Tata Steel World 25K, the first World Athletics Gold Label Road Race at this distance, in the West B

Описание к видео Tata Steel World 25K, the first World Athletics Gold Label Road Race at this distance, in the West B

Sutume shines, Kissa upsets Ebenyo in Tata Steel World 25K Kolkata 2024 
Gulveer shatters the event record, while Sanjivani took another title in Indian Elite
Kolkata, Dec 15:  Ethiopian Sutume Kebede retained the women's crown in the ninth edition of Tata Steel World 25K, the first World Athletics Gold Label Road Race at this distance, in the West Bengal capital today.  Ugandan Stephen Kissa triumphed over the defending champion, Daniel Ebenyo from Kenya, in the men’s race. 
The Indian elite runners also returned with splendid performances, with Gulveer Singh setting a new event record and Sanjeevani taking the title in the women’s category. 
As they converged upon the historic Red Road, Kolkata woke up to 14 degrees Celsius and a spring in their feet. More than 20,500 people participated in various categories, making it one of the most popular races in the country. 
Confirming her entry just two weeks before the race, Kebede recovered from a stomach ailment just in time to defend her title here in a modest 1:19:17.  Having set a stand-alone World Best for 25K here while winning last year's race with a time of 1:18:47, the Ethiopian runner started her campaign in 2024 with fantastic personal best in half-marathon (1:04:37) and marathon (2:15:55) to take the top spots in Houston and Tokyo respectively.  Incidentally, her timing in Tokyo made her the 8th fastest among women marathoners to date.
Coming to Kolkata with confidence and the desire to excel, Sutume started today's race with some initial challenges from Bahrain's Desi Jisa, the winner here in 2022, and Kenyan Viola Chpengeno, a third-place finisher in last year's Delhi half-marathon.  The Kenyan started fading in the waning stages of the race, thus allowing Kebede to become a clear leader after 23K.  The Ethiopian runner's winning time would have been better had Chepngeno continued with her for some more time.  However, Kebede signed off 2024 with another winning note.
Chepngeno finished second in 1:19:44, while Jisa finished a distant third at 1:21:29.
Kebede expressed her joy in retaining the title: “I am very happy to win (here) again. I wanted to break the course record, but was a little tired of travelling.  I am training for the next year and will participate in the marathons”.  
“I am happy to come second. It was not easy to run here. Everyone was strong today. I gave my best, and this makes me very happy,” Viola said while Jisa added, “I am happy to be on the podium. Thanks to everyone.” 
A redemption for Stephen Kissa in the men's race:
Stephen Kissa salvaged some pride after logging his first win in an international competition in five years. He suffered two back-to-back debacles as a non-finisher at the Olympic Games in Tokyo (10,000m) and Paris (Marathon) and took only second spots in a couple of races in between. Hence, making a podium finish on his debut at 25K brought a happy moment for the Ugandan to cherish for a long time.          
The race kicked off with a fair bit of nippiness in the air and as Kolkata broke dawn, the top bunch of Daniel Ebenyo, Benson Kipruto, Stephen Kissa, and Haymanot Alew made past the 10K mark at 28:42 but looked up the ante as they were still a few seconds behind their expectation. 
Defending champion Ebenyo looked strong, remained at the helm of affairs in the men's race, and ran neck-to-neck alongside Kissa in most parts of the race.  They briefly exchanged the lead, but the gap between the duo did not go beyond a meter or two all the time.  The Kenyan, who also set a stand-alone World Best for 25K (1:11:13) during last year's race, was looking to improve his time in this edition.
News Today Guddu 9830082220

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