RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-16 Thread Richard McCann
I misspoke.  I confused Salazar's 1980 and 1981 marks at NYC.  It was his 
second marathon that was under the old WR, albeit temporarily due to course 
measurement error.

RMc

At 09:15 PM 10/15/2003 -0400, malmo wrote:
Perhaps you misspoke, or perhaps this is yet another of your
embellishments? Salazar's debut was never under the WR.
We're all track fans here and you have little chance of getting any your
numerous whoppers past us. Why keep trying? I just don't get it?
malmo



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard McCann
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 2:15 PM
To: alan tobin
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years
old. It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list
either.
So now a 9 year old record is considered weak, and it's OK for a debut
mark
to be near that record?  Rutto's debut was 8 seconds off a 4 year old
record mark--that doesnt' seem too out of line.  And remember that
Salazar's debut was momentarily under the old WR, and even with the time
correction was extremely close.

RMc

I think we should adopt the cycling federations hematocrit test. If
you're
over 50 then you're out for health reasons
The ICU is refusing to join the WADA.  I don't know the circumstances,
but
perhaps someone can fill us in on the reasons.  I know that cycling may
be
dumped from the Olympics for this.
RMc

Alan



RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-16 Thread Richard McCann
At 01:52 PM 10/16/2003 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ARGGGH! Why can't you just say I misspoke. Ops? Instead you've 
chosen to say, temporarily a WR Everyone on the planet knew that course 
was short.
Do you need to take reading lessons?  I made the correction that his SECOND 
effort was temporarily a WR, (and even adjusting for how short, the time 
would have been a WR).  As for knowing that the course was short, and 
having watched the race on TV, for some weird reason, the all-knowing 
announcers failed to note that the course was short.


Thank god you're at Berkeley where you can't do damage and not at the FBI. 
You'd still be claiming Richard Jewell was the bomber at the 1996 Olympics!!!
So you've found that I slipped up on a factual issue (vs. the numerous 
errors that me and others have found in your posts)--somehow that erodes 
all of my credibility?  Not that you have ever admitted any errors, while I 
have freely admitted mine in the past.  That's the pot calling the kettle 
black

BTW, I'm not at Berkeley, I only graduated from there.  I'm busy mucking up 
your energy policies in Davis

RMc


malmo

 From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: 2003/10/16 Thu PM 12:15:34 CDT
 To: malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 CC: 'alan tobin' [EMAIL PROTECTED],  [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
   Zakharova win at Chicago

 I misspoke.  I confused Salazar's 1980 and 1981 marks at NYC.  It was his
 second marathon that was under the old WR, albeit temporarily due to 
course
 measurement error.

 RMc

 At 09:15 PM 10/15/2003 -0400, malmo wrote:
 Perhaps you misspoke, or perhaps this is yet another of your
 embellishments? Salazar's debut was never under the WR.
 
 We're all track fans here and you have little chance of getting any your
 numerous whoppers past us. Why keep trying? I just don't get it?
 
 malmo
 
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard McCann
 Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 2:15 PM
 To: alan tobin
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
 Zakharova win at Chicago
 
  The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years
  old. It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list
 either.
 
 So now a 9 year old record is considered weak, and it's OK for a debut
 mark
 to be near that record?  Rutto's debut was 8 seconds off a 4 year old
 record mark--that doesnt' seem too out of line.  And remember that
 Salazar's debut was momentarily under the old WR, and even with the time
 
 correction was extremely close.
 
 RMc
 
  I think we should adopt the cycling federations hematocrit test. If
  you're
  over 50 then you're out for health reasons
 
 The ICU is refusing to join the WADA.  I don't know the circumstances,
 but
 perhaps someone can fill us in on the reasons.  I know that cycling may
 be
 dumped from the Olympics for this.
 
 RMc
 
 
  Alan





Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread Richard McCann
And I argue that the marathon WR has been comparatively weak to other WRs, 
even with Dinsamo's mark in 1988.  Even though would you prefer to do so, 
you cannot look at the progression in a single event in isolation.  You are 
assuming that the WRs at any one point in time are always equivalent.  So, 
for example, you are assuming that all of the WRs in 1968 were equivalent 
to Beamon's LJ, or that all of the current WRs are equivalent to Johnson's 
200.  And I think that even you recognize the absurdity of that 
assumption.  Once you acknowledge that not all of the WRs are equivalent, 
then seeing rapid mass progression in an event that is recognized as 
relatively weak should not be surprising.

