2015 London Marathon

The 2015 London Marathon was the 35th running of the annual marathon race in London, England, which took place on Sunday, 26 April.[1] The men's elite race was won by Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge and the women's race was won by Ethiopian Tigist Tufa. The 2015 IPC Athletics World Championships marathon events were also held during the race. The men's wheelchair race was won by Josh George from the United States and the women's wheelchair race was won by American Tatyana McFadden. McFadden set a course record for the second year running.

35th London Marathon
Men's winner Eliud Kipchoge
VenueLondon, England
Date26 April 2015
Champions
MenEliud Kipchoge (2:04:42)
WomenTigist Tufa (2:23:21)
Wheelchair menJosh George (1:31:31)
Wheelchair womenTatyana McFadden (1:41:13)

Around 172,888 people applied to enter the race: 51,696 had their applications accepted and 38,020 started the race. These were all record highs for the race.[2] A total of 37,581 runners, 23,208 men and 14,373 women, finished the race.[3]

In the under-17 Mini Marathon, the 3-mile able-bodied and wheelchair events were won by Ben Dijkstra (14:00), Harriet Knowles-Jones (16:07), Nathan Maguire (11:35) and Kare Adenegan (12:41).[4]

Field

The 2015 men's elite field was dubbed the "clash of the champions" by race organizers due to an unusually large number of top competitors. Eight men in the field had recorded a sub-2:05 race in their career, the three fastest marathoners ever, and five of the top 10 all-time were among those competing.[5][6]

British runner Paula Radcliffe, who holds the women's marathon world record, chose to compete in the mass field instead of the elite field. Before the race, she stated that it would be her final competition.[7] Earlier in the year, she was suffering from an Achilles tendon injury which gave her limited training time before the marathon.[8]

Approximately 38,000 people took part in the race overall, many of them raising money for charity. Competitors ranged in age from 18 to 90.[9]

Celebrities taking part in the London Marathon included: Formula One driver Jenson Button and rowing Olympic gold medalist James Cracknell who were raising money for Cancer Research UK and a brain injury charity called Headway respectively,[7][10] the BBC Radio Two presenter Chris Evans, fashion designer Henry Holland, actor Oliver Proudlock and model Christy Turlington Burns.[10] Five members of the House of Commons members took part: Alun Cairns, Richard Drax, Graham Evans, Dan Jarvis and Edward Timpson as did Governor of the Bank of England Mark Carney.

Among those competing in the three-mile children's course was David and Victoria Beckham's son Romeo.[7] According to the family, Romeo's run raised £6,000 for UNAIDS.[10]

Race description

Paula Radcliffe during the marathon

On race day, conditions were overcast with light rain in places. The temperature was mildly cold, decent for running.[7][10] An estimated 750,000 fans lined the streets of London to watch the race live.[10]

The men's race got off to a fast start, covering the first three miles in 14 minutes, 31 seconds. From there the pace periodically sped up and slowed down as racers considered their strategies.[6] After ten miles, it appeared that the course record of 2:04:29 was within reach. After the race passed Tower Bridge, the lead group contained ten runners. By the 19-mile mark, it was cut to six as defending champion Wilson Kipsang of Kenya pushed the pace.[5] With four miles to go, the lead group was down to four competitors, all from Kenya: Eliud Kipchoge, Stanley Biwott, Kipsang, and world record holder Dennis Kimetto.[6]

Kipsang and Kipchoge broke free of the others as they approached the 24-mile mark.[6] The two remained close until Kipchoge pulled away in the final 800 metres. Kipchoge finished in a time of 2 hours, 4 minutes, 42 seconds for his first London Marathon victory. Previously, he won the Chicago and Rotterdam Marathons in 2014. "It was a tough race," he commented. "My training paid off and it went to plan. The crowd were wonderful and lifted me for my sprint finish."[7] Kipsang finished five seconds back for second place. Kimetto placed third, more than a minute behind the leaders.[5] Biwott finished fourth to complete a top four sweep by Kenya.[7]

