Skip to main content

Aiyabei Crushes Course Record, Abraha Outkicks Worku, and Kawauchi Survives Hard Fall at Prague Marathon

by Brett Larner


London World Championships marathon team member Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref. Gov’t) lined up at the Volkswagen Prague Marathon with support from JRN in a bid to break his four-year-old best of 2:08:14. Planning to go with second group pacer Eliud Macharia of Kenya at 3:02/km, Kawauchi and Macharia found themselves part of the lead group when its pacers were unable to hit their target 3:00/km in the challenging early part of the Prague course. The lead group accelerated approaching 15 km, while Macharia, Kawauchi and Moroccan Salah Eddine Bounasr stayed their course and hit it dead on 2:08:00 pace in 45:30.


Over the next 10 km the leaders again slowed, letting Macharia’s trio return and even go to the front without changing their pace. Following the pacers’ departure it was down to a race of six, the Ethiopian trio of Gebretsadik Abraha, Bazu Worku and Mekuant Ayenew, Kenyan Benson Kipruto, Bounasr and Kawauchi. The group hit 32 km in 1:37:43, well off the hoped-for sub-2:07 winning time and Kawauch’s PB pace but still on track for sub-2:09. Calm and in control, Kawauchi looked set for his biggest run ever on European soil.


Then, rounding a cobblestoned corner onto a bridge between 32 and 33 km, he tripped and fell. The Ethiopians surged to get away, leaving Bounasr behind in the process, and by the time Kawauchi could get back to his feet he was 15 seconds behind, bleeding from cuts on his hand, hip and leg. The Ethiopians made a series of attacks over the last 10 km to get rid of Kipruto, and in the last two km Worku opened up a lead that looked like it would be enough to give him the win. But Abraha had other ideas, putting on a long surge to pass Worku and take the win by a second in 2:08:47.

With a 2:08:48 for 2nd Worku joined an exclusive club of men with ten or more career sub-2:10 performances. Ayenew ran a PB 2:09:00 for 3rd, Kipruto 4th in 2:09:51 and Bounasr just missing his first-ever sub-2:10 as he took 5th in a PB of 2:10:04. Kawauchi looked like he might return to catch both Kipruto and Bounasr, but with the impact of his fall still resonating all he could manage was 2:10:13 for 6th. Taken straight to the medical area, he received treatment for his cuts and was examined for more serious injuries but was pronounced unhurt.

Pacer Eliud Macharia and Kawauchi post-race.

Bitterly disappointed by the fall but trying to find the positive, post-race Kawauchi told JRN, “I thought I could catch the Moroccan but he just wouldn’t come back. Up to 32 km it was the best I’ve ever run in a European race, so in that respect it gives me confidence for London. I’m going to be really sore for the next few days, though.” Besides the confidence of knowing that he ran one of the best, if unluckiest, races of his career in Prague, Kawauchi can take encouragement from having surpassed Suguru Osako’s 2:10:28 from last month’s Boston Marathon to become the fastest Japanese man outside Japan so far this year despite his fall. He also achieved one historic accomplishment, tying the world record of 22 career sub-2:12 marathons held by Ethiopian great Abebe Mekonnen. If he succeeds in doing it again at June’s Stockholm Marathon Kawauchi will singlehandedly hold every sub-x record from sub-2:12 to sub-2:19.

While the men’s race was overall slower than Prague’s usual standards, the women’s race was hot. A quartet of sub-2:23 Ethiopians led by 2:20 women Feyse Tadese and Amane Beriso was expected to take down the 2:22:34 course record set back in 2011 by Kenyan Lydia Cheromei. Two of them succeeded, Beriso running 2:22:15 and Tadelech Bekele a PB of 2:22:23, but in a sight familiar of late, Kenyan Valary Jemeli Aiyabei and a male pacer ran a death-defying first half to put the win way out of the Ethiopians’ reach. Aiyabei and pacer split an incredible 1:08:24 for the first half, no small feat given the difficult first 4 km and other sections full of streetcar tracks and the cobblestones that tripped up Kawauchi’s plans.