As to your argument that having so many push under the record is unusual is 
that the number of elite marathons has increasing several fold since the 
mid-late 1980s.  Before then, the only elite marathons outside of the once 
every 4 year Olympics were the Commonwealth Games, Boston, Fukuoka, and a 
once a year European marathon that seemed to move location.  Now the 
opportunities to face top competition that requires fast times to win are 
manifest.   Think of how many runners were under Bikilia's 2:12:11 1964 WR 
from then until 1972.  I wouldn't be surprised that it was almost 
equivalent, and certainly after you adjust for the many fewer opportunities 
to race then.

I am a doubter of the 1993 Chinese women's performances (the 1997 
performances are more in line with historic events).  But I would not be a 
doubter if those records had been either done by an individual spread out 
over a longer period of time, without qualifying rounds at high speeds.  (I 
read last night that Wang also ran faster than the 3k WR in the last 3k of 
her 10k WR, 8:17.7!), or there had been a single mass finish race, instead 
of having 2 under the 10k WR, two days later 2 more under the 1500 WR, then 
4 under the 3k WR in the semis!, then 5 under the 3k WR in the finals, all 
in the space of 6 days, with many of the same athletes breaking multiple 
WRs!  And to top it, none of these athletes ever again approaching these 
performances.   At least in the marathon, many of these athletes repeat 
there performances at a later date.

Also, given that the 5k/10k records dropped so much, with so many runners 
now under the previous standards, from 1993-1998 (and the records still 
stand), why didn't the marathon marks drop equivalently during that same 
period if drugs were the reason?  Seems like those drugs should have had 
the same effect during the same period, but that's not what occurred.

And finally, it should not be surprising to see the record broken every 
year when it is broken by a relatively small increment each 
time.  Progressing for 2:06:50 to 2:05:42 in 1999 is the equivalent of a 16 
second improvement in the 10k--that's a relatively small improvement 
historically, especially over 11 years.  As for the record being broken 
every year, I see improvements in 1999, 2002 and 2003.   Improvement in the 
debut record only reflects that better athletes are deciding to move up in 
the event.  It's not unusual to see debuts in the 5k and 10k near the WR as 
well.  The marathon is now becoming more like the other events as training 
volumes increase.

You need to eliminate conclusively the many other explanations before you 
leap to your conclusion, which has no actual evidence whatsoever.  (I point 
I make repeatedly on this list.)

RMc

At 01:57 PM 10/15/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
running a near a WR in one event implies drug use.  He's going to have to 
use a completely different basis for coming to that conclusion.

It's not just running near a WR that implies drug use. It's when numerous 
people run near a WR that bothers me. It's when a marathon VIRGIN runs 
near a WR that bothers me. If KK runs a WR it wouldn't strike me as 
mysterious at all. He's been in the game for a while. He didn't debut at 
2:05. The problem I have is that 7 of the top 10 marathon times in HISTORY 
have been run in 2002 or 2003. From 1988 to 1998 no one went under 
Dinsamo's record. Since then there's been 25 performances by 21 runners 
under that record. You will not find such a statistic during any other 
past decade. When records (be it WR or debut WR which was just broken in 
Paris by Wilson Onsare before Rutto did his Chicago dance) are broken 
every year in the same event then I question every one of those results. 
The state of the sport leads to such uncredibility.

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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CC: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
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RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread alan tobin
Trumping the trump card...

The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years old. 
It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list either. I'm 
suspicious of any current or former WR holder or Olympic/World gold 
medalist. You can damn me for that opinion all you want but it is my opinion 
and it won't change until WADA, USADA or any other anti-doping agency does a 
better job which isn't likely to happen. I think we should adopt the cycling 
federations hematocrit test. If you're over 50 then you're out for health 
reasons

Alan


From: Post, Marty [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'alan tobin' [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ 
Zakharova win at Chicago
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Rutto's debut of 2:05:50 was 55 seconds off the current world record.

Khannouchi's debut of 2:07:10 - also a debut world record at the time -- 
was
20 seconds off the then world record.

