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B.A.A. Half Marathon
October 12, 2008
8:00 a.m.
RACE DAY CONDITIONS
57 degrees and no wind at the start
5,117 entrants
3,742 starters
3,702 finishers
Complete
Results (coolrunning.com)
Searchable
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With foliage around Boston
signaling the arrival of fall and temperatures
in the mid-50s, a record field enjoyed perfect
running weather this morning for the Eighth Annual
B.A.A. Half Marathon, presented by Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund. In total,
3,702 runners completed the 13.1-mile loop of
Boston's famed Emerald Necklace park system. Leading
the way was one of the most talented elite fields
the race has ever seen.
The men's race featured
a host of new faces, including Charles Munyeki
(KEN), who ran 59:44 earlier this year, making
him the 10th-fastest man in the world for 2008.
Joining Munyeki in the field was his training
partner, countryman, and the man who defeated
him at the Rock 'n' Roll Half Marathon just seven
days earlier, Gilbert Okari.
Following a cautious opening
mile of 5:07 and a quick 4:44 second mile, the
lead pack consisted of four men: Munyeki, Okari,
their training partner James Koskei (KEN), and
Karim El Mabchour (MAR). That group stayed intact
through seven miles when Munyeki and Okari began
to ease away. Koskei was the first to fade, in
the eighth mile, then El Mabchour faltered during
the ninth. By mile 10 the two training partners
had a 14 second lead on third place.
Though the race was decided
in a final sprint toward the finish on Roberto
Clemente Field, with Munyeki surging ahead to
break the tape, he knew much earlier that the
race was in hand. Asked when he knew he had won,
Munyeki said, candidly, "During the last mile.
I knew it then." Though just 22 years of age,
Munyeki has already proven himself to be a master
of the half marathon distance. "I felt very good,"
he said after today's effort. "It was very easy."
Following the race, Okari
confessed that he is not yet accustomed to the
half marathon. Though he has won many of the top
10K and 12K road races on the U.S. circuit, Okari
was competing at the half marathon distance for
just the third time. In addition, he was still
recovering from a knee injury which was aggravated
by the hills and turns on today's course, forcing
him to hold back. "My body's not used to the half
marathon," he said. "It will take me time."
Just as Munyeki became
the event's youngest male champion, Azalech Masresha
(ETH)--just 20 years old--became the youngest
female champ ever. Though still relatively new
to the sport (she began running at the age of
16), Masresha showed her half marathon talents
early, running 1:11:59 as a 19-year-old. Today,
however, she had to prove herself against a talented
field.
Six women quickly separated
themselves from the pack in the first mile, with
Masresha a constant presence at the front. She
led through miles three, four, five and six, but
none of her rivals faltered until the eighth mile,
run in 5:11 (the fastest of the day). Slowly,
Masresha and Irene Limika (KEN) began to pull
away, trailed closely by Neriah Asiba (KEN).
Like the men, the women
needed every last meter to determine a winner.
Masresha was only able to separate herself from
Limika in the final strides, as the two crossed
the line less than one second apart. The pair's
times of 1:11:44 and 1:11:45 were the third and
fourth fastest ever run on this course.
Six women ran faster than
last year's champion, Edna Kiplagat (1:13:36).
Kathy Newberry (Williamsburg, VA), third last
year in 1:16:44, improved by three minutes yet
fell to seventh place. A simple "Yes," was Masresha's
response when asked if she was surprised to have
defeated such a strong field. "It's a hilly course--not
an easy course. I'm happy that I won."
While newcomers were victorious
in the men's and women's races, familiar faces
triumphed in the wheelchair division. Tony Nogueira
(Glen Ridge, NJ) moved quickly to the lead in
the opening mile, aggressively attacking the first
half of the course, which runs gradually uphill.
He could sense his challengers close behind, though.
"The competition was good [today], it kept me
going," he said. He ultimately broke the tape
in 53:07, tying his own course record, set in
2004. Nogueira's win was his fourth at the B.A.A.
Half. He also won in 2003, 2004, and 2007.
Joining Nogueira on the
victory stand was women's course record holder
Laurie Stephens (Wenham, MA), the 2003 and 2004
B.A.A. Half Marathon champ. Stephens cruised to
a comfortable seven minute, 15 second victory
over defending champion Jacqui Kapinowski (Point
Pleasant, NJ), finishing in 1:17:00.
The event's presenting
sponsor, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the
Jimmy Fund, has raised $1.4 million over the past
five years at the B.A.A. Half. With 334 runners
taking part in the race today, they hoped to exceed
last year's fund raising total of $377,000.
Compiled with assistance from Eric Blake,
Peter Brown, Barbara Huebner, Bernie Muller, Tarryn
Prosper.
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