Aiyabei paid for the first half with a 1:13:33 on the easier second half, but even so there was littlee chance of her being caught. Aiyabei crossed the finish line with a 2:21:57 course record, a PB by three minutes. Beriso and Bekele did their best to close the gap, Beriso coming within 20 seconds by the end of the race, but it was simply to far to the front. Other Ethiopians took 4th, 5th and 7th to make it five in the top seven, but with a brave and wild run from Aiyabei the women’s race belonged to Kenya.


Volkswagen Prague Marathon
Prague, Czech Republic, 5/7/17

Men
1. Gebretsadik Abraha (Ethiopia) – 2:08:47
2. Bazu Worku (Ethiopia) – 2:08:48
3. Mekuant Ayenew (Ethiopia) – 2:09:00 – PB
4. Benson Kipruto (Kenya) – 2:09:51 – PB
5. Salah Eddine Bounasr (Morocco) – 2:10:04 – PB
6. Yuki Kawauchi (Japan) – 2:10:13
7. Said ait Addi (Morocco) – 2:10:38 – debut
8. Samson Gebreyohannes (Eritrea) – 2:14:25 – PB
9. Geoffrey Kipyego (Kenya) – 2:14:54 – debut
10. Raymond Choge (Kenya) – 2:16:03

Women
1. Valary Jemeli Aiyabei (Kenya) – 2:21:57 – CR, PB
2. Amane Beriso (Ethiopia) – 2:22:15
3. Tadelech Bekele (Ethiopia) – 2:22:23 – PB
4. Hirut Tibebu (Ethiopia) – 2:24:04 – PB
5. Feyse Tadese (Ethiopia) – 2:26:46
6. Carla Salome Rocha (Portugal) – 2:27:08 – debut
7. Mulu Seboka (Ethiopia) – 2:29:17
8. Beatrice Toroitich (Kenya) – 2:32:25
9. Rosa Chacha (Ecuador) – 2:37:06
10. Lavinia Haitope (Namibia) – 2:40:22 – PB

text and photos © 2017 Brett Larner
all rights reserved

Comments

Most-Read This Week

Japan Announces Complete London Olympics Athletics Team

by Brett Larner Click here for JRN's complete video coverage of the 2012 Japanese Olympic Trials, 27 videos making up nearly three hours of footage. The Japanese Federation and Olympic Committee announced the complete lineup of Japan's team of 48 athletes for this summer's London Olympics track and field events at a press conference on June 11.  The team features 11 national record holders and 18 current national champions and is young overall, with a heavy preponderance of first-time Olympians including a World Junior gold medalist, 13 collegiates and one high schooler.  The Fujitsu corporate team is overwhelmingly the best-represented, boasting 8 Olympic team members, while Chukyo University tops the collegiate list with 3 athletes on the team.  Suzuki, whose Suzuki Hamamatsu AC club team exists outside the corporate league, also has 3 Olympians. No Olympic team selection process is free of controversial decisions, and the omission of women's 10000 m Jr. NR hold

Yamagata-Based Alexander Mutiso Aims to Be #1 in Paris Olympics Marathon

Having been named to the Kenyan men's team for this summer's Paris Olympics, Alexander Mutiso , 27, of the Nanyo, Yamagata-based ND Software corporate team, told the Yamagata Newspaper on May 13 that his goal for the Olympic marathon is "to be #1." Having lived in Yamagata for 10 years, Mutiso has strong attachment to the area and credits its environment for helping him develop, saying, "Ever since I came to Yamagata I've been running well." He left for Kenya on May 14 to join the Kenyan national team training camp, aiming to be in perfect condition when he arrives in Paris for the main event. Mutiso came to Japan in 2015, joining the ND Software team and taking up residence in Nanyo. "I don't like the cold winters in Yamagata so much, but the other seasons are nice." From that base he has grown into the athlete he is now, competing in races across Japan and around the world. Compared to the track, his strengths lie more in long road races

'Reinstate Olympic Marathon Prospects Unfairly Disqualified by World Athletics'

A petition for World Athletics to allow the ten men who made the Paris Olympics marathon quota via world rankings but were replaced by unqualified universality place athletes to run. Sent to JRN by the race director of a major marathon.