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Marathon News - McCann Gets Dramatic Win In Commonwealth Marathon

Mar-19-2006

McCann Gets Dramatic Win In Commonwealth Marathon

(c) Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved

MELBOURNE (19-Mar) -- Home country favorite Kerryn McCann defended her
Commonwealth Games marathon title in dramatic fashion here today, while
Samson Ramadhani took the men's marathon gold in what turned into a showdown
between the traditional African rivals of Tanzania and Kenya. Theirs were
the first gold medals as the athletics program at the 18th Commonwealth
Games opened today.

Off of a very slow early pace --just 18:45 through the first 5 km-- the 38
year-old McCann remained patient and was unperturbed when the young
Tanzanians, Josephine Akunaay (formerly Deemay) and Sarah Majah, launched a
few surges. The pack easily withstood those efforts to disband it, and
through the 20 km mark (1:12:23) ten women were still in contention: McCann
and her two Australian teammates Kate Smyth and Lauren Shelley, Hellen
Cherono of Kenya, Lioudmila Kortchaguina of Canada, Mamoroallo Tjoka of
Lesotho, Tracey Morris of Wales, Hayley Haining and Susan Partridge of
Scotland, and Akunaay of Tanzania.

The early slow pace was fine with McCann. "I just wanted to run with the
group, with the pack, and see what happens after that," McCann said later.

McCann picked up the pace just after 20 km and the pack stretched out a bit
through half-way (1:16:23), but ten women were still within striking
distance of the lead. McCann felt it was time to cut the group down to
size. Surging again, she shed six of her rivals. Now, only she, Cherono,
Yelling, and Akunaay remained in contention.

"I spoke to my coach and my manager (Nic Bideau) beforehand and he said I
wasn't allowed to do anything until halfway," McCann recounted after the
race. "I wanted to kick it along a bit just to see what would happen."

McCann remained in control, gently pressing the pace. Soon, the plucky
Tanzanian had fallen back, and McCann, Cherono and Yelling were running
single file through 30 km. But Yelling was beginning to feel the effects of
McCann's surges, and had to make a decision.

"I was just trying to keep myself going at a nice even rhythm," said Yelling
who said that the pace had just gotten a little too fast. "Trying to keep
it strong to the end instead of crawling into the stadium."

So, from 32 km to the finish, it would be McCann and the 22 year-old
Cherono. The Kenyan fixed her gaze on McCann's heels and would not lead.
The kilometers clicked by; the wait was excruciating.

"I wasn't really thinking anything, really," McCann said of those final
kilometers. "I started getting cramps in my calves at 38 K and I was hoping
they would hold out by the finish."

The pair passed 40 km in 2:23:23, and just a few meters later McCann grabbed
a drink and began to press the pace again, taking a one-stride lead. But
Cherono would not let her go, responding immediately. Moments later, they
began to ascend the footbridge which spans the rail yards outside the
stadium. McCann hit the crest of the bridge with a two-stride lead, but
Cherono closed on the descent.
When they turned into the stadium with 300m to go, McCann had at most one
stride on Cherono. Down the backstraight the sprint began, with McCann on
the inside. Rounding turn-3, the Australian opened a small lead, but this
time Cherono could not answer. Coming out of turn-4, the lead was perhaps
three strides, and with the near-capacity crowd in the MCG roaring in
approval, McCann reached a full sprint to cross the line in 2:30:54,
following in the steps of Lisa Martin who had defended her title for
Australia in 1990.

"I think it's probably the greatest victory I've ever had, the greatest race
I've ever run," said McCann. "I've never had to sprint like that at the end
of a marathon. It's some thing I'll cherish forever."

Cherono crossed just two seconds later, setting a personal best and
clinching the silver. Yelling entered the stadium shortly thereafter, to
nab her first international medal with a 2:32:19 effort.

"Awesome," said Yelling when asked to describe the feeling of getting a
medal.


ISEGWE BOLTS TO FAST PACE, BUT NEVER SAW HALF-WAY

Unlike the women's race, the men ran fast right from the gun. Led by World
Championships silver medalist, Christopher Isegwe of Tanzania, the men did
the first 400m in a snappy 73 seconds, a 2:08 marathon pace.

"It felt like a track race," said Andrew Letherby of Australia who said the
runners were already jostling for position.

Isegwe slowed slightly out of the stadium to pass 5 km in 15:36, but upped
the tempo significantly in the second 5 km (14:55) and refused to slow down.
With Kenyan Fred Mogaka right on his tail, he passed 15 km in 45:25 (14:54)
while Ramadhani was just 8 seconds back running alone.

"The pace was very hard from the beginning," said Ramadhani.

But after going through 20 km in 1:00:28 --a sub-2:08 pace-- Isegwe suddenly
stopped. He sat down on the pavement, clutching the back of his left thigh,
apparently struck by a hamstring injury. He was finished.

This left Mogaka to forge ahead alone, running at a pace that if sustained
would see him break his personal best time by some seven minutes. Mogaka
got through the halfway mark in 1:03:48, but without Isegwe to help with the
pace, he began to slow down. That left the door open for Ramadhani to catch
up, and 1:26:35 into the race (around 28 km), Mogaka was caught.

"I tried to pick up the pace at 29 km," said Ramadhani.

But the Kenyan did not fold his tent just yet. He managed to stay with the
Tanzanian through 40-K when ascending the footbridge to the stadium,
Ramadhani went into the lead for good. He entered the MCG alone and,
because he didn't see a finish line tape stretched across the track, kept
running even after he had earned the gold medal in 2:11:29.

Mogaka crossed next in 2:12:03, while Dan Robinson of England got the bronze
in 2:14:50. He had emerged from a chase pack which included the three
Australians, Scott Westcott, Andrew Letherby and Shane Nankervis.

"We had a bit of a group going with the Australians," said Robinson who is a
physical education teacher. "We went through the half in 66:30 which was
just about spot-on."

Robinson got into third at 32 km, getting by Kenyan Jacob Yator. He said
that he had run a "sensible race."

"We thought that some of the African guys would go out pretty hard, and they
did. We just expected a few of them to come back which, luckily, a few
did."

Results:

MEN -
1. Samson Ramadhani, TAN 2:11:29 Gold
2. Fred Mogaka, KEN 2:12:03 PB Silver
3. Dan Robinson, ENG 2:14:50 Bronze
4. Scott Westcott, AUS 2:16:32
5. Andrew Letherby, AUS 2:17:11
[14 finishers total]

WOMEN -
1. Kerryn McCann, AUS 2:30:54 Gold
2. Hellen Cherono, KEN 2:30:56 PB Silver
3. Liz Yelling, ENG 2:32:19 Bronze
4. Tracey Morris, WAL 2:33:13 PB
5. Josephine Akunaay, TAN 2:36:27 PB
[19 finishers]


 

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