-Original Message-
From: alan tobin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 9:57 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
running a near a WR in one event implies drug use.  He's going to have to
use a completely different basis for coming to that conclusion.
It's not just running near a WR that implies drug use. It's when numerous
people run near a WR that bothers me. It's when a marathon VIRGIN runs near
a WR that bothers me. If KK runs a WR it wouldn't strike me as mysterious 
at

all. He's been in the game for a while. He didn't debut at 2:05. The 
problem

I have is that 7 of the top 10 marathon times in HISTORY have been run in
2002 or 2003. From 1988 to 1998 no one went under Dinsamo's record. Since
then there's been 25 performances by 21 runners under that record. You will
not find such a statistic during any other past decade. When records (be it
WR or debut WR which was just broken in Paris by Wilson Onsare before Rutto
did his Chicago dance) are broken every year in the same event then I
question every one of those results. The state of the sport leads to such
uncredibility.
Alan

From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
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I have problems with the statistical methods used to develop most of 
these
tables.  Even the comparison method I used, which is similar to Hoffman's
is a bit too simplistic.  However, the correct method is rather data
intensive.  I would want to use the top 100 marks over a series of years 
to

estimate the underlying variance in performances.  This would be the 
means
of identifying which performances are the greatest outlier vs. other
performances.  The one underlying assumption is that the same proportion 
of

the population competes in each event so that the probability 
distributions

are comparable among events.

If we're going to rely solely on subjective comparisons, then Tobin's
evaluation is no more valid than mine and he has absolutely no basis for
leaping to a conclusion that running a near a WR in one event implies 
drug
use.  He's going to have to use a completely different basis for coming 
to
that conclusion.

On the other hand, I'm not arguing that my comparison is subjective per 
se,

but rather can be recreated by anyone else in a step by step fashion that
is readily transparent.  If they want to change the underlying 
assumptions,

they are free to do so and to come to their own conclusions.  Such
transparency is the fundamental basis of objective comparisons

RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread alan tobin
H...apparently I've been trumped. I'll go back to my cave now.

Alan


From: Post, Marty [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'alan tobin' [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ 
Zakharova win at Chicago
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Rutto's debut of 2:05:50 was 55 seconds off the current world record.

Khannouchi's debut of 2:07:10 - also a debut world record at the time -- 
was
20 seconds off the then world record.

-Original Message-
From: alan tobin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 9:57 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
running a near a WR in one event implies drug use.  He's going to have to
use a completely different basis for coming to that conclusion.
It's not just running near a WR that implies drug use. It's when numerous
people run near a WR that bothers me. It's when a marathon VIRGIN runs near
a WR that bothers me. If KK runs a WR it wouldn't strike me as mysterious 
at

all. He's been in the game for a while. He didn't debut at 2:05. The 
problem

I have is that 7 of the top 10 marathon times in HISTORY have been run in
2002 or 2003. From 1988 to 1998 no one went under Dinsamo's record. Since
then there's been 25 performances by 21 runners under that record. You will
not find such a statistic during any other past decade. When records (be it
WR or debut WR which was just broken in Paris by Wilson Onsare before Rutto
did his Chicago dance) are broken every year in the same event then I
question every one of those results. The state of the sport leads to such
uncredibility.
Alan

From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago
Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2003 12:08:10 -0700
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I have problems with the statistical methods used to develop most of 
these
tables.  Even the comparison method I used, which is similar to Hoffman's
is a bit too simplistic.  However, the correct method is rather data
intensive.  I would want to use the top 100 marks over a series of years 
to

estimate the underlying variance in performances.  This would be the 
means
of identifying which performances are the greatest outlier vs. other
performances.  The one underlying assumption is that the same proportion 
of

the population competes in each event so that the probability 
distributions

are comparable among events.

If we're going to rely solely on subjective comparisons, then Tobin's
evaluation is no more valid than mine and he has absolutely no basis for
leaping to a conclusion that running a near a WR in one event implies 
drug
use.  He's going to have to use a completely different basis for coming 
to
that conclusion.

On the other hand, I'm not arguing that my comparison is subjective per 
se,

but rather can be recreated by anyone else in a step by step fashion that
is readily transparent.  If they want to change the underlying 
assumptions,

they are free to do so and to come to their own conclusions.  Such
transparency is the fundamental basis of objective comparisons.
Subjective comparisons are opaque and cannot be recreated.

RMc

At 01:23 PM 10/14/2003 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ALL of these comparison tables are fundamentally flawed, as 
subjectivity

is the common denominator. Don't believe me, just compare the projected
equivalents from the various tables: Purdy, Coe and Martin, Portuguese,
Mercier (I'm missing a few)

_
See when your friends are online with MSN Messenger 6.0

RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread Richard McCann
At 06:01 PM 10/15/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ 
Zakharova win at
 Chicago

Trumping the trump card...

The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years 
old. It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list either.
So now a 9 year old record is considered weak, and it's OK for a debut mark 
to be near that record?  Rutto's debut was 8 seconds off a 4 year old 
record mark--that doesnt' seem too out of line.  And remember that 
Salazar's debut was momentarily under the old WR, and even with the time 
correction was extremely close.

