While @runblogrun was viewing Bank of America Chicago marathon and the victory of Galen Rupp and Tirunesh Dibaba, the B.A.A. half was happening in one of our favorite towns, Boston.
Please find the release below with top ten results on this fine event. Thanks to the BAA and PhotoRun for their assistance in covering this fine event.
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Daniel Salel wins BAA Half, 8 October 2017, photo by PhotoRun.net
Julia Chelimo winning BAA Half, October 8, 2017, photo by PhotoRun.net
Daniel Salel earns three-peat, while Joan Chelimo runs away with title at 17th annual B.A.A. Half Marathon, presented by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund.
BOSTON, MA (8-Oct) — Kenyans Daniel Salel and Joan Chelimo swept the top spots at today’s 17th annual B.A.A. Half Marathon, presented by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Jimmy Fund. Salel completed the three-peat, running away from a large lead pack in the final two miles before breaking the tape in 1:04:31. Calling Boston her lucky city, Chelimo returned to the Bay State and earned a commanding victory in 1:10:31.
A total of 6,431 participants started the B.A.A. Half Marathon, including more than one thousand B.A.A. Distance Medley runners. The B.A.A. Half Marathon was the third and final event of the 2017 B.A.A. Distance Medley, a three-race series that includes the B.A.A. 5K and B.A.A. 10K.
Salel, from Eldoret, remained part of a large ten-man pack through 10K in 30:57. Among the leaders were American Olympians Abdi Abdirahman and Dathan Ritzenhein, as well as Japan’s Suguru Osako and Ethiopia’s Tesfalem Gebrearegawi.
Having run the B.A.A. Half Marathon four times and won the last two years, Salel was determined to earn another victory. Through the early hills, Salel hung tough despite consistent surges from Abdirahman.
Hitting 10K in 30:57 and ten miles in 49:46, Salel was poised for a strong final push. He chose the 15K point to begin testing the pace.
“We started slow, we ran a slow pace through 15K. Then I started leading,” said Salel, smiling from ear to ear. “I was thinking the pace is so slow that we might run a poor time. So, I decided to move and go. After 15K I decided to take the lead, push the pace, take it higher.”
Once Salel made his move approaching Franklin Park Zoo, the race was all but over. Osako and Gebrearegawi did their best to respond, but they simply could not match Salel’s speed over the final kilometers. Leaving the Zoo with about a kilometer to go, Salel was all alone. He’d maintain the lead through the finish, breaking the tape in 1:04:31. Osako was second in 1:04:42, with Gebrearegawi completing the podium in third (1:04:45).
“I’m so happy, very happy to win again for the third time. I like the course, I like Boston, and I’ve been champion three times,” Salel said. With the win, Salel earns a $10,000 first-place prize. He called Boston his second home, proclaiming the roads and people of Boston his favorite. “The crowd was supporting me, yelling my name. The crowd was so nice.”
Fourth went to Japan’s Shogo Nakamura (1:04:50), with Abdirahman fifth (1:05:11), and North Carolina’s Tyler Pennel sixth (1:05:33). Ritzenhein was eighth in 1:06:25, followed eight seconds later by B.A.A. team member Eric Ashe in ninth.
On the women’s side, Joan Chelimo controlled the race from start to finish. Departing Franklin Park on the heels of the elite men, Chelimo passed two miles in 10:01 with the men less than ten seconds ahead. Buze Diriba stuck alongside as best she could, though the pace proved to be too much by five miles.
“I just wanted to try the first mile and then go fast and see if someone could follow me. Only one lady followed me, but later she just suffered so my [strategy] worked,” Chelimo said.
Chelimo’s early tempo put her on pace to challenge Mamitu Daska’s course record of 1:08:20, passing 10K in 32:20. But, the humid conditions soon began to take their toll and slow the pace down. Chelimo pushed on alone all the while Diane Nukuri, Biruktayit Degefa, and Diriba ran together nearly a minute behind.
