Repeat winners in NYC Marathon
NEW YORK -- Paula Radcliffe sat in the stands at last year's New York City Marathon, cheering on her husband and realizing just how much she missed competing.
She recaptured the thrill of racing at the same event Sunday, but with a new twist -- this time, when she won, she celebrated as a mother, holding her 9-month-old daughter Isla.
Radcliffe and Martin Lel each pulled away during the final mile to win a second NYC Marathon title on a cool, sunny day with 39,085 runners starting.
"I've really, really missed it," Radcliffe said. "It's way more fun than cross training in a pool or cross training in a gym, and that's what it's all about. That's what keeps me motivated to work hard and to cross train hard is just getting out there and enjoying the atmosphere."
Radcliffe, the world-record holder from Great Britain, made a triumphant return in her first marathon in more than two years. She outlasted Gete Wami of Ethiopia, who was running her second marathon in 35 days.
Radcliffe won in 2 hours, 23 minutes, 9 seconds, beating Wami by 23 seconds. Two-time defending champion Jelena Prokopcuka of Latvia was a distant third in 2:26:13.
Lel had a better finishing kick than Abderrahim Goumri of Morocco, as they reprised their showing in April's London Marathon, when the Kenyan edged Goumri by 3 seconds.
On this day, Lel's time of 2:09:04 bested Goumri by 12 seconds in the first NYC Marathon without a pacesetter. Hendrick Ramaala of South Africa was third in 2:11:25.
"What I was doing is, maybe during the last sprint, sometimes you can lose, sometimes you can gain," Lel said. "So I said, 'Let me try to see.' "
A day after elite distance runner Ryan Shay collapsed and died during the U.S. men's marathon Olympic trials in Central Park, officials held a moment of silence for Shay before the start of the men's race.
Wami briefly passed Radcliffe in the final mile. But when Radcliffe surged back past her, Wami didn't have the legs to catch up again.
"She was just too strong," Wami said.
Radcliffe took home $170,000 for winning, including a time bonus; Lel earned $160,000 with the bonus.
Lel won his second NYC Marathon, adding to his 2003 championship.
Seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong finished 698th in 2:46:43.