New York, USA - As is so often the case these days here, the women’s
version of the ING New York City Marathon (Sunday 7 Nov) seems more intriguing
than the men’s race, especially this year.
Olympic redemption for Radcliffe?
Not only is Britains Paula Radcliffe (holder of the World record at an awesome
2:15:25) competing for the first time since her agonising dropout at 36
kilometres in Athens 11 weeks ago, but she’ll be facing three other top
10 performers on the all-time list: Kenyans Tegla Loroupe and Margaret Okayo,
equal 7th at 2:20:43, and American record holder Deena Kastor, 10th at
2:21:16.
Britains best athletics writers
Radcliffes presence has brought a squad of Britains best athletics writers
across the pond to see how she will fare, and today she faced them and others
for the first time since she stopped at 36 km in Athens. She was cheerful,
almost chirpy, and said she had gotten over her Athens disappointment and was
ready to run hard and win. "Its something you can never forget," she
smiled, perhaps a bit ruefully, "but you have to get over it."
Hard training in Flagstaff
If she is as ready as she says she is after two months of hard training in
Flagstaff, Arizona, its hard to bet against the 30-year-old Radcliffe. Shes run
more than five minutes faster than anyone else in the field, and if form holds,
she could win literally by a mile (more than 1600 metres).
Okayo fit for task
But of course, form doesn always hold in a Marathon, and no world-class runner
toes the line with the idea of finishing second.
Okayo, 28, who took the London Marathon title this spring, has won in New
York twice, in 2001 and 2003, setting a course record each time (its now
2:22:31) ...