
This location will be continuously updated with pertinent media relations materials. The above hyperlink is the go-to place for Media resources, including the event media guide, uniform guide, start lists, live splits, courtesy photos, transcripts, and more. We look forward to welcoming you to tomorrow’s race, and wish the best of luck to all participants as they make their way from Hopkinton to Boston. Kenyan Rosemary Wanjiru was second ahead of Ethiopian Tigist Abayechew.ĭon’t miss out on ET Prime stories! Get your daily dose of business updates on WhatsApp.BOSTON – In preparation for Monday’s 127th running of the Boston Marathon, we invite media members to review helpful resources, statistics, and storylines. Only record holder Brigid Kosgei of Kenya and Briton Paula Radcliffe have run faster marathons. My mind is still moving, the body still absorbing the training."įellow Kenyan Mark Korir completed a one-two finish for the African nation, four minutes and 49 seconds behind, with Ethiopian Tadu Abate third.Įthiopian Tigist Assefa stunned the field in the women's race, winning in 2:15:37, the third-fastest time in history.

I need to celebrate this record and have to realise what happens. Kipchoge is the only man to run a sub-two hour marathon when he clocked 1:59.40 on a specially designed track in Vienna in 2019 but the time is not officially recognised as it was not set in competition.Īsked whether he would attempt a sub-two hour run in Berlin next year, Kipchoge said: "Let us plan for another day.

Passing through the city's iconic Brandenburg Gate just as the sun started to emerge, a beaming Kipchoge crossed the finish line to set another record. Having slowed slightly in the second half of the race he still powered through the final 500-metre sprint. The Kenyan, who retained his Olympic at the Tokyo Games last year, had fallen short of his world mark by just over a minute at the Tokyo Marathon in March, but he was not to be denied in Berlin.
