FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2013 Boston Marathon Champion Lelisa Desisa (ETH) Wins 13th B.A.A.
Half Marathon, Presented By Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and The Jimmy Fund
Stephen Sambu (KEN) and Kim Smith (NZL) Each Win $100,000 USD Grand Prize
In The 2013 B.A.A. Distance Medley
BOSTON - 2013 Boston Marathon® champion Lelisa Desisa (ETH) and Kim
Smith (NZL) won the 13th B.A.A. Half Marathon, presented by Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund, under sunny skies in Boston's Franklin
Park. Desisa and Smith both broke the event record on this rolling course
through Boston's picturesque Emerald Necklace park system, running 1:00:34
and 1:09:14, respectively. Stephen Sambu (KEN), who placed third today, and
Smith won the 2013 B.A.A. Distance Medley and earned $100,000 each.
The 13th B.A.A. Half Marathon is the third and final event of the 2013
B.A.A. Distance Medley, a three-race series which combines the B.A.A. 5K on
April 14, the B.A.A. 10K on June 23, and the B.A.A. Half Marathon. Sambu,
25-years old, and Smith, 31, won $100,000 each as the male and female with
the fastest cumulative time in the three-race series.
Desisa, 25, remembering his victory in the 117th Boston Marathon just six
months ago, smiled at the cheers from the crowd at the finish line inside
White Stadium. "I like the people of Boston, and I am considering myself
now one of the people of Boston," said the reigning Boston Marathon
champion.
Desisa will be remembered in Boston for more than his victory on April 15,
2013. He also returned for the B.A.A. 10K on June 23, where he gifted his
Boston Marathon winner's medallion to Mayor Thomas M. Menino in a gesture
of solidarity with the City of Boston and as a tribute to those who were
affected by the events of April 15.
Following the B.A.A. 10K, Sambu held a 26-second lead over Daniel Salel
(KEN) on the B.A.A. Distance Medley Leader Board. 2012 B.A.A. Distance
Medley champion Allan Kiprono (KEN) and 2012 B.A.A. Distance Medley
runner-up Lani Rutto (KEN), were both within one minute of the overall
lead.
In the early stages of the race, a pack of more than ten runners controlled
the pace, passing the first mile marker in 4:26, two miles in 9:06, and
reaching 5K in 14:11. Kiprono and Rutto led the pack by a step in these
first few miles, as Rutto took the pace-setting duties until the sixth
mile. Passing the 10K mark in 28:17, Kiprono made a move to take the lead
by a step, but the pack remained largely unchanged.
By the eight-mile mark, the lead pack was narrowed to Sambu, Salel,
Kiprono, Desisa, and Sam Chelanga (KEN). Following a 4:22 mile split in the
ninth mile, Salel and Sambu took the lead and raced side-by-side.
The four runners clocked consecutive 4:48 splits for the next two miles,
passing the 11-mile mark in 50:52. As they entered the Franklin Park Zoo,
the runners remained together. Desisa said later that he had made his
decision to start pressing and pushing at 10 miles, but it was in the zoo
in the eleventh mile that Desisa made a decisive move, using the narrow
pathways to his advantage. As Sambu noted after the race, "When Lelisa
sprinted inside there, we just followed him."
The crowd inside White Stadium stood and cheered as Desisa broke the tape
in 1:00:34. Salel and Sambu finished second and third, respectively, and
both were recorded with a time of 1:00:41. Also finishing under Kiprono's
old event record of 1:01:44 were Chelanga and Rutto, finishing in fourth
and fifth respectively.
After the race, Sambu, who lives and trains in Arizona, discussed his plans
to use his $100,000 grand prize winnings in the B.A.A. Distance Medley to
buy water purification resources for his native village in Eldoret, Kenya,
where his family still lives.
"I know back home, we don't have those things; we don't have clean water,"
Sambu said. "It's really bad. So that's my plan … I really want to make a
little bit of a change in my village. If I would be able to do that, it's
going to be a really big deal for my village."