In the women's race, the pace was slow. Tigist Tufa of Ethiopia used a late surge to distance herself from the field, finishing in a time of 2 hours, 23 minutes, 22 seconds.[5] It was just the second time an Ethiopian woman won the London Marathon, after Derartu Tulu won the 2001 London Marathon, and ended a four-year winning streak for Kenya. It was Tufa's first major marathon win. "The weather was very difficult for me and I found it a very slow race until the end", she said. "I was unwell at the end but I am very happy that I am OK now. I've always dreamed about winning the London Marathon."[7] Two-time winner and pre-race favourite Mary Keitany of Kenya finished in second place, 18 seconds behind Tufa. Tirfi Tsegaye of Ethiopia placed third.[7] Radcliffe finished in a time a 2:36:55. She called the race very emotional and remarked "It was so loud, my ears were ringing. It was just amazing the whole way round. All the way along, there were so many people giving me encouragement."[11]

A total of 37,675 racers had completed the course by 6:10 pm, eclipsing the record of 36,705 set in 2012. Guinness World Records reported that more than 30 records were broken during the race for things such as "fastest marathon dressed as Spiderman." Two competitors wed midway through the race.[10] Prince Harry presented the winners with their medals. Radcliffe received a lifetime achievement award.[7]

IPC World Marathon Championships

Elite wheelchair competitors at the start of the race: David Weir (37) 2nd, Josh Cassidy (22), Ernst van Dyk (23) 5th, Kota Hokinoue (26) 7th

Britain's David Weir was attempting to win a record seventh London Marathon title in the men's wheelchair race. After Marcel Hug withdrew from the race midway with a punctured tyre, Weir and American Josh George battled for the lead. Weir appeared to have the advantage in the final straightaway, but George nipped him at the line.[6] George finished in a time of 1:31:31, one second ahead of Weir.[6][12] Masazumi Soejima of Japan placed third.[12] It was George's first London Marathon title.[7]

American Tatyana McFadden won the women's race for the third consecutive year.[7] Her time of 1:41:13 beat her own course record set in 2014 by nearly four minutes.[6][13] It was the third time that McFadden had set a course record in London and it was her first global marathon title. The defending World Champion Manuela Schär finished almost three minutes behind in second.[14]

El Amin Chentouf, Abderrahman Ait Khamouch and Elena Pautova set world records in the men's T12, men's T46, and women's T12 categories respectively.[15]

Results

Men

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Eliud Kipchoge Kenya2:04:42
Wilson Kipsang Kiprotich Kenya2:04:47
Dennis Kipruto Kimetto Kenya2:05:50
4Stanley Biwott Kenya2:06:41
5Tilahun Regassa Ethiopia2:07:16
6Sammy Kitwara Kenya2:07:43
7Javier Guerra Spain2:09:33
8Ghebrezgiabhier Kibrom Eritrea2:09:36
9Aleksey Reunkov Russia2:10:10
10Serhiy Lebid Ukraine2:10:21
11Emmanuel Kipchirchir Mutai Kenya2:10:54
12Michael Shelley Australia2:11:19
13Scott Overall United Kingdom2:13:13
14Anuradha Cooray Sri Lanka2:13:47
15Koen Raymaekers Netherlands2:14:25
16Hermano Ferreira Portugal2:15:53
17Matthew Hynes United Kingdom2:16:00
18Bekir Karayel Turkey2:16:06
19Christian Kreienbühl  Switzerland2:17:00
20Aaron Scott United Kingdom2:20:49
Geoffrey Mutai KenyaDNF
Tsegaye Mekonnen EthiopiaDNF
Samuel Tsegay EritreaDNF
Wilfred Kipkosgei KenyaDNF
Edwin Kipyego KenyaDNF
Wilfred Kirwa Kigen KenyaDNF
Kadengoi Loitareng KenyaDNF