Though Nukuri and Degefa began chipping away at her lead, Chelimo was not to be denied a victory. She’d find a second-wind in the final 5K before entering Franklin Park all alone, taking the win in 1:10:31.
“It is so special for me. I really love this city, coming back to Boston and doing my best and winning again, I am so grateful. I feel like Boston is my lucky city,” said Chelimo, wearing her B.A.A. Half Marathon medal proudly around her neck.
Nukuri was second in 1:11:21, followed by Degefa (1:11:40), and Diriba (1:13:04). Team B.A.A. member Katie Matthews was fifth in 1:16:55.
By winning her second B.A.A. event this year, Chelimo earned a $20,000 bonus to go along with her $10,000 first-place prize. She vowed to return again in the future. “Hopefully next year, if I get lucky and get invited again to Boston, I would love to come and break the [course] record. It is my lucky city again. When I start preparing for the marathon in 2019, I would love to come to Boston again and be lucky like today, too.”
Nearly 400 runners were part of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Half Marathon Team, raising more than $500,000. Since 2003, Dana-Farber has raised more than $6 million through participating in the B.A.A. Half Marathon.
Buze Diriba and Benjamin Harris were winners of the B.A.A. Distance Medley, having the lowest cumulative times between the B.A.A. 5K, B.A.A. 10K, and B.A.A. Half Marathon. Diriba’s total time was 1:59:35, while Harris’s tally was 2:11:34.
New Jersey’s Tony Nogueira won the men’s wheelchair title for the eleventh time, breaking the tape in 58:02. Carla Trodella was the women’s wheelchair champion in 3:31:37, her fourth title since 2011.
Registration for next year’s B.A.A. Distance Medley will open in January, and dates for the 2018 B.A.A. Distance Medley events will be announced in the coming months.
(Attached images credit: photorun.net, 2017)
Top 10 Men
1.) Daniel Salel, KEN, 26, 1:04:31
2.) Suguru Osako, JPN, 26, 1:04:42
3.) Tesfalem Gebrearegawi, ETH, 21, 1:04:45
4.) Shogo Nakamura, JPN, 25, 1:04:50
5.) Abdi Abdirahman, USA, 40, 1:05:11
6.) Tyler Pennel, USA, 29, 1:05:33
7.) Ken Yokote, JPN, 24, 1:05:57
8.) Dathan Ritzenhein, USA, 34, 1:06:25
9.) Eric Ashe, USA, 29, 1:06:33
10.) Jameson Kabuku, KEN, 20, 1:06:54
Top 10 Women
1.) Joan Chelimo, KEN, 26, 1:10:31
2.) Diane Nukuri, BDI, 32, 1:11:21
3.) Biruktayit Degefa, ETH, 27, 1:11:40
4.) Buze Diriba, ETH, 23, 1:13:04
5.) Katie Matthews, USA, 26, 1:16:55
6.) Kelsey Bruce, USA, 24, 1:17:22
7.) Elvin Kibet, KEN, 27, 1:19:28
8.) Katie Moraczewski, USA, 26, 1:21:28
9.) Lauren Philbrook, USA, 30, 1:22:19
10.) Rose Penfold, USA, 26, 1:22:59
Top Men’s Wheelchair
1.) Tony Nogueira, USA, 49, 58:02
2.) Gary Brendel, USA, 58, 1:00:16
3.) Timothy Kelly, USA, 50, 1:09:00
Top Women’s Wheelchair
1.) Carla Trodella, USA, 36, 3:31:37
B.A.A. Distance Medley Men’s Winner
(B.A.A. 5K, 10K, Half Marathon cumulative time)
1.) Benjamin Harris, USA, 28, 2:11:34
B.A.A. Distance Medley Women’s Winner
(B.A.A. 5K, 10K, Half Marathon cumulative time)
1.) Buze Diriba, ETH, 23, 1:59:35