First-ever Tanzanian gold as Simbu dips past Petros in world marathon
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Tanzania's Alphonce Felix Simbu produced a savage dip at the
line to snatch world marathon gold from Germany's Amanal Petros in Tokyo on
Monday.
Simbu and Eritrea-born Petros were both clocked at 2hr 09min
48sec in the most dramatic of endings for the longest event of the world
championships in the Japanese capital, the Tanzanian adjudged to have finished
three-hundredths ahead.
"I made history today -- the first Tanzanian gold medal
at a world championships," said Simbu, who won bronze at the 2017 worlds
in London.
There was a 88-strong field from 47 countries that took to
the streets of Tokyo for the gruelling 26-mile (42km) race.
Twenty-two failed to finish, not least Ethiopia's Tadese
Takele, who pulled out at the 33km mark, switching his watch off and climbing
over a barrier from the road onto a pavement, seemingly grimacing in pain.
Takele had won the Tokyo Marathon in March in 2:03:23,
making him the fastest entrant for the marathon at the world championships.
His Ethiopian teammate Deresa Geleta, second to Takele in
the Tokyo Marathon, was the next high-profile casualty, pulling up at 35.5km.
Uganda's Abel Chelangat had paced much of the race, leading
a definitive break-out at the 39.5km mark that split the lead pack to five, including
all three medallists.
As they approached the stadium, Chelangat and Ethiopian-born
Israeli Haimro Alame were suddenly dropped.
Petros led the podium trio onto the track for what proved to
be a totally gripping final 300 metres.
The German opened up down the back straight, but was tracked
by Simbu -- second at this year's Boston Marathon in 2:05:05 -- with Aouani
back in third.
Petros looked like he had the win as he neared the finish
line, but with Simbu fast advancing with a last-gasp spurt of energy, the
German could do nothing bar glance nervously over his right shoulder as his
legs tied up.
Simbu's persistence paid off as the 33-year-old broke the
line just ahead of Petros, who tumbled to the floor.
"I have never seen something like this in the marathon
-- both the men and women's races came down to a sprint finish. It's like the
100m!" said Petros.
"Coming into the finish I was thinking about winning so
a bit of me is feeling very sad. I'm sad I lost gold in the last three metres
but I am very happy also for Simbu."
Uganda's defending champion Victor Kiplangat never landed a
blow and finished in 11th place in 2:11:33.
In other action on the morning session of the third day of
the championships, Femke Bol cruised through her heat of the 400m hurdles.
In the absence of American Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, who
has opted to race the 400m flat here, Bol is odds-on favourite to defend her
title, with semi-finals scheduled for Wednesday and the final on Friday.
American Katie Moon, the two-time defending world champion
and Olympic gold medallist in Tokyo in 2021, led 13 other athletes through to
the final of the women's pole vault.
All 14 had cleared 4.60m and Moon will be accompanied in
Wednesday's final by teammates Sandi Morris and Hana Moll.
One notable absentee, however, will be former world indoor
champion Molly Caudery, the Briton sustaining an ankle injury in warm-up that saw
her withdraw from the event.
Reigning Olympic champion Nina Kennedy of Australia did not
travel to Tokyo, having pulled out with a strained leg muscle following surgery
on her hamstring.


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