Mare Dibaba
captured the first women's marathon gold for Ethiopia at the world
championships on Sunday, holding off Helah Kiprop of Kenya in a race that was
settled by a 100-meter sprint. The 25-year-old Dibaba patiently waited for the
right time to make her move, constantly checking her watch before breaking away
in the shadow of the Bird's Nest. Dibaba finished in 2 hours, 27 minutes, 35
seconds, edging Kiprop by one second in the closest women's marathon finish
ever at the worlds. Eunice Kirwa of Bahrain earned the bronze.
The marathon is a
long-distance running event with an official distance of 42.195 kilometres (26
miles and 385 yards), usually run as a road race. The event was instituted in
commemoration of the fabled run of the Greek soldier Pheidippides, a messenger
from the Battle of Marathon to Athens. The
marathon was one of the original modern Olympic events in 1896, though the
distance did not become standardized until 1921.
The winner of
Women’s event - Mare Dibaba Hurrsa is an Ethiopian long-distance runner. Her first high profile outing came at the
Ethiopian 20 km championships in 2007 and she took sixth place, running for
Oromia Police. Mare briefly transferred to compete for Azerbaijan in 2009,
running under the name Mare Ibrahimova, but after she was revealed to be
overage for the European Athletics Junior Championships she returned to compete
for her country of birth. Having reverted to her Ethiopian citizenship, she
further established herself at the various runs. Here at Beijing, Dibaba thrillingly outsprinted
two other athletes to take top spot on the podium, the first of two victories
for the East African country on the final day of competition in Beijing.
For all its long
distance running pedigree, it was the first time Ethiopia had won global gold
in a marathon. Dibaba, who had set the
fastest time in the world earlier this year, beat Kenya's Helah Kiprop by a
second, while Kenyan-born Bahraini Eunice Kirwa claimed bronze. All three had entered the Bird's Nest Stadium
in contention, with Kenya's Jemima Sumpgong in close pursuit, but it was Dibaba
who had the fastest finishing kick.
Defending champion
Edna Kiplagat could only finish fifth, but Kenya did add to its gold medal
tally later when Asbel Kiprop defended his men's 1500m title.
Like the Steve and
Mark Waugh and Hamish and James Marshalls of Cricket, there are the Luik
sisters. Infact they are threesome ! - Estonians
Leila, Liina and Lily Luik are identical triplets and two of them were in the
event.
Though they were
the cynosure of all eyes, Liina Luik was placed 27th and Lily Luik was placed 38th in the event.With regards – S. Sampathkumar
31st Aug 2015.
