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New York Half Marathon Presented by Nike
By John Nepolitan August 6, 2007
In the days prior to the New York Half Marathon
Presented by Nike the weather in New York was hot
and very humid, prompting the New York Road Runners
Club to issue a heat warning to participants, but race day
morning brought cooler temperatures (70 degrees) and low
humidity. As a result, New Yorkers delighted in a
runaway win by the greatest distance runner of all time---
Haile Gebrselassie (Ethiopia) and a battle to the end in
the women's race.The race course has a hilly opening loop through Central
Park (described by many as more cross country), and was
predicted to produce slow opening miles before entering
the flat latter stages of the race just past 7-1/2
miles. An opening mile time of 4:30, however, let everyone
know that a fast time was in the making.
Passing two miles in 9:26 and three miles in 13:43 would
start to
break the field apart and by the time the 5000 meter split
was reached (14:12), the 2006 LaSalle Bank Chicago
Marathon and two-time Boston Marathon Champ, Robert
Cheruiyot (Kenya), made a slight move going up a hill
drawing Gebrselassie and the USA's Abdi Abdirahman
clear of the field. The three would stay together through to
just past seven miles. Splits included: 5 miles (22:48), 6
miles (27:25), 10,000 meters (28:22) and 7 miles (31:55).
At the 33-minute mark Cheruiyot went for a drink of water
and Abdirahman threw in a small surge that only
Gebrselassie was able to match. When Abdirahman
completed his move and went back to his previous pace,
the multi-world record holder from Ethiopia continued the
move and by the 35-minute mark the race for first place was
all but over. Gebrselassie would continue through splits of
36:20 (8 miles), 40:43 (9 miles), 42:11(15,000 meters),
45:10 (10 miles), 49:43 (11 miles) and 54:17 (12 miles),
56:15 (20,000 meters) before pushing the final 1.1 miles to
break the tape and setting in a new course record of 59:24
(4:32/mile pace), and the 2nd fastest half marathon
performance in the USA. The ever smiling Ethiopian had an 18-second lead over
Abdirahman at 15,000 meters and that would grow to 1:02
by 20,000 meters and 1:20 at the finish. Nonetheless, the
Tucson-based runner improved both on his place from
2005 (3rd) and his time and seems to be on course for a
spot on the USA Olympic Marathon team (which will be
selected on November 3 in New York) crossing the line in
1:00:29. Cheruiyot struggled home to finish in third with a time of
1:00:58 before being taken to the hospital as a precaution
(word that the World Marathon Masters leader was fine and
doing well).
In last year's race, Catherine Ndereba (Kenya) had all she
could handle in holding off
Benita Johnson (Australia) in the final steps. The 2007
finish would once again be close, but this time involving
three runners and Ndereba would cross the
line second.
A pack of six runners, Hilda Kibet (Kenya),
Ndereba (Kenya), Nina Rillstone (New Zealand), Yuri
Kano (Japan), Madai Perez (Mexico), and Megumi
Oshima (Japan) passed 5000 meters in 17:05 and
10,000 meters in 34:06 before the pack would start to split
apart. At 15,000 meters Kano (50:43), Rillstone (50:44), and
Oshima (50:48) had fallen back of the trio of Kibet, Ndereba
and Perez who all passed in 50:40. Over the next 5000
meters (3.1 miles) Rillstone would rejoin Kibet and
Ndereba (20,000 meters in 1:07:09) while Kano (1:07:29),
Perez (1:07.36) and Oshima (1:07:53) were attempting to
hold onto the minor placings. When the top three came into
view of the finishline just past 13 miles the three were in a
fight to the finish with Kibet, who is applying for citizenship in
the Netherlands, having the best sprint of them all pulling
away in the last meters and having enough cushion to
celebrate he break through performance to cross the line in
1:10:32 to earn a 1 second win over Ndereba (1:10:33) and
2 more seconds over Rillstone (1:10:35) who was having
the
best race of her life.
Post Race Quotes:
Haile Gebrselassie - "I was dreaming to run in New York
City the dream came true this morning, I am so glad that I
had the chance to run here . . . The race was very
aggressive at the beginning of the race especially through
the lap of Central Park, I did not expect that I thought the
athletes would go slow, but it was the other way
around . . . When I came to Times Squire, something that I
like the most and I push faster . . . Right after the Park (about
7-1/2 miles) I said ok this is my race . . . My preparation is
perfect, I am preparing for the Berlin Marathon and when you
prepare for a marathon the half marathon is not that
difficult . . . I am thinking of 2008 or 2009 (of running the New
York City Marathon) I promise to run the New York City
Marathon before I stop running." Abdi Abdirahman - "It was a great race to day overall I was
happy with the way I ran...When I put my surge in I knew we
had dropped Robert(Cheruiyot) I was trying to recover, but
then he (Gebrselassie) kept going - so he put like 2 surges
in a row....Last year I was 3rd and this year I was 2nd so
hopefully next year I can come back and win this
thing.....When Haile opened up the gap my main focus was
just to maintain my form.....i didn't give up I still had a hope I
am an athlete I am here to compete and we know Haile is
the greatest, but at the same time this is sport I win some
and I lose some so if you give up the race before you cross
the finish line you will lose to other people as well.....This is
just 1 step closer to what I want to accomplish here on
November 3rd....When I go to Osaka ( for the IAAF World
Track Championships 10,000 meters) I am going to go in
there with the same attitude, I am not going to go to Osaka
and be in the back of the pack I want to be up in front and
fighting for a medal Hilda Kibet - "The last meters were very tough...I knew that I
could sprint...When it comes to a sprint and when you are
just a few meters from someone you feel very strong and
you are just fighting to win....I ran a race against Greta
Wami(Ethiopa) and she has a faster 10000 meters than me
and I know she can sprint and I won from her in the last 100
meters so I knew I can sprint...At the moment I am applying
for a passport for the Netherlands, but that can take up to 1
year, but in 2008 I will probably represent the
Netherlands.....This is the best race (victory) for me
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