| *****PRESS
RELEASE*****
THE SAFARICOM MARATHON
Saturday 26TH June 2004
‘Running Wild’
Records smashed at Safaricom Marathon
Peter Ndegwa, a relative unknown local runner, smashed the
Safaricom Marathon record today by 6 minutes in a time of
2hrs 19.01. Ndegwa was invited to run his third marathon at
the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy following his strong showing
two years ago when he led the race. Second place went to David
Kuino, who finished over a minute behind Ndegwa in a time
of 2hr20.09. It was Kuino’s debut in the Safaricom sponsored
event, which is now regarded as one of the toughest marathons
in the world.
The women’s full marathon was won for the third consecutive
year by Callen Areba in a time of 3hrs 02.09 However, local
community runner, Lucia Mwinaki, from Matunda nearly produced
a shock result by leading for much of the race, but was finally
overtaken in the last kilometre by Areba.
Now in its fifth year, the Safaricom Marathon attracted a
record 530 runners from 19 different countries including USA,
Canada, Australia, China, Japan, Egypt, Uganda, Ethiopia,
South Africa, France, Germany, Belgium, Denmark and Switzerland.
Established as a fundraising event, the Marathon has now raised
over US$500,000 for the benefit a number of causes; the main
beneficiaries being programmes focusing on education, community
development, healthcare and wildlife conservation.
In the half marathon races, World Champion Catherine Ndereba
was beaten into second place in the women’s event by
Joyce Chepchumba. The former winner of London and New York
Marathons broke the course record by three and half minutes
to finish in 1hr 19.35. Meanwhile the men’s event was
won by Robert Gachuiri in a record time of 1hr 07.38. Henry
Wanyoike, the renowned blind runner followed up his fine performance
in Boston to finish 37th in a time of 1hr 17.33.
The race, which remains the only marathon in the world run
within a wildlife game reserve, was flagged off by the Hon.
Mukhisa Kituyi Minister of Trade and Industry.
However the larger species found within Lewa, such as elephant,
buffalo, and rhino were kept at a safe distance by a large
team of armed rangers, a helicopter and two light aircraft.
Nevertheless many runners reported close encounters with zebra,
impala and giraffe. Indeed one eeland decided to join in the
fun and ran alongside runners for some considerable distance
before stopping at a water stop and helping itself to water.
|