Paris Olympics Belgium Ethiopia Kenya Racing record UPS MET reports Paris Olympics Belgium Ethiopia Kenya

Kenya marathon great Kipchoge fails to finish on tough day at the office

channelnewsasia.com

PARIS : Regarded as the greatest marathon runner of all time, Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge met his match on Saturday as he failed to finish the exceptionally hilly Paris Olympics course, dashing his hopes of a historic third straight gold.The 39-year-old Kipchoge started among the frontrunners but faded before the 20km mark, clutching his side as challengers streamed ahead of him.

After the race he said back pain had overwhelmed him and made him stop.Ethiopia's Tamirat Tola took the gold, finishing first by a wide margin, while Belgium's Bashir Abdi won silver and Benson Kipruto secured Kenya a spot on the podium by earning bronze.In typical sanguine fashion, Kipchoge downplayed the defeat - the first time he has not finished a race - and did not give any hints as to his widely-expected retirement from the sport."Today is a tough day in my office.

As always, you can't predict what will happen," he told reporters with a smile, adding that he felt supported by the crowds even after slowing to a walk in what he described as his worst ever race."I walked for two kilometres and I had more than 300 people on my side walking together," he said.Passing runners, too, were encouraging him to keep pushing on, he said. "I could feel the love and the respect, actually."After stopping Kipchoge took off his running shoes and gave them to a fan before climbing into an official vehicle.

The Kenyan has four of the 10 fastest marathon times in history, but his personal best of 2:01:09 was nearly two years ago at the 2022 Berlin marathon.

Related News
Indian javelin throw star Neeraj Chopra has revealed that an advice to "stay relaxed" from his Kenyan counterpart Julius Yego proved decisively helpful in calming his racing mind before he pulled off a season's best effort to finish second in the Diamond League in Lausanne, Switzerland. The 26-year-old was at the fourth spot at the end of the fourth round before managing a throw of 85.58m in his fifth attempt that kept him inside the top three. His final attempt of 89.49m on Thursday helped him finish second behind Grenada's Anderson Peters (90.61m).
LAUSANNE : Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi of Kenya inched ever so close to the men's 800 metres world record on Thursday, missing the global mark by two tenths of a second in winning the Lausanne Diamond League with the second fastest time in history.
Factors that may have inhibited the country’s performance at the just-concluded Paris 2024 Olympics are beginning to emerge with an official of Team Nigeria hinting The Guardian that the payment of $6,000 “training grants to athletes in the middle of the Games” was one of them.
Kinzang Lhamo, a marathon-runner from Bhutan, received the loudest cheers from the Paris crowd as she crossed the line in the women's marathon event at the Paris Olympics 2024. But she wasn't the winner. Nor the runner-up. Not even the bronze medalist. In fact, the 26-year-old Lhamo finished last. Not just by a small margin either; Lhamo finished nearly an hour and a half after marathon winner Sifan Hassan had crossed the line. Netherlands' Sifan Hassan had smashed the Olympic women's marathon record with a time of 2 hours 22 minutes 55 seconds. But that wasn't enough to get the biggest applause of the day.
The first batch of the Nigerian contingent to the just-concluded Paris 2024 Olympic Games are expected to return to the country today. The Guardian learnt, yesterday, that the first set of athletes would depart the Olympics Village this morning, while the second batch will leave tomorrow.
The River Seine was the fickle star of the Paris Olympics, taking centre stage at the opening ceremony and open water swimming and triathlon events despite a running saga over water quality. It was under torrential rain that the Seine appeared before millions of viewers around the world on July 26 for a cheeky and controversial opening ceremony. "Dantesque conditions," was how Games chief Tony Estanguet summed up the unprecedented Olympic opening ceremony, the first to take place outside the main stadium.

Latest News

Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.