Geoffrey Mutai leads NYC Marathon record breakers

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Geoffrey Mutai of Kenya led an  assault on the New York City Marathon record book by winning the  men’s race in course record time yesterday, while Firehiwot Dado  of Ethiopia produced an amazing comeback to claim the women’s  title.  

Mutai burst from the leading pack at the 20-mile mark to win  in two hours, five minutes and six seconds, more than two and a  half minutes faster than the previous record of 2:07:43 set in  2001 by Ethiopian Tesfaye Jifar.

Finishing second behind the Boston Marathon winner was  Emmanuel Mutai, no relation to his fellow Kenyan, who completed  the 26.2-mile test in 2:06:28 and clinched a $500,000 bonus for  winning the world marathon majors championship.  
 

Geoffrey Mutai

Third place went to Olympic bronze medalist Tsegaye Kebede  of Ethiopia, who was also faster than the old New York record   in 2:07:14, 46 seconds ahead of 2010 winner Gebre Gebremariam.   

The women’s race on a glorious autumn day also looked headed  for a record-setting time with London Marathon winner Mary  Keitany of Kenya running well under world-best pace in firing  out to a massive two-minute, 23-second lead just past the  halfway mark.  
 
But Dado and fellow Ethiopian Buzunesh Deba overtook the  fading front-runner in the final mile of a run that drew more  than 47,000 participants.   

Dado, a three-time Rome Marathon winner, claimed the New  York crown in 2:23:15, four seconds ahead of Deba, who lives and  trains in New York and was lifted by spirited support from  friends once she hit the Bronx before heading to Central Park.  
 

Firehiwot Dado

Keitany was third in 2:23:39. “At the end I was feeling a  bit fatigued in my leg and this was why my colleagues got me,”  the Kenyan said.   
The exhilarating men’s times came despite a modest pace in  the first half of the race and continued a trend in the marathon  following course record times in Boston, London and a world-best  time of 2:03:38 set in September by Patrick Makau of Kenya.   

“Everything now will be changed,” said Geoffrey Mutai, about  moving marathon records ever lower.   
Keitany, finishing third last year in her marathon debut in  New York, seized the lead from the start and built a seemingly  insurmountable advantage by Mile 15.  
 
But the 29-year-old began to slow, and Dado and Deba kept  whittling down the margin, moving within one minute of Keitany  as they entered Central Park for the final stage.
  
When Keitany noticed her pursuers closing in, she put on a  desperate spurt and held them off until the trio reached the  southern tip of the park.   

Dado surged by and later so did Deba, winner of the Los  Angeles and San Diego marathons, on the last straight in the  park.   
“Once we saw her we said let’s catch her,” said Dado. “And  working together, we caught her.” Deba gained strength once she hit familiar ground in the  Bronx. “That’s my place, that’s my home place,” she said. “And I  have confidence.”