Negewu holds on to Cape Town Marathon title
Running in a lead pack of six athletes, including Ketema Bekele Negasa, Laban Mutai, Duncan Maiyo, and South Africa’s Xolisa Tyali, Negewu went through 10km in 30:18, some 13 seconds behind pacemaker Henry Kiplagat.
Winning streak
Kiplagat proceeded to pour on the pace and by halfway had extended his lead to 34 seconds over the chasing pack. Kiplagat went through to the half marathon mark in 1:04.29 with the pack clocking 1:05.03.
By 30km, the pack was chasing down Kiplagat and had whittled his lead down to nine seconds with Negewu driving the bus. At 35km, Negewu threw down the gauntlet and pulled away from his rivals to cross the line in 2:10.01.
“Defending my title was important to me. I am really happy to be able to defend my title as this race put me on the map,” said Negewu. “I was hoping for a faster time, I wanted to break my course record but there was a bit of wind between 11 and 18 km, which slowed us down, and the guys didn’t want to work together. So if things go well I would like to come back next year and try and win the race for the third time and break my course record.”
Ketema Negessa finished the marathon second in 2:11.06, while Duncan Maiyo of Kenya placed third when he finished in 2:11.26.
South African Elroy Gelant finished his debut marathon in 2:12.49; placing fifth overall. Gelant stayed off the leaders until the 30km mark before he tried to close the gap. In the end though, running in man’s land for a longer period of time cost him and slowed down in the latter stages of the race.
Gelant’s fifth place means he was the first South African home, which earned him a R100,000 bonus. In the women’s race, SA’s Irvette van Zyl's ninth position earned her R12,000 plus the R100,000 bonus.
Dramatic finish in women’s race
The women’s race saw some drama as pacemaker Helalia Johannes reached the halfway mark in 1:15.22. All of the race favourites were behind her by at least 38 seconds. Running comfortably in that chase pack were Meserey Asefan, Betelhem Moges, Fantu Jimma, and Agnes Kiprop amongst others.
By 35km, it was clear that with her pacemaking duties fulfilled, Johannes was going for the win, but within less than a kilometre to go, she was caught by Betelhem Moges who went on to win in 2:30.22. Johannes came through six seconds adrift at 2:30.28 and Agnes Kiprop third in 2:31.00.
“I was looking for 2:27 or faster, but the pace between and 10km and 25km was a bit slow, so I lost some time there,” said Moges. When asked if she was worried about the pacemaker being so far ahead, Moges was a bit surprised that Johannes had stayed in the race for so long. “I was expecting her to pull out and was not aware that she was so far ahead, so I was surprised when I saw her in front of me. But I saw she was struggling and so I surged and caught her.”
Lungie Gonqa earned the provincial men's title, with the race incorporating the Western Province Championships, finishing 17th overall in 2:24.31, and Ulrica stander secured the women's crown by taking 14th in 2:54.08.
SA road running
"There is no doubt now that the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon has established itself on the global stage. We have IAAF GOLD Label Status and have seen times that we are not used to in South Africa. This can only be good for South African road running as the standard can only improve from here," said race ambassador Elana van Zyl-Meyer.
This year’s Sanlam Cape Town Marathon had recorded just under 8,000 entrants; cementing its position among the continent's most popular road running events.
"It is incredible how quickly the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon has grown, with its IAAF Gold Label Status making it the only marathon in Africa able to claim such a pedigree. It is phenomenal. And the results show. A winning time of 2:10.01 is a massive achievement and we are extremely proud of what has been achieved in such a short time. None of this could have been achieved without all of our partners, and we are extremely grateful to them,” said race director Janet Welham.