De Rozario rolls to victory in the Sydney Marathon, African stars dominate

Save articles for later

Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.

Star Australian wheelchair racer Madison de Rozario added Sydney marathon to her list of international victories as Moroccan runner Othmane El Goumri and Kenyan Betsy Saina claimed the men’s and women’s elite events.

On a hot but clear Sydney morning, where feared smoke haze had mostly cleared as forecast, a record 17,000 runners began the race – making it the biggest ever marathon held in Australia.

El Goumri proved to be the strongest in an elite men’s field, making his move in Centennial Park and driving home to victory at the finish line at the Opera House. On a re-designed, hilly course – and with hot temperatures – El Goumri’s time of 2:08:20 was outside the event record but enough to claim the win, ahead of Kenyan Laban Korir and Getaneh Molla Tamire, from Ethiopia.

Brett Robinson was the top-placed Australian in eighth place, with a time of 2:23:05.

Competitors run across the Sydney Harbour Bridge.Credit: Getty

The women’s race was tighter for longer, but Kenyan Betsy Saina pushed away in the last five kilometres to win in 2:26:47, ahead of Rahma Chota and Gladys Kiptegai.

After struggling with injury all year, Aussie star Sinead Diver ran superbly to finish eighth in 2:31:27.

In her first Sydney marathon, de Rozario was dominant and claimed an easy win, stopping the clock at 1:59:41, almost 13 minutes ahead of the second place getter.

It added Sydney to the list of big victories for the Tokyo Paralympic gold medallist, including the London and New York marathons.

Runners crossing the Harbour Bridge.Credit: Edwina Pickles

“That was a lot of fun. It’s a tough course. I wasn’t 100% sure what to expect and it definitely got trickier as the course went on, but it’s a great day and the way the course kind of doubles back on itself to get to be out there,” de Rozario said.

“Of course, often times in the world vision, you’re kind of, you’re out at the front, you don’t see a single person from beginning to end.”

Canadian Josh Cassidy claimed the men’s wheelchair event.

MORE TO COME

Most Viewed in Sport

From our partners

Source: Read Full Article