Paris - Arab Today
Mark Korir of Kenya won the Paris men's marathon on Sunday, his first career victory in a prestigious international race.
Korir, 30, who was second in last month's Paris Half-Marathon, came home in am official time of 2hr 05min 49sec, ahead of another Kenyan, Luka Kanda (2:07:20).
Seboka Tola of Ethiopia was third, in 2:07.33, with yet another Kenyan, Mike Kigen, fourth.
Meseret Mengistu of Ethiopia, a surprise late entry after an invitation from the organisers, won the women's event in 2:23:26.
Mengistu, 25, shattered her own personal best, the 2:29:22 she ran in 2013.
Her compatriot Amane Gobena (2:23:30) was second and Kenya's Visiline Jepkesho third in 2:24:44.
Kigen led the decisive breakaway 10km from home but he was reeled in by Korir, who set off in pursuit and caught him up 5km out in the Bois de Boulogne before streaking away to leave Kigen trailing in behind the first three.
"When I saw the others accelerate between 25km and 30km, I just kept the same rhythm without looking to follow them," Korir said.
"The first half of the race was run at a slowish pace, so that meant I could accelerate whenever I wanted to."
Korir is only the fifth man to run under 2hr 06min in the French capital.
Ethiopia's Kenenisa Bekele set the race record of 2:05:04 last year, beating the 2:05:10 run by Kenya's Stanley Biwott in 2012.
Kenyans Peter (2:05.37 in 2013) and Vincent Kipruto (2:05:47 in 2009), have also broken the 2:06 barrier.
Source: AFP