Women

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Tigist Tufa Ethiopia2:23:22
Mary Jepkosgei Keitany Kenya2:23:40
Tirfi Tsegaye Ethiopia2:23:41
4Aselefech Mergia Ethiopia2:23:53
5Florence Kiplagat Kenya2:24:15
6Jemima Sumgong Kenya2:24:23
7Priscah Jeptoo Kenya2:25:01
8Ana Dulce Félix Portugal2:25:15
9Volha Mazuronak Belarus2:25:36
10Edna Kiplagat Kenya2:27:16
11Iwona Lewandowska Poland2:27:47
12Diane Nukuri Burundi2:27:50
13Tatyana Petrova Arkhipova Russia2:28:42
14Alessandra Aguilar Spain2:29:45
15Sonia Samuels United Kingdom2:31:46
16Mary Davies New Zealand2:34:22
17Emma Stepto United Kingdom2:35:41
18Rebecca Robinson United Kingdom2:36:51
Tetyana Hamera-Shmyrko UkraineDQ
Rkia El Moukim MoroccoDQ
Elvan Abeylegesse TurkeyDNF
Rebecca Chesire KenyaDNF
Peres Jepchirchir KenyaDNF
Elizeba Cherono KenyaDNF
Susan Partridge United KingdomDNF

Wheelchair men

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Josh George United States1:31:31
David Weir United Kingdom1:31:32
Masazumi Soejima Japan1:31:33
4Pierre Fairbank France1:31:33
5Ernst van Dyk South Africa1:31:33
6Tomasz Hamerlak Poland1:31:56
7Kota Hokinoue Japan1:32:22
8Jordi Madera Spain1:33:22
9Heinz Frei  Switzerland1:33:23
10Simon Lawson United Kingdom1:34:21
11Ryota Yoshida Japan1:35:35
12Alhassane Baldé Germany1:38:31
13Tobias Loetscher  Switzerland1:38:32
14Laurens Molina Costa Rica1:38:32
15Denis Lemeunier France1:38:33
16Ebbe Blichfeldt Denmark1:38:34
17Hiroki Nishida Japan1:41:48
18Hiroyuki Yamamoto Japan1:43:29
19Choke Yasuoka Japan1:43:44
20Alexey Bychenok Russia1:46:06

Wheelchair women

Position Athlete Nationality Time
Tatyana McFadden United States1:41:14
Manuela Schär  Switzerland1:43:56
Amanda McGrory United States1:46:25
4Sandra Graf  Switzerland1:46:27
5Susannah Scaroni United States1:47:06
6Christie Dawes Australia1:56:20
7Wakako Tsuchida Japan1:56:48
8Chelsea McClammer United States2:02:31
9Sarah Piercy United Kingdom2:20:45
10Martyna Snopek United Kingdom2:26:40

References

  1. "London Marathon: Paula Radcliffe 'unprepared but healthy'". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  2. Stats and Figures. London Marathon. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  3. London Marathon - Race Results. Marathon Guide. Retrieved 2020-04-25.
  4. Virgin Mini London marathon 2015 results. London Marathon (2015). Retrieved 2020-04-26.
  5. Justin Palmer, ed. (26 April 2015). "Kipchoge wins fierce London battle with Kipsan". Reuters. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  6. "London Marathon 2015: Eliud Kipchoge takes men's race by surprise". The Guardian. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  7. "Eliud Kipchoge, Tigist Tufa win London Marathon". ESPN. Associated Press. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  8. Ingle, Sean (25 April 2015). "Paula Radcliffe eyes only a personal victory in final London Marathon". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  9. "London Marathon: Thousands take part in biggest race". BBC News. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  10. Gareth Vipers (26 April 2015). "London Marathon 2015: 38,000 runners make this year's event the biggest ever as three-quarters of a million spectators turn out in support". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  11. "Paula Radcliffe: Running London Marathon again was 'amazing'". BBC News. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  12. "American Joshua George wins men's wheelchair race". ITV News. 25 April 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  13. "Tatyana McFadden wins women's wheelchair marathon". ITV News. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  14. "US racers Josh George, Tatyana McFadden and Raymond Martin claim marathon world titles in London". IPC Athletics. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  15. "Three world records set at marathon World Championships". IPC Athletics. 26 April 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
Results
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