Kenya

Kipchoge retains Olympic marathon crown in Tokyo

Kenyan marathon world record-holder Eliud Kipchoge becomes only the third man to successfully defend an Olympic marathon title on Sunday in Sapporo.

Eliud Kipchoge wins the marathon at the Tokyo Olympic Games (© AFP / Getty Images)

Five years ago, marathon world record-holder Eliud Kipchoge was the last athletics champion crowned at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio.

He replicated that performance on Sunday morning in Sapporo with another commanding run to become only the third man to successfully defend an Olympic marathon title.

In Rio, he waited until the 36th kilometre to break away. This time, his decisive move came in the 31st.

By the 38th, the Kenyan more closely resembled a solitary figure out on a morning training run than a man leading the Olympic marathon. He’d built a lead of more than one minute by that point, with no other runner within view.

Such was Eliud Kipchoge‘s dominance en route to his 2:08:38 triumph, his winning margin of 1:20 was the widest in an Olympic marathon since Frank Shorter’s win in 1972.

“I think I have fulfilled the legacy by winning the marathon for the second time, back-to-back. I hope now to help inspire the next generation,” said Kipchoge, who claimed gold ahead of Abdi Nageeye of the Netherlands (2:09:58) and Belgium’s Bashir Abdi (2:10:00).

STAT OF THE DAY

More than 100 countries have now won Olympic medals in athletics, after India and Burkina Faso won their first medals in the Tokyo stadium, courtesy of superb performances by javelin star Neeraj Chopra and triple jump ace Hugues Fabrice Zango.

You May Also Like

Kenya

Kenya's Julius Yego, the 2015 world Javelin champion and 2016 Olympics silver medalist, reached the javelin final at the ongoing Olympic Games in Paris...

Features and Reports

Uganda's Joshua Cheptegei finally secured Olympic gold in the men’s 10,000m event, breaking a 16-year-old Olympic record after a fierce competition with Ethiopian top...

Uganda

Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei smashes the Olympic 10,000m record to win the first track and field final of the Paris 2024 Games.

Nigeria

Nigerian champion Favour Ofili says Team Nigeria officials failed to register her for the women’s 100m event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

©2004-2024 All Rights Reserved / Powered by Yomog Sports + Media | AthleticsAfrica.com is the leading source for track and field athletics, road and mountain running news, events information, analysis, results, images and videos from Africa.

Exit mobile version