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Felix Limo

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2006 London Marathon winner Limo (left) and 2005, 2007 & 2008 winner Martin Lel (right) in 2006
Limo (right) in 2008 London Marathon

Felix Limo (born August 22, 1980) is a Kenyan long-distance runner, who specializes in the marathon.

Limo held the 15 Kilometres road running world record from November 2001 to November 2010, where he lost the record to Leonard Komon[1]. Limo set his record of 41:29 minutes in Nijmegen, the Netherlands when winning the Zevenheuvelenloop race. Deriba Merga of Ethiopia equalled the time in 2009.[2]

He won the Portugal Half Marathon in 2002. He debuted at the 2003 Amsterdam Marathon, finishing second timing 2:06.42, only three seconds slower than William Kipsang, who set a course record.[3]

Previously, Limo has achieved victory at the 2005 Chicago Marathon, as well as at Berlin and Rotterdam in 2004. In winning the 2004 Rotterdam Marathon, he ran arguably his strongest effort, setting his personal best of 2:06:14. Not only is that the eleventh fastest marathon ever run, but it was achieved on a very windy day.[4] Limo withdrew from a possible defense of his Chicago Marathon title due to back pain, and the 2006 race was won by Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot.

He won the 2006 London Marathon in a time of 2:06:39, the third fastest of 2006.

Felix is not related to world champion Richard Limo, but might be distantly related to another Kenyan runner, Benjamin Limo.[5]

Achievements

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing  Kenya
2004 Rotterdam Marathon Rotterdam, Netherlands 1st Marathon 2:06:14
Berlin Marathon Berlin, Germany 1st Marathon 2:06:44
2005 Chicago Marathon Chicago, United States 1st Marathon 2:07:02
2006 London Marathon London, United Kingdom 1st Marathon 2:06:39

References

  1. ^ "Komon breaks World 15Km record in Nijmegen". www.iaaf.org. IAAF. 2010-11-21. Retrieved 2010-11-21.
  2. ^ IAAF World Records
  3. ^ Time-to-run.com: Amsterdam Marathon 2003 results
  4. ^ IAAF, April 4, 2004: Felix Limo sets course record of 2:06:14 in Rotterdam Marathon
  5. ^ IAAF, August 25, 2000: Not even the elements can stop Jones



Sporting positions
Preceded by Men's Zevenheuvelenloop Winner (15 km)
2000 – 2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by Men's Chicago Marathon winner
2005
Succeeded by



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