AMERICANS STIR BUZZ AT COMRADES MARATHON
By Riël Hauman
(c) 2010 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved
The South African ultrarunning scene was abuzz last week with the newsthat American stars Josh Cox, holder of the USA record for 50 km, and
Kami Semick, reigning world 100 km champion, have entered the 85th
Comrades Marathon, which will be held on Sunday between
Pietermaritzburg and Durban. They are part of the 23,565-strong field
that will start the world’s largest ultramarathon.
It is the first time in the history of the race that it will be run
“down” for two years in a row. Two consecutive “up” runs, from coastal
Durban to Pietermaritzburg, have taken place three times – one of these
when the 1940 and 1946 races were separated by World War II. It was
decided to have the race finish in Durban again because it is one of
the host cities for soccer’s FIFA World Cup tournament, which kicks off
two weeks later.
The distance for this year’s race is 89.28 km – 110 meters longer than
in 2009. The first few kilometres of the route in Pietermaritzburg have
been changed to facilitate an easier and faster flow of the runners out
of the city.
The last time a top American runner ran the Comrades was in 1994 when
Alberto Salazar won the up run on his first attempt in 5:38:39. Second
on that occassion was Nick Bester (the 1991 champion), who now manages
the elite Nedbank team for which Cox will compete. The only other USA
runner to win the race was Ann Trason, who set an up run record in 1996
and won again in 1997 in what is still the second fastest time for the
down run.
Cox, one of 171 US runners entered, said in an interview that Salazar’s
victory spurred him on to tackle the Comrades and that the 1994
champion helped him with his preparation. “It is the greatest race on
Earth,” he said. “I am here to win.”
Cox set a USA record of 2:47:17 in the P.F. Chang’s Rock ‘n’ Roll
Arizona 50 km between Phoenix and Tempe in January 2009. He covered the
standard marathon in 2:20:29 and then continued by running 20 laps on a
track to complete 50 km. Eleven months later he ran a personal best of
2:13:51 when he finished second in the California International
Marathon in Sacramento. He was only 9 seconds behind winner Tesfaye
Girma of Ethiopia.
Cox has a PB of 65:09 for the half-marathon (also set in 2009) and can
boast a best time of 29:57.06 for a track 10,000 m. A month ago he won
the Country Music Half-Marathon in Nashville in 66:47, essentially a
training run.
The big question will be whether Cox, 34, can handle the distance and
the tough course, on which the downhills tend to play havoc with a
runner’s upper leg muscles. On the down run the route drops from 670
metres at the start to sea level – but almost all of it is in the
punishing second half. The demands of the Comrades are different than
those of a marathon or 50 km, and many talented runners over these
shorter distances have found that their bodies cannot handle doubling
(or almost doubling) the distance.
One of the exceptions, of course, was Salazar. Comrades experts will
tell you that the down run is tougher than the up run, and if Cox has
prepared well enough for the pounding of the downhills, he may well
emulate his fellow countryman.
Apart from Salazar, only eleven men have ever won the Comrades on their
first attempt (including the winner of the very first Comrades in 1921,
Bill Rowan).
Cox will be up against a formidable field, led by defending
champion, Zimbabwe’s Stephen Muzhingi, who conquered the seemingly
invincible Leonid Shvetsov last year. Muzhingi beat the Russian, who
has since retired, by almost 10 minutes in 5:23:27, the second fastest
ever on the down run – bettered only by Shvetsov’s record of 5:20:41.
Muzhingi’s victory capped a superb three years of Comrades performances
– he was seventh in the previous down run and in the 2008 up run he
finished third. On top of that he was fourth in the 2009 Two Oceans,
only six weeks before the Comrades. This year he was fourth again, but
this time he had an extra two weeks to recover before the Comrades.
The tough 33-year-old Zimbabwean will not give up his title easily and
his powerful run over the last 25 km from Field’s Hill in 2009 will
certainly serve as a warning to all his rivals.
Charles Tjiane, the first South African in 2009, will be back and will
be aiming to improve on his third position. He has prepared with a
comfortable 13th place in the Two Oceans and 9th in the Om die Dam 50
km.
Eight South Africans – double the number of 2008 – won gold medals last
year, the first time since 1995 that eight local runners had finished
in the top ten. Apart from Tjiane, the other seven were Fusi Nhlapo,
winner in 2003, Lucas Nonyana, Mncedisi Mkhize, Bongmusa Mthembu, Peter
Molapo, Bethuel Netshishefhe and Harmans Mokgadi. They are all back.
Nhlapo has never been out of the top five in his last four runs, while
Netshishefhe won the Two Oceans in 2007. Triple Two Oceans winner Marco
Mambo has also entered. He failed to finish his debut last year and in
this year’s Two Oceans he was 16th.
Nonyana won gold medals in 2007 (9th) and 2009 (5th), was fourth in the Om die Dam ultra and should be a contender again.
But, as usual, there are many more runners who are serious contenders
on paper – the problem with the Comrades is its unpredictability and
the number of things that could go wrong on the day. Among these men
are Sipho Ngomane, winner in 2005, Prodigal Khumalo (ZIM), Josiah
Thugwane, the 1996 Olympic Marathon gold medallist, Simon Peu, who had
a disappointing run in this year’s Two Oceans, Brian Zondi, Collen
Makaza (ZIM), and Fanie Matshipa.
