Welcome to the Science of Sport, where we bring you the second, third, and fourth level of analysis you will not find anywhere else.

Be it doping in sport, hot topics like Caster Semenya or Oscar Pistorius, or the dehydration myth, we try to translate the science behind sports and sports performance.

Consider a donation if you like what you see here!


Did you know?
We published The Runner's Body in May 2009. With an average 4.4/5 stars on Amazon.com, it has been receiving positive reviews from runners and non-runners alike.

Available for the Kindle and also in the traditional paper back. It will make a great gift for the runners you know, and helps support our work here on The Science of Sport.



Monday, April 14, 2008

Rotterdam Marathon 2008 Results

Kenyans dominate the "other" marathon this weekend

The 2008 Flora London Marathon has come and gone, with Martin Lel tightening his grip on the title of best marathoner ever. Lel seems untouchable at the moment as he has won won three major marathons in a row (London 2007, NYC 2007, and London 2008)---all that after a near miss in London 2006 where he was second. The race was hot, hot hot, as the top three all broke 2:06 and the top six all broke 2:07. You can read our full report here, but the top ten men looked like this:

  1. Martin Lel (KEN) - 2:05:15
  2. Sammy Wanjiru (KEN) - 2:05:24
  3. Abderrahim Goumri (MAR) - 2:05:30
  4. Emmanuel Mutai (KEN) - 2:06:15
  5. Ryan Hall (USA) - 2:06:17
  6. Deriba Merga (ETH) - 2:06:38
  7. Yonas Kifle (ERI) - 2:08:51
  8. Felix Limo (KEN) - 2:10:35
  9. Aleksey Sokolov (RUS) - 2:11:41
  10. Hendrik Ramaala (RSA) - 2:11:44
Rotterdam - The forgotten race!

While Lel was dominating the London field and staking a claim for greatness, just 300 miles west across the English Channel another race was unfolding. It was the Rotterdam Marathon, and its organizers promised the best field ever assembled in that race's history. The top five men had PB's under 2:07 going into the race, and the organizers were hoping for one of them to break Felix Limo's course record of 2:06:14. They got their wish, as William Kipsang cruised to victory in 2:05:49, beating Daniel Rono (2:06:58) by over one minute as he soloed home over the last eight kilometers. Unfortunately, the race was not broadcast in either the US or SA, so detailed analysis would be guesswork! (our advice is to plan the calendar so as to avoid being held on the same day as London in future!)

The conditions seemed ideal with a temperature of about 12 C (~54 F) and light winds. This falls right in the range of temperatures in which the fastest marathons by men have been run, and so it was not surprising that Kipsang broke 2:06. What was surpising, however, was that he did it nearly uncontested in what appeared to be a tight field---on paper, at least.

Kipsang earns his win

The pace setters did their job and kept the pace fast from the start (14:57 five km split), and at halfway seven men were together at 1:02:54. Kipsang attacked around 30 km, and by 35 km he had a seven second gap. The chasers faded as Kipsang confidently pulled away, increasing his lead to 40 seconds at the 40 km mark. He cruised over the line far ahead of Rono and the others, and the top three all set PB's:

1. William Kipsang (KEN) 2:05:49 PB
2. Daniel Rono (KEN) 2:06:58 PB
3. Charles Kamathi (KEN) 2:07:33 PB
4. Richard Limo (KEN) 2:08:43
5. Paul Kirui (KEN) 2:09:46
6. Tom van Hooste (BEL) 2:10:38
7. Daniel Yego (KEN) 2:10:41
8. Benjamin Maiyo (KEN) 2:10:44
9. Janne Holmen (FIN) 2:10:46
10. Driss el Himer (FRA) 2:12:08

Morgunova takes the win in the women's race

It was a brave run by Lyubov Morunova (RUS) coupled with a melt down by Zekeros Adanech (ETH) on the women's side. Adanech trailed by 19 s at 25 km, but came charging back to make it even with Adanech at 30 km. The Ethiopian could not answer the Russian's pace, though, and faded badly over the next five km so that at 40 km Morgunova was clear by two full minutes. In spite of such a "slow" finish, Adanech still set PB (2:27:32):

1. Lyubov (Morgunova (RUS) 2:25:12 PB
2. Zekeros Adanech (ETH) 2:27:32 PB
3. Alessandra Aguilar (ESP) 2:29:03 PB
4. Alice Chelagat (KEN) 2:30:18 PB
5. Ines Monteiro (POR) 2:30:36 PB
6. Yesenia Centeno (ESP) 2:33:01 PB
7. Viktorya Trushenko (RUS) 2:33:50
8. Shiru Deriba (ETH) 2:37:11

Big day out for Kenyan men

Back in January we wrote about the post-election violence in Kenya, and how it was affecting some of the Kenyan runners. At the World Cross Country Championships three weeks ago, Kenya's poor showing was attributed to that violence, and the speculation was beginning about Kenya's "fall" from their lofty position. For the marathons season, the big question was whether top runners like Lel and Limo (and many, many others) would be in top form come London, Rotterdam, and Boston. If the results from this weekend are any indication, the answer is an emphatic "YES." Rotterdam alone was dominated by the Kenyan men as they took eight of the top ten places, and in London, Kenyan men took four of the top ten.

What is perhaps more remarkable is that on one single day, THREE Kenyan runners broke 2:06! And another two went sub-2:07. Quite remarkable quality AND depth, and so Kenyan Marathon running is alive and well.

Admittedly, it is possible that all of these runners were based elsewhere during the violence. But we are relieved that in spite of the tragic turn of events and senseless violence in Kenya back in January, the Kenyans were well represented in these two big races and are still as competitive as ever as a running nation.

Join us this week for more post-London analysis, as well as our full Boston Marathon previews!

2 Comments:

N.N said...

A sad one : First non Kenyan runner in Rotterdam was Belgian runner Tom Van Hooste, (2h10min38s) He cannot go to Beijng because he had to run 2h09'45s , the only Belgian runner who ever ran 2h09 was Vincent Rousseau (2'07, I believe) long time ago. In Belgium If you don't play soccer, tennis or are into cycling, there isn't any support unless you are a star already ...

Ross Tucker and Jonathan Dugas said...

Hi Lorenzo

That's quite amazing. In SA, we have some stiff qualification criteria, but for the marathon, there are usually three guys able to qualify, though none are currently as fast as your best guy. Ramaala did 2:11 on the weekend, and he's a guaranteed starter in Beijing. It's a pity they look on running that way - one wonders whether the standard they demand is more to blame for lack of great runners than actually lifting it up, as they suppose.

If they set that standard at say 2:12, they might find that all the marginal guys (running 2;12 to 2:16) step up and train harder, and then next thing you know, you have four or five guys running 2:10. I've often wondered why administrators take such a short-sighted view - money, of course, is the answer. Pity for van Hooste. He could always come to SA and run for us, he'd be our best runner at the moment!

Ross