Jemima Sumgong made the most of a kick with
6km to run to win Kenya’s first ever Olympic
women’s marathon gold on Sunday.
Sumgong, winner of this year’s London
marathon, timed 2hr 24min 04sec for Kenya’s
first-ever women’s marathon gold over the
42km-long
course that finished at Rio’s
Sambodromo with temperatures hitting 28
degrees Celsius (82F).
“It was very hot but everybody had to get through
the heat. I had to control my body and listen to
my body very carefully,” said Sumgong.
“I had prepared that I would move out at
kilometre 35 and my body was responding very
well, as well as my movement.
“I am very grateful. This is the first gold medal
for Kenya (at Rio 2016).”
Just before the finish, a group of protesters
carrying banners climbed over barriers and ran
onto the course before being intercepted by
police on motorbikes. Runners were not
disturbed by the protests.
Bahrain claimed only their second medal in any
sport when Kenyan-born Eunice Kirwa took
silver, 9sec adrift of Sumgong, while defending
world champion Mare Dibaba of Ethiopia
claimed bronze, at 26sec.
Sumgong admitted, however, that she knew
victory was hers with 2km to run, saying it made
up for her disappointing showing at the 2008
Beijing Olympics.
“I was in Beijing but I was pretty disappointed
that I wasn’t able to win a medal or make it on
the podium, but I knew one time, one day, I’d be
somewhere,” she said.
“I was never worried that I’d lose this. At the
40km I knew the gold was mine.
“At 35km I noticed that my other two teammates
had dropped off and that gave me the motivation
to carry on.
“At 40km I saw there were three of us but I knew
whatever happened I couldn’t lose the gold and
then I knew I was on the way to history.”
Dibaba, in her first race since finishing sixth at
the London Marathon, had led a lead pack of
seven runners through the 35km mark in
2:00.31.
But then with 6km to go, Kirwa surged, only
Dibaba and Sumgang managing the pace.
Ethiopian Tirfi Tsegaye, who timed a world-
leading 2:19:41 to win the Dubai Marathon at the
start of the year and then finished second at the
Boston Marathon, and Belarus’ Volha Mazuronak
became the new chase pack as Bahrain’s Kenyan-
born Rose Chelimo and American Shalane
Flanagan were dropped.
Clocking 16:31 as their fastest 5km segment of
the race, between 35km and 40km, the leaders’
approach to the turning course in the final run-
in to the Sambodromo put paid to Dibaba’s
efforts, the Ethiopian falling behind Sumgong and
Kirwa.
Sumgong then turned the screw on former
compatriot Kirwa down the home stretch to
claim a historic gold for Kenya’s women
marathon runners.
For a large part of the race, there was a lead
pack of 15.
Hitting the halfway mark in 1:12:56, it still
consisted of 13, including the North Korean Kim
twins, Hye-Song in the pink shoes, Hye-Gyong in
the blue, who went on to finish 10th and 11th
respectively.
Mazuronak, wearing a tight bandana, surged
briefly before she was reeled in, but American
Amy Cragg and Kenya’s Helah Kiprop fell off the
pace as the field began to split with the lead pack
at seven.
Then came Kirwa’s burst before Sumgong showed
all her experience to power past the Bahraini for
gold.
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