RMc

I think we should adopt the cycling federations hematocrit test. If you're 
over 50 then you're out for health reasons
The ICU is refusing to join the WADA.  I don't know the circumstances, but 
perhaps someone can fill us in on the reasons.  I know that cycling may be 
dumped from the Olympics for this.

RMc


Alan



RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread Philip_Ponebshek





Alan wrote:

Trumping the trump card...

It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list either. I'm
suspicious of any current or former WR holder or Olympic/World gold
medalist. You can damn me for that opinion all you want but it is my
opinion
and it won't change until WADA, USADA or any other anti-doping agency does
a
better job which isn't likely to happen.


Well, Alan - the only thing that statement damns you to is utter
irrelevancy.

At this point, you're not posting content.  You're posting a repetitive
screed.  And you leave no basis for dialogue, except for others to accept
your premise.

So we can all duly note that Alan, in the absence of any data, is
suspicious of any current or former WR holder or Olympic/World gold
medalist.  Which adds as much information to my life as knowing that Anne
Coulter has come up with a new way to label liberals as evil.

Since we all know your point of view, can you just quit posting it until
you have more than your gut feelings to substantiate it?


Phil





RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread malmo
Perhaps you misspoke, or perhaps this is yet another of your
embellishments? Salazar's debut was never under the WR. 

We're all track fans here and you have little chance of getting any your
numerous whoppers past us. Why keep trying? I just don't get it?

malmo



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard McCann
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 2:15 PM
To: alan tobin
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago

The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years
old. It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list
either.

So now a 9 year old record is considered weak, and it's OK for a debut
mark 
to be near that record?  Rutto's debut was 8 seconds off a 4 year old 
record mark--that doesnt' seem too out of line.  And remember that 
Salazar's debut was momentarily under the old WR, and even with the time

correction was extremely close.

RMc

I think we should adopt the cycling federations hematocrit test. If 
you're
over 50 then you're out for health reasons

The ICU is refusing to join the WADA.  I don't know the circumstances,
but 
perhaps someone can fill us in on the reasons.  I know that cycling may
be 
dumped from the Olympics for this.

RMc


Alan





RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-15 Thread Steve DiNatale
Sal's 1st try was 2:09:41 @ NYC
World Record was 2:08:33

--

- Original Message -

DATE: Wed, 15 Oct 2003 21:15:08
From: malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Richard McCann' [EMAIL PROTECTED],'alan tobin' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Perhaps you misspoke, or perhaps this is yet another of your
embellishments? Salazar's debut was never under the WR. 

We're all track fans here and you have little chance of getting any your
numerous whoppers past us. Why keep trying? I just don't get it?

malmo



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Richard McCann
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2003 2:15 PM
To: alan tobin
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ
Zakharova win at Chicago

The record KK came within 20 seconds of wasn't 2 weeks old but 9 years
old. It should also be known that KK isn't off my suspicion list
either.

So now a 9 year old record is considered weak, and it's OK for a debut
mark 
to be near that record?  Rutto's debut was 8 seconds off a 4 year old 
record mark--that doesnt' seem too out of line.  And remember that 
Salazar's debut was momentarily under the old WR, and even with the time

correction was extremely close.

RMc

I think we should adopt the cycling federations hematocrit test. If 
you're
over 50 then you're out for health reasons

The ICU is refusing to join the WADA.  I don't know the circumstances,
but 
perhaps someone can fill us in on the reasons.  I know that cycling may
be 
dumped from the Olympics for this.

RMc


Alan








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Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread alan tobin
You need to realize that the current men's marathon WR is still
quite weak, and should be well under 2:04 to be equivalent to the classic 
distances WRs.  Even Tergat's half marathon record is better than his 
marathon.
I friggin hate assumptions like that. Using that logic all of the women's 
WRs fail in comparison to the 400 mark. You can not compare a time at one 
distance to a time at another distance. It's just stupid. The marathon is an 
entirely different ball game than the 10k or even the half-marathon. You can 
however compare times at one distance across decades. It took 21 years to 
drop from 2:08:34 to 2:08:18. Even if you question the validity of the first 
time it still took 24 years to drop from 2:09:36 to 2:08:18. That's the 
largest gap between drops in the men's record. One would think that an event 
record would drop dramatically at first and then level off unless there are 
major training breakthroughs (late 60s) or very gifted individuals (Peters, 
Clayton, KK) who break the record multiple times. What I don't buy is the 
record being broken by a different person every year or every week.

