Written by: Melanie Stuparyk
Posted: Tuesday, 22 April 2008
Kenyan runner Robert
Cheruiyot won his fourth Boston marathon with a time of 2:07:46, less than a
minute over his own course record of 2:07:14, to become the fourth man to hold
as many titles for the race.
The men’s lead pack was 20 runners
strong for the first 10K of the race, and at the 4-mile mark were clocked as
running at a 4:41 pace. When Cheruiyot broke away from the pack, which had
dwindled to four at mile 20, he was clocked at a 4:37 pace. He increased the
distance between himself and the second place runner, Abderrahime
Bouramdane and third place finisher Khalid El
Boumlili , both from Morocco even on Heartbreak Hill, the most
challenging spot on the race with a pace of 5:17.
This year’s Boston marathon was
the closest in the history of the
women’s race in Boston. A slowly dwindling pack of 10 runners at the 10K mark
eventually wore its way down to two women, side by side, battling with all the
strength and kick they had left to pull away from the other one. Finally, with
300 meters to go 22-year-old Ethiopian runner Dire Tune kicked it to win first
place with a time of 2:25:25. Following only two seconds behind her was Russian
Alevtina Biktimirova. Aside from the glory of winning such a grueling marathon,
Tune takes home $150,000 in prize money, and Biktimirova $75,000.
The question on the winners’ minds was whether their wins
would secure them a place on their own country’s Olympic teams, a decision made
by committees back home based on past performances. Both Tune and Cheruiyot
hope to run in Beijing and hope to return home to good news.
For more information on finishers
and to read unique marathon stories see www.baa.org.