Ethiopia's Desisa takes NYC Marathon,
Keitany is women's winner
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[November 05, 2018]
(Reuters) - Ethiopian Lelisa Desisa
used a powerful surge to win his first New York City Marathon in five
tries and Kenya's Mary Keitany claimed a fourth women's crown with a
dominant victory on Sunday.
Desisa finally made it to the top of the podium with a strong closing
mile to win in an unofficial two hours, five minutes and 59 seconds as
he and fellow Ethiopian Shura Kitata (2:06:01) passed defending champion
Geoffrey Kamworor, who finished third in 2:06:26.
"Today is my day. I am very, very happy," said Desisa, a two-time Boston
Marathon winner who had finished second in New York in 2014 and third in
2015 and 2017.
"I (was) thinking this year to be a champion," Desisa said. "I'm very
thirsty to be the champion. I've been second. I've been third. This year
I decided to be champion because I had the training."
Kitata, 22, led much of the race before Kamworor moved in front of the
Ethiopians around the 23rd mile.
But his African challengers were not done with Desisa holding off Kitata
in the final mile.
Keitany, second to American Shalane Flanagan in 2017 after three New
York victories, returned to the top with a runaway performance. The
36-year-old won by more than three minutes in 2:22:48.
"Last year I was second but I did not give up," said Keitany, who
returned home to train. "I worked very hard for the victory."
She had won in 2014, 2015 and 2016 before Flanagan ended the streak.
London champion and fellow Kenyan Vivian Cheruiyot was a distant second
in 2:26:02 as Flanagan closed to third in 2:26:22 in what may have been
her last competitive marathon.
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Ethiopia's Lelisa Desisa crosses the finish line to win the
Professional Men's race REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
"It's such an honor being the defending champion," Flanagan said. "I
could not pass coming back."
Molly Huddle was fourth in 2:26:44 and Boston Marathon winner Des
Linden sixth (2:27:51) in a solid showing by American women.
American Daniel Romanchuk surprised three-time champion Marcel Hug
of Switzerland for an historic men's wheelchair win.
The 20-year-old Romanchuk became the youngest New York winner and
the first American champion in clocking an unofficial 1:36:21 to nip
Hug by one second.
The title was the second major win for Romanchuk, who also won
Chicago in October.
Swiss Manuela Schar defended her women's title, overtaking American
Tatyana McFadden for the victory in 1:50.27. McFadden clocked
1:50:48.
(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; editing by Clare
Fallon and Pritha Sarkar)
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