight men broken 
the hour in the same half marathon.

By contrast, despite their similarly slow opening 5km, the women's race was 
blown apart by Priscah Jeptoo, who on this winning form looks to have 
picked up in 2014 where she left off in New York last November. Her 
acceleration over the 5km to 10k (32:41) meant a 15:27 split, with only 
Flomena Cheyech, Guteni Shone and Helah Kiprop able to stay within a few 
seconds of her notoriously flailing gait. What came next was mighty 
impressive: she covered the 5km segment between 10k and 15k in another 
15:27, so 30:54 for that middle 10k and after that there was still little 
let-up. She hit 20km in 63:45 (15:37) and it was that split that really did 
the damage. Her lead as she headed in to the final 1.1km and the long home 
straight had reached a yawning 62 seconds and the race was all but over. 
Even then this quietly spoken 29 year old mother and businesswoman pushed 
hard, covering the final 1.1km in 3:17 to win by a massive 71 seconds.

Without doubt she could have gone a minute or more faster, and while we'll 
never know exactly what she could have run, to suggest that Mary Keitany's 
three year old world record of 65:50 would have been under serious threat, 
is likely no exaggeration. Behind her, the next eight athletes broke 70:00, 
with Guteni Shone in third broaching new ground (68:31) while Mare Dibaba, 
who tops the world marathon rankings after her win in Xiamen on Jan 2nd 
(2:21:36), looked less than fully recovered from her Chinese exertions with 
a 68:56 clocking for sixth.

Ultimately only Jeptoo came out of the women's race with added credit, her 
main rivals well beaten with namesake Rita a subdued 5th in 68:49. For the 
men's part, while any sub-60 performance has to be respected, bearing in 
mind the glorious conditions that prevailed, their slow start was 
disappointing. What if both races had gone out a little quicker - say 14:10 
for the men and 16:00 for the women? What if there had been pacemakers 
instead of just a hope that the athletes would lay down their own good 
tempo, as last year? And what if the main protagonists were less focused 
upon their spring marathon effort and actually targeted this Half as an end 
in itself. There is undoubtedly a lot more to come from the RAK Half in 
years to come.

Top 10 results with 5km splits:

MEN                       5km   10km     15km     20km     Time 
1  Lelisa Desisa      ETH 14:32 28:31:00 42:39:00 56:40:00 59:36 
2  Nguse Amlosom      ERI 14:32 28:30:00 42:39:00 56:40:00 59:39 
3  Wilson Kiprop      KEN 14:31 28:30:00 42:39:00 56:45:00 59:45 
4  Bernard Koech      KEN 14:31 28:30:00 42:38:00 56:43:00 59:46 
5  Bernard Kipyego    KEN 14:32 28:31:00 42:39:00 56:45:00 59:47 
6  Micah Kogo         KEN 14:31 28:30:00 42:39:00 56:45:00 59:49 
7  Feyisa Lilesa      ETH 14:32 28:31:00 42:39:00 56:45:00 59:51 
8  Paul Lonyangata    KEN 14:32 28:31:00 42:39:00 56:44:00 59:54 
9  Jacob Kendagor     KEN 14:31 28:30:00 43:16:00 58:11:00 1:01:27 
10  Ibrahim Jeilan    ETH 14:31 28:31:00 43:19:00 58:23:00 1:01:47 
 
WOMEN                     5km   10km     15km     20km     Time 
1 Priscah Jeptoo      KEN 17:14 32:41:00 48:08:00 1:03:43  1:07:02 
2 Flomena Cheyech     KEN 17:14 32:45:00 48:41:00 1:04:45  1:08:13 
3 Guteni Shone        ETH 17:14 32:46:00 48:48:00 1:05:03  1:08:31 
4 Helah Kiprop        KEN 17:14 32:45:00 48:46:00 1:05:07  1:08:36 
5 Rita Jeptoo         KEN 17:14 32:52:00 48:59:00 1:05:10  1:08:49 
6 Mare Dibaba         ETH 17:14 32:59:00 49:06:00 1:05:20  1:08:56 
7 Feyse Tadese        ETH 17:14 32:59:00 49:24:00 1:05:53  1:09:19 
8 Aberu Kebede        ETH 17:14 32:52:00 49:08:00 1:05:53  1:09:22 
9 Worknesh Degefa     ETH 17:15 32:59:00 49:07:00 1:05:54  1:09:43 
10 Caroline Kilel     KEN 17:14 33:13:00 49:58:00 1:06:53  1:10:33 

                                  ###

 

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