2014 London Marathon
34th London Marathon | |
---|---|
Venue | London, England, United Kingdom |
Date | 13 April 2014 |
Champions | |
Men | Wilson Kipsang (2:04:29) (Elite) Marcel Hug (1:32:41) (Wheelchair) |
Women | Edna Kiplagat (2:20:19) (Elite) Tatyana McFadden (1:45:12) (Wheelchair) |
The 2014 London Marathon took place on Sunday 13 April 2014. It was the 34th running of the annual mass-participation marathon race and the second World Marathon Major of the year.
The men's elite race was won by Kenyan Wilson Kipsang and the women's race was won by Kenyan Edna Kiplagat. The men's wheelchair race was won by Switzerland's Marcel Hug and the women's wheelchair race was won by American Tatyana McFadden. Kipsang and McFadden set course records.
Race description
The 2014 London Marathon was held on 13 April 2014. One of the largest crowds in London Marathon history, with spectators standing 10 to 15 people deep, turned out to cheer on the competitors in warm weather. The race began in Greenwich in South East London, passing by many of London's most famous landmarks, before finishing on The Mall.[1]
Men's race
The men's elite race featured a particularly strong field, including marathon world-record holder Wilson Kipsang, reigning Olympic and world marathon champion Stephen Kiprotich, 2013 London Marathon champion Tsegaye Kebede, and London course-record holder Emmanuel Mutai.[2] Other notable competitors included Geoffrey Mutai, who unofficially ran the fastest marathon ever; Ayele Abshero, who has the fastest marathon debut; Xiamen and Dublin marathon champion Feyisa Lelisa; Paris Marathon champion Stanley Biwott; two-time New York Marathon champion Marilson dos Santos, and 2011 world 10,000 metres champion Ibrahim Jeilan. British Olympic 10,000 metres Gold medallist Mo Farah, who ran half the marathon in 2013, drew significant interest in his home country and internationally. It was the first-ever marathon for Farah, often hailed as one of the greatest distance track runners in history.[1]
Entering the final mile, two Kenyans led the race: 2012 London Marathon champion Wilson Kipsang and Stanley Biwott. Kipsang pulled away over the last mile, to win the race in 2 hours 4 minutes 29 seconds. Biwott finished second in a personal best 2:04:55.[1] Ethiopians Kebede and Abshero followed, finishing the race in tandem, 2 minutes off the winning time and placing third and fourth respectively. Tsegaye Mekonnen, Geoffrey Mutai, Emmanuel Mutai, Farah and Lilesa formed the chasing pack, finishing 5th to 9th respectively, 4 minutes off the winning time. American Ryan Vail rounded out the top 10 runners, coming in at 02:10:57.
Wilson Kipsang's winning time was a course record and the 16th-fastest marathon in history.[3]
Women's race
The women's race came down to a sprint finish between two Kenyans, Edna Kiplagat and Florence Kiplagat. Edna Kiplagat won the battle of the two unrelated women and finished in a time of 2:20:21, five minutes slower than the course record set by Paula Radcliffe in 2005. Florence Kiplagat finished second, three seconds back. Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia finished third in her marathon debut after winning gold medals in the 10,000 metres during the previous two Olympic games.[1]
Wheelchair races
American Tatyana McFadden won the women's wheelchair marathon race for the second consecutive year, re-breaking the course record she established in 2013. It was her first marathon of the year after taking a short sabbatical from the sport to compete in the sit-ski cross-country during the 2014 Winter Paralympics, where she won Silver.[1]
In the men's wheelchair race, a week after winning the Paris Marathon, Marcel Hug beat his long-time rival David Wier in a sprint finish to take his first London title, having finished second in 2010, 2012 and 2013.[4][5]
The non-elite marathon had 30,825 registered entrants[6] including celebrities[7] and Members of Parliament.[8] One man died in hospital after collapsing after the finish line.[9] Millions of pounds were raised for charity by the run's participants.[10]
Death of runner
Robert Berry, a runner from Newbury, Berkshire, collapsed at the finish line and the 42-year-old was pronounced dead after being transferred to St. Mary's Hospital. He was raising money for The National Osteoporosis Society as his mother had the condition.[9] He had reported difficulty breathing before starting.[11] Berry was the twelfth runner to die at the London Marathon in its 34-year history. The previous was 30-year-old Claire Squires in 2012. Tributes flooded in and donations were made to Berry's Just Giving page.[12]
Results table
Elite races
Wheelchair races
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References
- ^ a b c d e John F, Burns (13 April 2014). "Rough Debut for Farah as Kipsang Captures London Marathon". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ Mo Farah will find it difficult to win the London Marathon at the first attempt retrieved 15 January 2014
- ^ "Marathon Records: All Time Best Men's Marathon Times". Marathon Guide. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ "London Marathon 2014: Marcel Hug beats David Weir to win wheelchair race". BBC Sport. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ "London Marathon 2014: David Weir loses out to Marcel Hug". BBC Sport. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ Chiara Rimella; Kitty Knowles (13 April 2014). "London Marathon 2014: Charities will be the big winners". Independent. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- ^ "London Marathon 2014: celebrity runners". Telegraph. 11 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- ^ Alexandra Topping (13 April 2014). "Record number of MPs run in London Marathon". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ a b "London Marathon 2014: Man dies in hospital after collapse". BBC. 13 April 2014. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
- ^ "London Marathon runners raise millions for charity as they pound streets in sun (From Bradford Telegraph and Argus)". Thetelegraphandargus.co.uk. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- ^ "Runner, 42, who died after completing London Marathon spoke of breathing difficulties before race as donations to his JustGiving page rise by £1,000 AN HOUR". Daily Mail. 14 April 2014.
- ^ Robert Berry. Just Giving. Retrieved on 2014-05-29.