Here’s Bob Ramsak’s event report for the IAAF on the amazing 10,000m run by Rhonex Kipruto on day one. KIpruto continued a fine tradition of Kenyan victories over 10,000 meter, the ninth for Kenya. Rhonex Kipruto had surprised many with his win in UAE Healthy Kidney in April 2018 in 27:08. This young runner is someone to truly watch.
Rhonex Kipruto won UAE Healthy Kidney 10k in 27:08 in April in Central Park, photo by PhotoRun.net
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Propelled by a dazzling and largely solo display, Rhonex Kipruto cruised to the world U20 10,000m title, clocking 27:21.08 to capture Kenya’s ninth title over the distance.
The 18-year-old closed with a 13:23.86 second half, a performance that would have powered him to victory in all but four of the 16 previous 5000m title races contested at these championships. But his came on the back of an opening 13:57.22, and he ran it alone, chasing only the high early evening sun that seemingly never sets in Scandinavia’s mid-summer months.
“I’m very happy, it was a great day,” said Kipruto, whose performance shattered both his previous best of 27:49.6 and the championships record of 27:25.23 set by his compatriot Rodgers Chumo two years ago. “It was an honour to represent my country and my people. The competitors were tough but I was able to stay focused.”
That he did, with a little early help from teammate Solomon Boit who helped dictate at least some of the pace and take as much power as they could from the legs of Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo, who was along with Kipruto, a strong pre-race favourite.
From the gun, Kipruto and Kiplimo immediately took to the front with the Ugandan, who finished third two years ago, bringing the field through the first kilometre in 2:50.41. That pace, more than two seconds quicker than the opening 1000 metres in the 2016 record race, hinted that a quick contest was in store. With Kipruto and compatriot Boit following closely, Kiplimo stayed at the front for the next several laps, reaching two kilometres in 5:40.68 and three in 8:25.42. The two took turns with the lead over the next few laps but the pace slowed. By four kilometres, reached in 11:13.53, the leading trio were some ten seconds behind championships record pace, seemingly pushing it out of reach.
But two kilometres later, Kipruto unleashed some of the power that pushed him to a 27:08 victory in New York’s Central Park in April, the seventh fastest 10km ever run on a record standard course.
Upping the tempo, Kipruto opened a 10-metre lead with nine laps left, a lead he extended to some 30 metres two laps later. Kiplimo managed to defend the gap over the ensuing three laps, but seemed to hit a wall with one kilometre to go, as Kipruto extended his lead to more than half the distance of the home straight.
The rest was an exhibition by Kipruto which he capped with a thumbs up to the crowd as he sped down the homestretch one last time.
Kiplimo held on for second, finishing in 27:40.36. If he was disappointed, he didn’t show it.
With Boit fading over the final few laps, Ethiopian Berihu Aregawi, who was shadowing the Kenyan for much of the second half, sped by over final lap to take bronze in 27:48.41, a personal best. Boit was next in 27:57.44, also a lifetime best.
“My performance was really good today and I am really happy being second,” said the 17-year-old who was the youngest athletics Olympian in Rio two years ago.
Bob Ramsak for the IAAF