2013 London Marathon

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33rd London Marathon
London-Marathon-2013-logo.jpgTsegaye Kebede during 2013 London Marathon.JPG
Tsegaye Kebede, the men's winner during 2013 London Marathon
Venue London, England, United Kingdom
Date 21 April 2013 (2013-04-21)
Champions
Men Tsegaye Kebede (2:06:04) (Elite)
Kurt Fearnley (1:31:29) (Wheelchair)
Women Priscah Jeptoo (2:20:15) (Elite)
Tatyana McFadden (1:46:02) (Wheelchair)
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2014 →

The 2013 London Marathon took place on Sunday 21 April 2013. It was the 33rd running of the annual mass-participation marathon race and the third World Marathon Major of the year. 34,631 people participated.[1]

The men's elite race was won by Ethiopia's Tsegaye Kebede and the women's race was won by Kenyan Priscah Jeptoo. Australian Kurt Fearnley won the men's wheelchair race, while American Tatyana McFadden won the women's wheelchair race with a new course record of 1:46:02.

Pre-race

After the Boston Marathon bombings six days before the London Marathon, organisers issued a statement announcing that the event's security—which is jointly planned with the Metropolitan Police—would be reviewed.[2] On 16 April, Minister for Sport Hugh Robertson announced that the event would go ahead as planned, stating that he was "absolutely confident" that organisers can "keep the event safe and secure."[3] Forty percent more police officers were deployed to manage the race than in 2012.[4]

Race description

Participants in the race running along Victoria Embankment

The 2013 London Marathon began with a 30-second moment of silence in honour of the victims of the Boston Marathon bombings.[5] Many runners also wore black ribbons on the encouragement of race organisers.[4] Organisers also pledged to donate US$3 to a fund for Boston Marathon victims for every person who finished the race.[6] The weather was ideal for racing, drawing 700,000 fans and raising the prospect of a world record time.[4][6]

Through the halfway mark of the men's race, the leaders were on world record pace. At that point, Great Britain's Mo Farah withdrew from the race, as he had planned. The pace dropped off after that and Emmanuel Mutai of Kenya built a large lead. In the final kilometre of the race, Tsegaye Kebede of Ethiopia surged past Mutai to win the men's marathon with a time of two hours, six minutes and four seconds.[4] Ayele Abshero of Ethiopia finished third. 2012 Olympic champion Stephen Kiprotich of Uganda took sixth.[4]

At the 15-kilometre (9.3 mi) mark, the women's elite leaders converged with men's wheelchair racers at a water station. Ethiopia's Tiki Gelana, who won the marathon at the 2012 Olympics in London, and Canadian wheelchair racer Josh Cassidy collided as she attempted to cut in front of him to get water. She returned to the race, but fell off the pace in clear pain.[4] Priscah Jeptoo of Kenya pulled away from the lead group of three when she ran a 5-minute, 11-second 21st mile.[6] She won the women's race with a time of two hours, 20 minutes and 15 seconds. "Today I'm very, very happy, I couldn't believe I could be the winner," Jeptoo remarked. Edna Kiplagat of Kenya and Yukiko Akaba of Japan finished second and third respectively.[4]

In the men's wheelchair race, Kurt Fearnley of Australia won an eight-way sprint to the finish to win with a time of 1:31:29. He credited a new training regimen for his win and remarked "I realised last year that at the last 300 m (980 ft) if someone's got that extra bit of power up their sleeve they beat you every time."[7] Marcel Hug of Switzerland took second and Ernst van Dyk from South Africa finished third.[7] Pre-race favourite and six-time winner David Weir of Great Britain finished fifth.[4][7] Cassidy, who dropped out of the race after the crash, had harsh words for the race organisers. "I don't know who's responsible, but every year we come to overtake the women, there's 10 chairs going at 20 mph (32 km/h) and the poor women are scrambling to find their feet," he said. "I have a brand new $2,000 pair of wheels that are damaged, who's going to pay for them? Things have to change."[4]

American Tatyana McFadden won the women's wheelchair race with a new course record of 1:46:02.[8] Fellow American Amanda McGrory finished second and Sandra Graf of Switzerland took third.[8]

Results

Elite races

Men
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1 Tsegaye Kebede  Ethiopia 2:06:04
2 Emmanuel Mutai  Kenya 2:06:33
3 Ayele Abshero  Ethiopia 2:06:57
4 Feyisa Lilesa  Ethiopia 2:07:46
5 Wilson Kipsang  Kenya 2:07:47
6 Stephen Kiprotich  Uganda 2:08:05
7 Yared Asmerom  Eritrea 2:08:22
8 Stanley Biwott  Kenya 2:08:39
9 Hafid Chani  Morocco 2:09:11
10 Ayad Lamdassem  Spain 2:09:28
Women
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1 Priscah Jeptoo  Kenya 2:20:15
2 Edna Kiplagat  Kenya 2:21:32
3 Yukiko Akaba  Japan 2:24:43
4 Atsede Baysa  Ethiopia 2:25:14
5 Meselech Melkamu  Ethiopia 2:25:46
6 Florence Kiplagat  Kenya 2:27:05
7 Mai Ito  Japan 2:28:37
8 Alevtina Biktimirova  Russia 2:30:02
9 Susan Partridge  United Kingdom 2:30:46
10 Irvette Van Zyl  South Africa 2:31:26

Wheelchair races

Men
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1 Kurt Fearnley  Australia 1:31:29
2 Marcel Hug   Switzerland 1:31:29
3 Ernst Van Dyk  South Africa 1:31:30
4 Tomasz Hamerlak  Poland 1:31:30
5 David Weir  United Kingdom 1:31:31
6 Kota Hokinoue  Japan 1:31:31
7 Heinz Frei   Switzerland 1:31:32
8 Hiroyuki Yamamoto  Japan 1:31:33
9 Richard Colman  Australia 1:35:44
10 Denis Lemeunier  France 1:36:34
Women
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1 Tatyana McFadden  United States 1:46:02 (CR)
2 Amanda McGrory  United States 1:46:04
3 Sandra Graf   Switzerland 1:48:01
4 Christie Dawes  Australia 1:50:43
5 Shelly Woods  United Kingdom 1:50:44
6 Shirley Reilly  United States 1:50:46
7 Susannah Scaroni  United States 1:50:47
8 Madison de Rozario  Australia 1:53:44
9 Diane Roy  Canada 2:03:59
10 Meggan Dawson-Farrell  United Kingdom 2:18:23

References

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External links