| Toronto Waterfront Marathon
Toronto, 29 September 2003
TWO WORLD RECORDS SET ON TORONTO WATERFRONT.
(TORONTO. 29 September 2003). What a day of excitement
in Toronto! The sun shone, the bands played along the course, 6,000
runners from 18 countries came to run, more than $125,000 was raised
for 32 charities, Lyubov Morgunova of Russia set a new women's record
of 2:36:20 on the flat scenic Lakeshore route-and not one, but TWO
new world records were set at yesterday's Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront
Marathon.
But it was two older runners who outshone the field.
Ninety-two year old Fauja Singh of Ilford, Essex, England, shattered
his previous world mark of 6:11 [set at Flora London in April] with
a new world record for 90+, of 5 hours 40 minutes and 4 seconds.
Not to be outdone, Canadian phenomenon, 72-year-old Ed Whitlock
of Milton, Ontario, became the first runner on the planet, 70+ to
go under 3 hours with an agonizingly close 2:59:10.
Several thousand spectators lined the last kilometer
of the course. And the roar was huge as the nonagenarian Singh crossed
the line to be mobbed by ecstatic members of the city's South Asian
community and the media. "I feel great; I'm really happy"
exclaimed Singh after his record finish. "It was very nice
and I felt comfortable. I enjoyed the course and all the support.
I received a lot of respect from the South Asian community of Toronto,
and I'm grateful for that. My ambition was to knock a minute or
two off my record, or get under 6 hours--I never expected a time
like this." Singh attributes his success to a healthy diet,
including his favourite ginger curry, daily meditation for relaxation
at his local Sikh Temple, warm baths, and 10 miles a day in training
[running or walking].
Indeed, Singh looked decidedly more comfortable
at the finish than the Canadian record-breaker Whitlock. With his
face cut and scraped from a fall he took in training earlier in
the week, Whitlock showed every sign of the enormous physical effort
to establish his remarkable record, his face grimacing with pain
as he leaned to the left and dragged himself down the final straightaway.
The crowd were on their feet as the seconds ticked by, and he made
it home with just 50 seconds to spare after failing by only 24 seconds
in his previous attempt on the "sub-3, over 70" barrier
in May 2001 [3:00:24!]. "I was dead on my feet," said
Whitlock. "I couldn't have gone much further. I had a real
tough time doing the last 200 metres." Much appreciation was
also shown to local club runners Mike Bedley and Gary Kapitan who
ran, respectively, alongside Whitlock and Singh.
Up front, Kenyan Joseph Ndiritu continued his domination
on the Canadian roads. He comfortably took the men's race in 2:17:50
from up-and-coming young Canadian Jim Finlayson of Victoria [2:20:45],
after half-a-dozen guys went through the half in 66:51 on a perfect
morning for running, then blew up [13 celcius at the start; no wind].
Much the same happened on the women's side. There,
promising young Canadian, Nicole Stevenson went for broke and an
Olympic qualifying standard [2:32]. She hit halfway at exactly 1:16,
with a 40 second lead on Morgunova. The inexperienced Canadian then
paid the price for her courage as she faded hard. She came home
in 1:26, as the veteran Russian-a 2-time winner and course-record
holder at Honolulu with a 2:26 PR-- cruised in for the victory in
2:36:20.
It was a remarkable day for running in Toronto as
well as Berlin, and consensus was widespread that the Waterfront
event signaled the return of top-quality, marathon excitement to
the city.
PHOTOS available on request, and at www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com
Media contact: Race Director, Alan Brookes, 416
464 7437.
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