Kipchoge headlines stacked Boston Marathon field
World
record-holder Eliud Kipchoge headlines a star-studded Boston Marathon field on
Monday (Apr 17) as the world's oldest 42.195km race takes on a sombre tone 10
years after a bombing attack near the finish line.
Survivors,
first responders and other members of the public gathered on Saturday in Boston
in honour of the victims of the marathon bombing, one of the most high-profile
attacks on US soil that claimed three lives and saw scores more injured.
A shattered
community came together in the wake of the attack, adopting the slogan
"Boston Strong" in a show of unity and resilience.
"This
year, I am thinking about the importance of continuing on in the face of pain
and setbacks," Boston's Coordinated Response Team Director Tania Del Rio
said in a statement.
"As we
mark 10 years since the 2013 Marathon, we run to keep our departed loved ones
in our minds and hearts."
Speedy
Fields
Twice
Olympic champion Kipchoge, a man who needs no introduction after he
unofficially became the first to run a marathon in under two hours in 2019, is
aiming to add a Boston title to his 10 World Marathon Major victories.
He will face
a tough challenge in his Boston debut from his fellow Kenyans, defending
champion Evans Chebet and 2021 winner Benson Kipruto, as well as Ethiopian
Lelisa Desisa, the 2019 world champion who won Boston in 2015 and 2013.
Ethiopian
Amane Beriso, who produced the all-time third-fastest marathon in Valencia late
last year, headlines a speedy women's field with twice major winner Joyciline
Jepkosgei of Kenya and Ethiopia's world champion Gotytom Gebreslase.
Kenyan Edna
Kiplagat will vie for her third Boston title with her fellow former champions
American Des Linden and Ethiopian Atsede Baysa also expected to run.
The 127th
running of the Boston Marathon begins with the men's wheelchair division.
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