Tamirat Tola commanded the crowded streets of Paris early Saturday morning and broke the Olympic record in the marathon in 2:06.26.
The Ethiopian was among the braved warm weather conditions that added to the course’s steep hills,
Eluid Kipchoge, seeking his third straight title was barely a factor and dropped out after appearing to grab his hip several times early in the race. The Kenyan was later seen near the 31km mark waiting for the catcher vehicle and gave his shoes to fans along the course.
But Tola, 32, emerged victorious
They went out slow and came home fast, and when it was over, and Tamirat Tola of Ethiopia was sprinting through the plaza and Les Invalides, the Olympic marathon once more proved why it can be that most captivating of races.
On a bright and clear morning in Paris, 80 of the world’s best distance runners blazed west out to Versailles and back to the center of the French capital, just ahead of a scorching afternoon, with Tola leading the way for most of it and finishing in an Olympic record time of two hours, 6 minutes, 21 seconds.
Tola continued to be one of the sport’s great late bloomers, a 32-year-old runner has become especially good at excelling in warmer conditions. He got his first big win at the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Ore. in 2022, another summer race in uncomfortable conditions, then backed it up in New York last November, in unseasonably warm conditions.
On Saturday morning, he captured another of the sport’s ultimate prizes, and he did it running with the kind of aggressive style befitting a runner on a serious hot streak.
After letting the little-known Eyob Faniel of Italy lead for most of the first half of the race, Tola made his first move just before the halfway mark.
He stayed at the front or close to it the rest of the way, putting the hammer down after 20 miles, surging up a hill through the forest west of the city limits to create a gap that began at more than 10 seconds between him and the chasers and stretching it out to 21 seconds by the time it was over.
Belgium’s Bashir Abdi took the silver medal and Kenya’s Benson Kipruto took the bronze.
Eliud Kipchoge, a two-time gold medalist and the only man to run the distance in less than two hours suffered from cramping early in the race and fell to the back of the pack before failing to finish.
PARIS — Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola delivered a gritty run to claim gold with an Olympic-record time in a difficult men’s marathon on Saturday, with two-time reigning champion Eluid Kipchoge bowing out of the race.
In a talent-packed field, Kipchoge was expected to battle to defend his title. Ethiopian marathon legend Haile Gebrselassie opened the race, but rather than welcoming Kipchoge at the line, he was there instead to congratulate his countryman Tola, whom he inspired to take up the sport as a 19-year-old.
Tola, 32, finished the race in 2:06:26, breaking the previous Olympic record set at Beijing 2008, made even more remarkable by the fact he only entered as a substitute two weeks ago after an injury to teammate Sisay Lemma.
Belgium’s Bashir Abdi took silver and Kenya’s Benson Kipruto took bronze.
The marathon course began outside Paris’ city hall, Hotel de Ville, and passed along sights such as Palais Garnier opera house, Place Vendome, the Louvre museum, the Trocadero and the Eiffel Tower and the Palace of Versailles. It ended with a scenic home straight in the shadow of the 17th-century hospital Esplanade des Invalides.
The footrace took on the air of the Tour de France at times, with multiple steep climbs amid a notably hilly course that was billed as one of the most difficult in Olympic history. The first climb took place around the 10-mile mark. A second hill a couple of miles later also had an impact, but it was the hill at the 18-mile mark that proved hardest, with a 13.5% incline at one point.
One of the notable runners who struggled was Kipchoge. He is one of the best marathon runners of all time, but he endured a tough race that even saw him almost a full minute behind the leaders at the halfway stage and reduced to walking up the hill at Mile 18.
He bowed out of the race soon after.
It comes after one of the most difficult years of Kipchoge’s career after he suffered significant online abuse following the death of his compatriot Kelvin Kiptum. Kipchoge suffered sleepless nights for some time after, resulting in him finishing in 10th at the Tokyo marathon in March — his worst-ever result as a professional.
The course did not phase Tola, though. He delivered a dominant display that saw him pull clear before the halfway mark and never let up.
Tola’s only previous Olympic medal was a bronze in the men’s 10,000 metres at Rio 2016. It is also his second major marathon victory after winning last year’s New York City marathon.
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