As for Desisa, his victory in today's race brought memories of the cheering
crowds at the Boston Marathon. When asked if he plans to run the 2014
Boston Marathon, Desisa said, "I come, I come. I will do more training to
win Boston again."
KIM SMITH DEFENDS BOTH B.A.A. HALF MARATHON AND B.A.A. DISTANCE MEDLEY
CROWNS
For the second consecutive year, New Zealand Olympian Kim Smith asserted
her dominance at the B.A.A. Half Marathon, claiming victory in a course
record time of 1:09:14. The 31-year-old resident of Providence, R.I., led
from start to finish, going on to successfully defend not only her race
title, but also the B.A.A. Distance Medley crown.
With her win, Smith becomes only the second women's champion in race
history to win the B.A.A. Half Marathon two years in a row.
"It's really cool!" Smith said moments after breaking the finish tape, who
had both her parents from New Zealand and her in-laws from Maine present to
watch her run. "Living in Providence and coming up here to race was an easy
choice... It's just amazing."
Shortly after leaving the start in Boston's Franklin Park, Smith found
herself out front with Ethiopia's Aheza Kiros and Kenya's Alice Kimutai
tagging alongside. The three would pass five kilometers in 15:52, then five
miles in 25:39.
Running in her first race since June's B.A.A. 10K, Smith came into today's
event holding a one minute, eleven second advantage in the B.A.A. Distance
Medley standings. Knowing she would have to push the pace for her chance at
the $100,000 grand prize, Smith kept her foot on the gas pedal, leading
every step of the early miles.
"I just tried to set a pretty decent pace and drop them," Smith said. "The
first 10K was pretty fast."
Together through 10 kilometers in 31:48.7, it appeared Smith and Kiros
would race neck-and-neck through the final half of the contest. But moments
before reaching the seven mile mark, Smith put any thoughts of a duel to
rest. Pumping her arms ferociously, the three-time Olympian eased away from
Kiros. A five second lead soon became ten seconds, then 34 seconds at the
nine mile mark.
"Once they dropped off I knew they must be tired, and I felt pretty good at
that stage. I thought 'I think I got it,'" Smith said.
All by herself, Smith continued to push over the latter stages of the race,
through Franklin Park Zoo and into White Stadium with no woman in sight. By
then it was clear the previous course record of 1:10:52 would be beaten.
The only question was by how much.
The answer wound up being one minute and 38 seconds, as Smith broke the
tape with 1:09:14 reading on the clock. Though she easily secured the
course record, Smith said it was never on her mind.
"I knew I was running pretty fast going through 10K. I didn't really worry
about course records. I just wanted to win," she said. "I was just running
and felt pretty good."
Defending her race title and picking up the B.A.A. Distance Medley victory
was a thrill, Smith added.
Behind Smith, Kiros would finish second in 1:10:03, with Kimutai third in
1:10:37. Kristen Fryburg-Zaitz was the top American in fourth, timing
1:13:12.
"It's always great when you can be the first American," said Fryburg-Zaitz.
"I'm thrilled to be at this race and be here for Boston. With what happened
in April, this is just a great opportunity to prove how strong American
distance runners are."
In the push rim wheelchair division, Tony Nogueira, of New Jersey, won his
eighth B.A.A. Half Marathon title, finishing in 55:06. Carla Trodella, of
Massachusetts, won the women's wheelchair division in 2:12:25.
Joseph Ekuom, of New York, won the masters division in 1:13:38. Scituate,
MA resident Holly Madden won the women's masters division, running 1:28:01.
Behind the day's top finishers, an event record crowd of 6,535 participants
started the race. Also in the field were nearly 650 runners representing
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, who are raising funds to improve patient care
and cancer research at Dana-Farber. The B.A.A. Half Marathon has been
presented annually by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund since
2003. Dana-Farber runners have raised more than $4 million USD through this
event over the past 11 years.
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