HALL AND NDEREBA PREVAIL AT ING PHILADELPHIA DISTANCE RUN
By David Monti
(c) 2009 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved - used with permission
PHILADELPHIA
(20-Sep) -- On a picture-perfect day for road racing here, both Ryan
Hall and Catherine Ndereba executed their race strategies perfectly,
winning the 32nd edition of the ING Philadelphia Distance Run,
America's most storied half-marathon.
For Hall, 26, of Mammoth
Lakes, Calif., the win came on his first appearance here. While
Ndereba, the 37 year-old Kenyan with two world marathon titles,
extended her incredible record of achievement here, bettering her own
record by winning the race for the seventh time. Remarkably, her first
win in Philadelphia, her long-time USA training base, came 13 years ago.
The
talk here over the last few days had been about fast times,
particularly by Hall, who requested that the 15-K, 10 mile and 20-K
marks be certified just in case he bettered any national records. But
both the men's and women's races ended up being tactical, especially
the men's, which came down to a sprint in the final kilometer.
Hall,
and Kenyans Samuel Ndereba, Benjamin Limo, and Valentine Orare, had
separated themselves from the field by the 8th kilometer (23:40). As
the race left the city center to run along the Schuylkill River, the
four contenders established a very steady, but slow rhythm. Mile splits
were consistently between 4:42 and 4:48, with Limo doing most of the
leading.
"I remember running 15-K's and we were talking at this
pace," said USA 10-mile record holder, Greg Meyer, who was who was
watching the race from the press truck.
Hall found the pace,
closer to what he would be running for a fast marathon, to his liking.
At this point in his marathon build-up for the ING New York City
Marathon in November, running even a little faster was challenging.
"After
the first couple of miles it was obvious that a record wasn't going to
be on for today," said Hall sporting a new short haircut he got here
yesterday. He added: "We were all kind of looking around and waiting
for someone to move."
Hall decided to sit tight, but not too
long, figuring that Limo, the 2005 world 5000m champion, would have the
best sprint. But with the pack still together with a mile to go, Hall
had waited long enough.
"Right about the mile (to go) mark I put
in a nice hard surge," he said. "I just decided I was going to press as
hard as I could."
It was good enough. Limo said that a hamstring
was bothering him and he was afraid to press any harder. The left an
opening for both Hall, who scampered to the finish near the
Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1:01:52, and Samuel Ndereba, Catherine's
brother, who was able to finish second in 1:01:56, just slightly off of
his personal best. Limo held on for third in 1:02:01, and Orare was
fourth (1:02:22). No other athletes broke 65 minutes.
"I knew
that the last mile would be tough," said Limo who seemed pleased
overall with his race. Of the hamstring problem he said, "I just felt
it when I was warming up."
The women went out more aggressively
than the men (33:09 for 10 km), but the race still came down to the
final kilometer. Ndereba had to contend with her plucky compatriot,
Irene Limika, 30, who was looking for her first Distance Run title.
Ndereba wasn't concerned.
"No, I wasn't worried," she said, her
eyes hidden behind her trademark sunglasses. "She's training well, and
I'm training well, too. I knew we were going to have a tough challenge
with one another."
In the end, experience won over youth.
Ndereba pressed hard to the finish line to win in 1:09:43, just three
seconds up on Limika who set a personal best. Neriah Asiba, also of
Kenya, finished third in 1:10:26, just two seconds off of her career
best time.
"It's a home crowd," said Ndereba of the Philadelphia fans. "I've been here almost 15 years. It's good to win home."
For
two Olympic gold medalists, Derartu Tulu of Ethiopia and Constantina
Dita of Romania, results were mixed. Tulu, 37, the first African woman
to win an Olympic gold medal in any sport, finished a solid fourth in
1:10:33. She's trying to make a comeback and is hoping to run a fall
marathon.
"I'm OK now," said Tulu, clearly pleased. "I'm coming up."
Dita
finished 10th in 1:14:47 and was clearly in some pain after the race,
holding her lower back and grimacing. She said, however, that the race
was part of her rebuilding process after a long break from what she
considered to be serious racing.
"It's the first time in a long time that I raced," she said.
Kristen Fryburg, 28, of Broomfield, Colo., was the top American, finishing in 8th place in 1:13:52.
Next year, this race will be run under a new name: the ING Rock 'N' Roll Philadelphia Half-Marathon.
PHOTOS: Ryan Hall and Catherine Ndereba win 2009 ING Philadelphia Distance Run (Photos by Jane Monti)
ENDS
