
Ethiopians dominate, break records at the Dubai Marathon

A new Dubai Marathon record was on Friday set by Ethiopia’s Mosinet Geremew when he sprinted clear from a large group of his compatriots to claim victory in the 10th fastest time over the distance.
Geremew crossed the line in two hours and four minutes exactly, two seconds ahead of Leul Gebresilase with last year’s winner Tamirat Tola a further four seconds adrift as Ethiopians filled the first 10 places.
His personal best mark eclipsed the previous race record of 2:04:11 set by Tola in last year’s race and lifted Geremew up to 10th on the all-time list, 63 seconds adrift of Dennis Kimetto’s world record that the Kenyan set in Berlin in 2014.
In the women’s race, Roza Dereje was the winner clocking 2:19:17, a new record and personal best for the Ethiopian, ahead of compatriots Feyse Tadese, Yebrgual Melese and last year’s winner Worknesh Degefa.

All four women finished under two hours and 20 minutes in the 19th running of the race with Dereje moving up to seventh on the all-time list behind Paula Radcliffe’s record of 2:15:25 that the Briton set at the 2003 London Marathon.
Radcliffe’s mark may have survived in Dubai but Kenya’s Mary Keitaney is using male pacemakers in the London race this April in a bid to add the overall record to the women-only mark she took from the Briton in 2017.
Winners in the Dubai marathon for both men and women took home $200,000 in prize money for a race that started before dawn in thick fog, and passed the luxury sail-shaped Burj Al Arab hotel along a section of the route.