Kenya's Emily Chebet Sets New Course Record At 32nd Freihofer's Run For Women 5k In Albany, NY
ALBANY, NY (June 5, 2010) —
Freihofer's Run for Women Results
Open
1. Emily Chebet (KEN) 15:12 (CR) $10,000
2. Edna Kiplagat (KEN) 15:20 $5000
3. Mamitu Daska (ETH) 15:23 $3000
4. Teyba Erkesso (ETH) 15:36 $2000
5. Belainesh Zemedkun (ETH) 15:44 $1000
6. Julliah Tinega (KEN) 15:48 $750
7. Benita Willis (AUS) 15:49 $500
8. Amane Gobena (ETH) 15:50 $300
9. Rebecca Donaghue (USA/PA) 15:50 $250
10. Elizabeth Maloy (USA/NY) 15:53 $200
Masters (Over 40)
1. Anzhelika Averkova (UKR) 16:40 $750
2. Lisa Harvey (CAN) 17:05 $500
3. Paula Wiltse (CAN) 17:28 $350
Over 50
1. Carmen Troncoso (USA/TX) 17:47
2. Joan Samuelson (USA/ME) 17:48
USA 10 km Race Walk Championships Results
1 Allen James, 46, M, Sanborn, NY 46:39 ($500)
2 Dave McGovern, 44, M, Locus Valley, NY, 47:22 ($400)
3 Teresa Vaill, 47, F, Gainesville, FL, 47:24 ($300)
4 Dan Serianni, 19, M, Rochester, NY, 48:48 ($200)
5 Dave Talcott, 50, M, Johnson City, NY, 50:42 ($100)
6 Alejandro Chavez, 17, M, Pharr, TX 51:24
7 John Soucheck, 44, M, Little Silver, NJ, 52:24
8 David Swarts, 45, M, Jackson, MI, 52:51
9 Dan O'Brien, 45, M, Port Huron, MI, 53:14
10 Omar Nash, 36, M, Cincinnati, OH, 53:35
Recap:
The 32nd running of the Freihofer's Run forWomen 5K, featuring 3,927 women running through the streets of the New
York's capital city, produced a stunning victory for Kenya's Emily
Chebet, made all the more so by her new course record of 15:12.
Chebet's new figures bettered the previous best time set by Morocco's
Asmae Leghzaoui at 15:18 in 2005. The six second improvement was the
largest in the history of the Freihofer's 5K.
It was evident from the outset that Chebet was going to be among the
most prominent contenders. Having won the World Cross-Country title in
March in Poland, she was far from intimidated by a field that included
defending Freihofer's champion (and 2010 Boston Marathon champ) Teyba
Erkesso from Ethiopia, Mamitu Daska also from Ethiopia and the second
finisher here in 2009, Amane Gobena, the third of the powerhouse
Ethiopian contingent and who had placed second here in 2008, and
three-time winner Benita Willis from Australia.
From the gun, which sounded at 10 a.m. on Madison Avenue, the pace was
cautious. Although all of the favorites were at the forefront —
Erkesso, Willis, Chebet, Gobena, Daska, plus Edna Kiplagat (KEN),
Julliah Tinega (KEN) and Albany native Elizabeth Maloy — an opening
kilometer of 3:13 and a first mile of 5:06 indicated that a course
record was all but out of the question. That likelihood was made all
the more remote by the increasing heat, which dispelled the humidity
that had built overnight, but which did little to ease the oppressive
racing conditions.
At two kilometers the clock displayed 6:15, still offering little
indication of the fireworks that were about to explode. The first
indication of that came close to the 1.5-mile mark when what had been a
group of eight leaders was suddenly whittled down to just Erkesso,
Daska, Chebet, and Kiplagat, winner of this year's Los Angeles
Marathon. Erkesso was the most aggressive, though in reality none in
the foursome was sitting in for the ride. Kiplagat was shadowing every
move, while Chebet and Daska hovered alongside, both appearing
ominously comfortable.
It was the two-mile split that gave the first tangible evidence of a
race in full flight. A clocking of 10:06 revealed a previous mile of
5:00, indicative that the pace was becoming more intense with each
passing stride. Surprisingly, it was Erkesso who was the first to feel
its effects, conceding two strides approaching 2.25 miles and giving up
ground that she would never recoup. She ultimately placed fourth in
15:36.
With just three competitors remaining in the lead pack - and with the
long downhill finishing straight along Madison Avenue not far away - it
was evident that a monumental battle to the line was about to ensue.
Indeed, it was the right hand turn out of Washington Park and onto
Madison that was the catalyst for the real racing to begin. Kiplagat
made a slight surge, but that was all the impetus Chebet needed. She
injected a wicked surge of her own that buried Daska for good, but
which also prompted the question of whether she had gone way too hard
too soon.
Chebet did not win her World Cross-Country title without tactical
savvy, however. Though Kiplagat hung on her heels, the diminutive
leader injected a second punishing surge with 350 meters remaining that
settled the score for good. At the line, Chebet's course record of
15:12 gave her a winning margin of eight seconds over Kiplagat, and
earned her a winner's check of $10,000. Asked how she felt about her
victory in her second Freihofer's appearance (she finished 6th in 2007;
15:59), the new champion beamed, "I feel very good."
"Being the World Cross-Country champion, I knew she had speed," mused
Kiplagat afterwards, who landed in Upstate New York from Kenya late
Thursday night to take part in the all-women road race.
Local runner, Elizabeth Maloy, a native of Loudonville and a graduate
of Holy Names and Georgetown University, joined Rebecca Donaghue from
Pennsylvania in becoming the first US runners to place in the top 10
finishers since 2007. Donaghue placed ninth in 15:50, with Maloy 10th
with a time of 15:53.
"I'm not strong enough yet to run with [the leaders] for three miles,"
commented Maloy, who competes for the famed New York Athletic Club and
focuses primarily on track racing. "But, I'm really happy with how I
ran. It was really fun, an amazing experience."
In the masters competition for runners over 40, Ukraine's Anzhelika
Averkova prevailed over Canada's Lisa Harvey, 16:40 to 17:05. Averkova,
who placed second here last year, received $750 for her victory and
stated, "I like the organization of this race. There are lots of fans
who give fantastic support. I love running in America."
"How could you not say that this is the greatest Freihofer's ever,"
remarked Regan, heaping praise on the day's competitors. "The World
Cross-Country champion defeats a world-class field and improves the
course record by the biggest margin in our history. That's what I call
a race. Plus, we had the second largest number of registrants ever.
This was a great day for Albany."
Earlier in the day in the USA 10K Race Walk Championships held on the
Empire State Plaza's red brick course, Allen James, 46, of Sanborn,
N.Y. cruised to victory in a time of 46:39. The top female finisher in
the 36-person field was Teresa Vail, 47, of Gainesville, Fla., who
crossed the line in 47:24.
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Event sponsors include the Charles Freihofer Baking Company, Price
Chopper Supermarkets, The City of Albany, FOX23, the Times Union, WGNA,
host hotel 74 State, CSC, Subway, and Dale Miller Restaurant.
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