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Kipruto, Kebede Win Tokyo Marathon in Course Record Times

Benson Kipruto, a Kenyan, broke Eliud Kipchoge’s track record on Sunday by winning the men’s Tokyo Marathon in two hours, two minutes, and sixteen seconds. The race took place in ideal racing conditions through the streets of the Japanese capital.

In 2:15:55, Ethiopia’s Sutume Asefa Kebede defeated Kenya’s reigning champion Rosemary Wanjiru in the women’s race, also breaking the record for the fastest time ever set by women to complete the route from Shinjuku to the Imperial Palace.

Kipruto added the Tokyo championship to his Boston and Chicago victories in 2021 and 2022. Over the final few kilometers, he moved ahead of Timothy Kiplagat and finished 39 seconds ahead of his compatriot.

With his performance, the 32-year-old beat his previous personal best by over two minutes, placing him seventh quickest.

“I am so happy to get the course record,” Kipruto told reporters.

“I think I’m ready for the Paris Olympics, I would be happy to represent my country in Paris but that relies on my country for selection. I’m still waiting on that, but I’m ready.”

Kiplagat had to be convinced not to pull out of the race by his coach after the death of his training partner, marathon world record holder Kelvin Kiptum, in a road accident last month.

Vincent Kipkemoi Ngetich finished third in 2:04:18 to give Kenya a podium sweep, with Ethiopians Hailemaryam Kiros and Tsegaye Getachew in fourth and fifth places.

Kipchoge was struggling at halfway with the pace under the course record time of 2:02:40 he had set in 2022, and the double Olympic champion had slipped two minutes behind the leaders by the 30-km mark. He finished 10th.

Kebede and Wanjiru had been in the leading group throughout the women’s race, but at the 37km mark the Ethiopian upped her pace to pull clear of her rivals and claim her first major marathon title by 19 seconds.

Her time bettered Brigid Kosgei’s 2022 women’s course record of 2:16:02 and took more than two minutes off her previous personal best time of 2:18:12.

“I’m truly happy,” the 29-year-old said. “It was a very tactical race. Everything went well and the result was better than I expected.

“I ran a good time in a major race and I hope the Ethiopian Athletics Federation will select me for the Paris Olympics. I would like to win (gold) and break the Olympic record.”

Kebede’s compatriot Amane Beriso was third in 2:16:58, more than a minute clear of Dutch Olympic long distance track champion Sifan Hassan in fourth place.

Ichitaka Yamashita was the fastest Japanese man in a time of 2:06:31 to finish ninth, while Hitomi Niiya took the local honours in the women’s race with a sixth-placed finish in 2:21:50.

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Sydney Okafor

I'm Sydney Okafor, a broadcast journalist, producer, presenter, voice-over artist and researcher, deeply intrigued by human angle stories in Nigeria and the broader African context.

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