CITY WORKERS COMPLETE STANDARD CHARTERED GREAT CITY RACE AND HELP PROTECT THE SIGHTS OF 73,740 PEOPLE Rush hour across London’s Square Mile was an altogether different sight last night as the City’s closed-off streets welcomed over 5,000 runners from over 350 companies for the annual Standard Chartered Great City Race. The competitive race was once again a family affair. In the individual men’s category, Phil Wicks from Legal & General scooped his sixth win in seven years in a blistering time of 14 minutes 45 seconds, with Huw Lobb from DMW Group second and Simon Coombes from Islington Council third. In the individual female category, Phil’s wife Emily from Punter Southall took the honours, for the fifth consecutive time, in a time of 16 minutes 55 seconds. Katy Webster from Ofcom came second and Lara Bromilow from HSBC Bank came third. Speaking after the race, Phil Wicks, said: “The weather was perfect today. It was incredible out there and I’m so pleased that Emily won the women’s race. It’s fun to blast around and soak up the great atmosphere.” The 5k race helped to raise significant funds and awareness for Seeing is Believing, a global initiative that tackles avoidable blindness and the official race beneficiary. With £10 from every entry going to this charitable initiative each person who registered to run provided enough funds to cover the cost of a trichiasis operation. In addition to this, the race registrations collectively raised over USD $59,000 which could provide enough medication to help tackle trachoma in the Kasempa District of Zambia – protecting a population of 73,740 people. A group of celebrities from the worlds of sport and entertainment showed their support for Seeing is Believing by taking on the challenge of running the race blindfolded. The team included England cricket legend Mike Gatting OBE, TV presenter Chris Hollins, Harlequins RFC player Nick Evans and 5-times Paralympic running gold medallist Noel Thatcher MBE. Richard Holmes, CEO Europe at Standard Chartered Bank, ran alongside celebrities and said: “I would like to thank everyone involved for helping to make this event such a memorable and enjoyable occasion. The spirit among all the runners and support was fantastic. “This year’s race has raised more money for Seeing is Believing than any previous race thanks to the huge appetite across the City to take part in the event. The funds raised will make an enormous difference to the lives of thousands of people and will go a long way to helping us achieve our target of raising US$100m for the initiative by 2020.” Top 5 Individual Men’s Race 1 – Phil Wicks, Legal & General: 14 minutes 45 seconds 2 – Huw Lobb, DMW Group: 15 minutes 25 seconds 3 – James Mcmullan, KPMG: 15 minutes 38 seconds 4 – Simon Coombes, Islington Council: 15 minutes 55 seconds 5 – Andrew Lawrence, Barclays PLC: 16 minutes 4 seconds Top 5 Individual Women’s Race 1 – Emily Wicks, Punter Southall: 16 minutes 55 seconds 2 – Katy Webster, Ofcom: 17 minutes 39 seconds 3 – Lara Bromilow, HSBC Bank PLC: 18 minutes 23 seconds 4 – Anna Critchlow, Career Legal Ltd: 18 minutes 27 seconds 5 – Hannah Harazawa, Mizuho International PLC: 18 minutes 28 seconds A full list of team and individual results can be found at the race website www.cityrace.co.uk on Friday 12 July. All results are provisional and subject to ratification. Official images of the race will be posted on the race Facebook page at: www.facebook.com/ -Ends- The Standard Chartered Great City Race The Standard Chartered Great City Race is London’s leading 5K corporate running challenge which takes place through the closed off streets of the City of London. On Thursday 11 July, more than 5,000 runners from nearly 400 company teams from across the City took part in the race. For further information please visitwww.cityrace.co.uk Follow the race on Facebook and on Twitter The Standard Chartered Great City Race is organised by the London Marathon Limited. |
Author
Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys. Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."
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