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Ringer's late charge seals triumphant marathon gold for Germany in Munich
Home athlete Richard Ringer stole the show at the Odeonsplatz this
afternoon as a sprint finish saw him overtake the Israeli runner who seemed
to have had the race won, Maru Teferi, in the final 20 metres to claim gold
in 2:10:21 on the first day of the Munich 2022 European Athletics
Championships.
Teferi dedicated his medal to "all the families of the victims" of the
attack on Israeli athletes during the Munich 1972 Olympics.
But as the 32-year-old Ringer crossed the line he seemed momentarily unable
to believe what he had accomplished, pointing a finger questioningly at his
own chest before sinking down to place his forehead on the hot surface of
the Ludwigstrasse, the blue ribbon of the finishing tape wound around him.
European Athletics Twitter - Men's Marathon
Teferi took silver in 2:10:23 and was soon cavorting happily in the
strengthening sunshine with his teammate Gashau Ayale, who had won his
individual battle with the second German runner home, Amanal Petros, to
claim bronze in 2:10:29 with Petros clocking 2:10:39 in fourth.
The women's race, which had begun in overcast conditions, also finished in
dramatic circumstances as Poland's Aleksandra Lisowska, her face contorted
with effort, won an attritional contest in 2:28:36.
Having been 11 seconds clear at 41km, however, the Pole eventually had a
margin of just six seconds as Croatia's fast-finishing Matea Parlov Kostro
emerged from a wringing struggle between three chasing athletes to claim
silver in 2:28:42.
Had the course been a kilometre longer, it seemed she might have had gold.
Although the Polish winner begged to differ…
The bronze went - just - to former hockey player Nienke Brinkman of the
Netherlands from Germany's Miriam Dattke, with both being given the same
time of 2:28:52 after an extended and agonising struggle over the final
kilometre.
Ringer's late charge proves decisive for marathon gold
Ringer was one of five athletes who had broken clear by the 39km mark, with
Spain's longtime leader Ayad Lamdassem, fifth at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics,
also in the group.
At the 40 kilometre-mark Ringer, wearing a length of white material like a
ponytail down the back of his yellow peaked cap, gritted his teeth and
pushed into the lead.
Lamdassem found the pace too much, but, shortly afterwards, so did Ringer,
and he dropped off the lead at the 41km point, with his teammate Petros
taking up the challenge in front alongside Teferi.
The gold looked likely to go to one or other of them, with Ringer, now
minus his cap, in apparently dogged pursuit of bronze. But the race was not
yet run - and the expansive boulevard of Ludwigstrasse was to witness more
drama.
First Ringer passed his flagging colleague, who was shortly afterwards
overtaken by Ayale, but the distance between himself and Teferi seemed
insurmountable.
Step-by-step it got less so, until, to a roar of excitement from the home
fans packing the stands by the finish, Ringer wrung yet more out of himself
to pass the leader within a few strides of the line.
France's Nicolas Navarro was fifth in 2:10:41, with Lamdassem taking sixth
place in 2:10:52, one place ahead of the third Israeli home, Yimer Getahun.
That meant a comfortable team gold for Israel, with their first three
runners home compiling an aggregated time of 6:31.48, with Germany taking
silver on 6:35.52 and bronze going to Spain on 6:38.44.
"Although this is an individual event, the great motivation was the team
because we were going for a team medal and the chances were good to get
one," Ringer said.
"I would have never thought that this team spirit could be so strong and
help so much, like at the 35K or 37K, with all the pain you feel. Every
marathon is a surprise, now I am the champion of Europe. I started as a 5K
runner, this is why I finished strong."
Teferi, who arrived in Israel from Ethiopia in 2006 - four years before
Ayale took the same route - commented: "It was an excellent team effort of
the team Israel. We are very pleased with it, especially because these
championships mark the 50th anniversary of the tragic events that took
place here in Munich in 1972.
"I would like to dedicate this medal to all the families of the victims,
and to send my love to everyone. As soon as we realised that these
championships were going to take place here in Munich, we felt it in the
heart, an inner strength to the best we can to honour those families.
On the race itself, the silver medallist said: "I did not really see the
German athlete catching up, I only realised it when he was so close to the
finish line, but overall, I came second and I am very happy with this medal."
Lisowska and Parlov Kostro take a surprise one-two in the women's marathon
A couple of minutes before Lisowska also finished like a 5000m runner it
looked as if Parlov Kostro would be the one to miss out on medals in the
women's race as she lagged behind the other two athletes chasing the Polish
leader, Nienke Brinkman of the Netherlands and home runner Miriam Dattke,
and began looking behind her.
But from somewhere she found new energy, and the battle for bronze
continued all the way down Ludwigstrasse with Brinkman, flagging at the
line, just doing enough to make the podium ahead of Dattke.
While a medal may just have eluded the German runner, her time - and that
of colleagues - ensured gold was secured in the team event with a total
time of 7:28.48, with Spain taking silver in 7:39.25 and Poland bronze in
7:40.54.
"Before the race, I did not believe this could happen and still cannot
believe it right now that I am the European champion - even though I was
fully prepared for this, and I knew I was considered one of the medal
favourites, especially after breaking the Polish record last year," said
Lisowska.
"Even in the last 100m, when I turned around and saw the Croatian athlete
was coming closer, I was not worried. I knew I had it under control.
Actually, I was waiting for that moment so I could give it one final kick."
European Athletics Twitter - Women's Marathon
Parlov Kostro commented: "It was a really hard race with a lot of ups and
downs and the finish was especially hard. On the last kilometres, we were
in a group of four and I started to be very tired. In the last 500 metres,
I knew it was my last chance to come in front for a medal."
Brinkman, 28, only took up running seriously in 2020, during the pandemic,
and bettered Lornah Kiplagat's Dutch record in only her second marathon as
she clocked 2:22.51 in this year's Rotterdam race.
She reflected: "I really liked the race and I am so happy for the medal. It
is almost a fairy-tale, a race like this, my career is just starting."
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