Another foreign visitor should be mentioned: Russian Grigoriy Murzin,
who was second in the 2007 down run. He is returning to the race full
of determination and has already proven his toughness; he could win
another gold.
And then there is debutant Mzwanele Maphekula. The 32-year-old athlete
was fifth, third and fourth in the last three SA Marathons and has a
personal best of 2:17:14. He was 15th in the Two Oceans – two places
behind Tjiane – and has prepared with great care for the longest race
of his career. He has the same coach as Lusapho April, who was fifth in
the recent Hannover marathon in a huge PB of 2:10:45, and is an entrant
to watch.
There is another problem with the Comrades – at least in recent years –
and that is that South Africa’s women seem to resign themselves
beforehand to the fact that Russia’s redheaded Nurgalieva twins cannot
be beaten – at least not by a local athlete.
Over the last seven years Elena and Olesya have taken eleven of the
fourteen first and second places on offer. Of those seven races they
failed to win only one (Tatyana Zhirkova took the 2005 event) and, when
both participated, it has happened only once that there was just one of
them in the top three. (Olesya did not run in 2006 and was fourth in
2004.)
It is a fearsome record, and they have also won the Two Oceans five
times between them since 2004. Olesya took the honours in last year’s
Comrades, as well as the Two Oceans two months ago, but Elena is
usually the better one in the longer race; she has scored four wins.
Elena had the flu before the 2010 Two Oceans and afterwards Olesya
said, “Today I was stronger than my sister, but she will be stronger in
the Comrades.” Unless something goes wrong, this will probably be the
case.”
Other Russians in the field are Irina Vishnevskaya, who won the
European 100 km title last year and also finished first in the 100 km
del Passatore in Italy, and Marina Myshlyanova, fourth in the last two
Comrades. Czech mountain running star Anna Pichrtova is also in the
field. She has recovered for a terrible car accident on her way to a
mountain race in Africa.
However, one feels that if the twins can be beaten, it will be by
Semick, whose ultra accomplishments speak volumes. The American won
four major ultras in 2009, topped by her victory in the IAU World 100
km Championships in Torhout, where she took the title in 7:37:24 to
beat Vishnevskaya by more than 9 minutes. Semick’s time was the world’s
fastest in 2009.
She also won the American 50 km title in 3:29:20, the USA 50 km Trail
Championships in 7:57:35, and the American River 50 Miles in 6:45:51.
Semick will have no problem with the distance and if she is on form,
the twins will have their hands full to keep her from following in
Trason’s footsteps.
South Africa’s two best Comrades runners of the past eight years, Farwa
Mentoor and Riana van Niekerk, have experience on their side, but that
may not be enough this time. Mentoor was the first South African in the
Comrades six years in a row, from 2002 to 2007, and again in 2009. She
did not finish this year’s Two Oceans, which will not help her
confidence.
Van Niekerk, who has tended to over-race in the past, led the locals in
2008, but failed to finish in 2007 and 2009. She is the current SA
marathon champion and was sixth in the Two Oceans – and then won the
Loskop 50 km a mere two weeks later.
It is very possible that the South African challenge will be led by
Lesley Train (fourth last year and second in this year’s Om die Dam
ultra), Adinda Kruger (third in the Two Oceans behind the twins and
fourth in the Loskop race) and Belinda Waghorn (third in both the Om
die Dam and Loskop ultras). Train and Waghorn both had easy runs in the
Two Oceans, finishing 11th and 14th respectively.
Other contenders are Lindsay van Aswegen, who was fifth in the Loskop
ultra, and Joanna Thomas, the outstanding master runner from Cape Town
whose seventh place in the Two Oceans gave her a win in her age
category.
And don’t forget Kashmira Parbhoo, who took the last gold medal in the
2009 Comrades amid astonished cries of “Who on Earth is this?!” She was
fifth in the Om die Dam race and could fare even better than last year.
Runners from 60 different countries have entered, and the average age
for men is 40 and for women 42. The oldest male is Martin Weidemann
(79) and the oldest female Kathleen Reid (70). Two entrants have done
forty or more Comrades: Dave Rogers will be attempting his 44th and
Riël Hugo his 41st. Nine others will earn their triple green number for
30 finishes if they reach the finish line in Durban’s Sahara Stadium
before the 12-hour cut-off.
Prize money for the first man and woman is R250,000 (USD 32,500), while
second place gets R120,000 (USD 15,600) and third R90,000 (USD 11,700).
The first South African citizen (man and woman) will win R125,000 (USD
16,250), while the incentive for breaking Shvetsov’s or Frith van der
Merwe’s record (which has stood at 5:54:43 since 1989) is R250,000 (USD
32,500). The first ten men and women receive gold medals, those from
position 11 to sub-6 hours Wally Hayward medals, from 6 hours to
sub-7:30 silver, from 7:30 to sub-9 hours Bill Rowan, from 9 hours to
sub-11 hours bronze, and from 11 hours to sub-12 hours Vic Clapham
medals.
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