There are few countries that could
lose a reigning Olympic gold medallist and Olympic record holder and still be
highly confident of retaining the title. However, despite the tragic death of
Sammy Wanjiru, Kenya will be supremely confident of taking the gold medal in
the men’s marathon at the upcoming London Olympics.
Over the years, the marathon has been dominated by the
Ethiopians. Ethiopia has produced some of the greatest long distance runners of
all-time. The likes of Abebe Bikila, Mamo Walde and Haile Gebrselassie are
legendary names in the marathon.
Haile Gebrselassie is one of the greatest marathon runners of all-time, but the Ethiopian dominance is under real threat in 2012 |
However, their neighbours, Kenya, have been striking back.
Last year, the twenty fastest times in the world were all set by Kenyans. They
won every big city marathon, setting course record in all the major marathons.
Just to underline their dominance, they took gold and silver at the World
Championships in Daegu as well.
To give an idea of the depth and quality of Kenyan marathon
runners at the current time, almost 300 have bettered the IAAF A-qualifying
entry time. To put this into comparison, Australia currently have one athlete
that has matched this time.
The roster of marathon runners that they have at their
disposal reads as a who’s who of long distance running right now. The biggest
problem for the Kenyan selectors is not finding potential medallists – rather
it is which of the world-class athletes that they will leave at home.
For the Olympics, each country can only enter three athletes
into the marathon. The Kenyans have already selected two of the three athletes
– the other will come from a remaining four-man shortlist. However, there are
already some top names that have missed out on fulfilling their dream.
Vincent Kipruto has already missed out despite being the reigning world silver medalist in the marathon |
Vincent Kipruto and Roberto Kiprono Cheruivot are two such
athletes. Kipruto finished second in the marathon in the World Championships
last year in Daegu and in 2009, he won the Paris marathon in a course record
time. Cheruivot won the 2008 Frankfurt marathon and the 2010 Boston marathon,
the latter in a course record time. However, neither of these two athletes was
deemed good enough to make the final shortlist.
The two men that have already been selected are Patrick
Makau and Abel Kirui. Patrick Makau is the current marathon world record
holders, which he set in the 2011 Berlin marathon. His time of 2:03:38 still
stands, although is expected to come under pressure at the Olympics this summer
when all the top names meet.
Abel Kirui is the a reigning two-time world champion, having
won the title in both 2009 and then in Daegu last year, where he beat Kipruto
to the gold medal.
Abel Kirui won the gold medal in Daegu last year and will be a favourite to take the Olympic gold |
However, there is intense competition between the other four
hopefuls – four men who would walk into any other country’s selection in an
instant. Those four athletes are Wilson Kipsang, Emmanuel Mutai, Moses Mosop
and Geoffrey Mutai. Although, as we run through their impressive resumés,
remember that had Sammy Wanjiru not tragically passed away last year, none of
these would be going to the games.
Wilson Kipsang currently stands at number two in the list of
the fastest marathons of all time. His 2:03:42 time at the 2011 Frankfurt
marathon is only four seconds off Makau’s world record time. He gave his hopes
a major boost by winning this year’s London marathon, beating Kirui by over
three minutes. However, he is still not guaranteed a place at the Olympics.
Emmanuel Mutai is the seventh fastest man in history with a
personal best time of 2:04:40. He has a silver medal from the World
Championships in 2009, and has experience of running in London, given he is the
2011 London marathon winner and course record holder, although he could only
finish seventh this year. Again, he is not guaranteed a place at the Olympics.
Moses Mosop technically has the second fastest marathon time
in history, although it is not officially recognised due to the nature of the
Boston course that he set it on. However, his time of 2:03:06 is still hard to
overlook. He is also the currently reigning champion and course record holder
of the Chicago marathon.
Geoffrey Mutai has run the fastest ever marathon in history, although it is not officially recognised as a record |
And finally, Geoffrey Mutai. He beat Mosop in the 2011
Boston marathon in the fastest ever time in a marathon, but as with Mosop, one
which is not officially recognised. His time of 2:03:02 would have smashed the
world record by 36 seconds, although this was undoubtedly aided by the nature
of the course. If we ignore that, he is still the tenth fastest man in history
and the only man to have ever won the Boston and the New York marathons in the
same year.
Only one of these four men will run in the Olympic Games
this summer. A fact which means that three of the greatest marathon runners of
their generation will miss out on the pinnacle of their sport.
Despite all this, Kenya are still not guaranteed the gold
medal in London. Unimpressed at the recent dominance of their neighbours, the
Ethiopian athletes have raised their level as we near the Olympics this summer.
Eight of the top twelve leading times this year are currently set by
Ethiopians. The top three times, set by Ayele Abshero, Dino Sefir and Marcos
Geneti were all sub 2:05:00 times; indeed, Abshero’s time puts him just outside
the top five in the fastest men of all-time.
The Beijing Olympic champion, Sammy Wanjiru, passed away last year after an incident at his home |
The one thing we know for certain is that we will have a new
Olympic champion. Sammy Wanjiru became the first Kenyan to win gold in the
Olympic marathon four years ago, and it is a tragedy that he will not return to
defend his crown. His death still remains a mystery – whether it was suicide,
murder or an accident. However, he has undoubtedly inspired a generation of
Kenyan marathon runners.
Even without him, the quality of the field come London will
be immense. As the two East African nations go head-to-head, it will be a
battle of the old masters and the young apprentices. Ethiopia has dominated the
event for as long as it has existed, but the Kenyans have come to take control
and usher in a new era.
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Big news today, Makau is ditched.
ReplyDeleteOhhh, the politics of olympic selection:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/02/olympics-athletics-kenya-marathon-idUSL4E8G29U720120502