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Actually, he's 55 seconds off the WR.  By my calculation, his time equals 
about 26:55 for 10k.  Given that few marathoners run equivalent 10k 
performances, I don't think he's too far out of line.  You need to realize 
that the current men's marathon WR is still quite weak, and should be well 
under 2:04 to be equivalent to the classic distances WRs.  Even Tergat's 
half marathon record is better than his marathon.

RMc

At 06:35 PM 10/13/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds off 
a record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50 
marathon. Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if 
he's a part of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?

Alan


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Sunday October 12, 06:50 PM

Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago
http://uk.sports.yahoo.com/031012/323/eawyq.html
Click to enlarge photo
CHICAGO (AFP) - First-time marathoner Evans Rutto of Kenya and reigning 
Boston Marathon champion Svetlana Zakharova of Russia won titles at the 
Chicago Marathon.

Rutto won in 2hr 05min 50sec, eight seconds off the race mark, American 
Khalid Khannouchi's old world best of 2:05:42 in 1999.
Click to enlarge photo
Kenya's Paul Tergat set the world marathon best of 2

Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread alan tobin
For example, how many 10k WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly 
medalists (Tergat) have run the men's marathon at or near the peak of their 
career?

Are you making the assumption that Geb and Tergat are at the peak of the 
their careers? I'd have to say that both were at their peak when they were 
setting 5k/10k WRs and winning Olympic golds/silvers (1995-2000). I think 
it's a pretty safe assumption that today there are more runners waiting 
until after their peak track 10k/5k fitness to run a marathon than 20-30 
years ago.

Alan

From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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I believe that you CAN make comparisons across distances.  What's 
interesting is that in the women's case, the marathon mark is now much 
STRONGER than the other marks.  How do you explain that discrepancy?  Over 
time, the longer distances have tended to get faster relative to the 
shorter distances as training volume increased and the number of top line 
athletes competing in the event has increased.  For example, how many 10k 
WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly medalists (Tergat) have run 
the men's marathon at or near the peak of their career?  Salazar is the 
only one that I can think of.  (Zatopek's triple doesn't count, but even 
that was a WR, showing how weak the mark was.)  What's interesting about 
the women is that they've had many more top elites at shorter distances run 
the marathon, in part because the 5k and 10k were not Olympic distances 
until 1992.

As for the drop in marathon from 2:08:34 to 2:08:18, remember that the 10k 
record only fell from 27:39 to 27:22 in the same period, yet the 10k record 
is now 26:22.  The marathon record should be 2:04:06 if it is to improve an 
equivalent amount.  That's in line with my previous assessment.

Your assessment is purely subjective as to whether a 2:05:50 marathon 
should be considered on par with a 26:30 10k.  You then leap to unfounded 
conclusions based on your purely subjective assessment.  I offer a counter 
assessment which is backed by some quantitative analysis.  I'm probably not 
on the mark, as most quantitative assessments of the real world require 
oversimplification.  However, those types of analyses give a good 
indication of the general direction--much better than anecdotal subjective 
assessments.

As for record bursts that have occurred, it's not always evident until 
after the fact as to why those bursts have occurred.  If I was going to 
offer an explanation about the current burst it would be that African 
runners began to enter the distance running events in large droves in the 
1980s.  They ran along with the Europeans and Americans with their 
preexisting notions about running limits until the early 1990s.  Then the 
Africans began to compete solely with each other and discovered that they 
could push beyond those limits, due in part because their own lifestyles 
are so harsh (much harder than even 19th century Europe and America), and 
in part because the added nutritional and technology benefits (not 
necessarily drugs given the leaps by young athletes who are too poor to buy 
drugs) that are becoming more available in East and North Africa.  The 5k 
and 10k marks have stood since 1998.  Now those top athletes are moving up 
to the marathon, and the performances in that event are beginning to 
improve similarly.

The introduction of a new competitive population with the right 
predisposition may have been the reason for the Finnish-driven burst in the 
1920s, and the Eastern European-driven burst in the 1950s (emerging from 
the WWII disaster).  The 1940s and 1960s bursts were driven almost solely 
by new training techniques, although the emergence of Kip Keino had some 
effect on the latter (the only man who could run toe to toe with both Ryun 
and Clarke.)  The late 70s burst was much more of mixed bag, with Rono on  
one hand, and Walker, Coe and Ovett on the other.

RMc

At 02:36 PM 10/14/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
You need to realize that the current men's marathon WR is still
quite weak, and should be well under 2:04 to be equivalent to the classic 
distances WRs.  Even

Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread Richard McCann
I believe that you CAN make comparisons across distances.  What's 
interesting is that in the women's case, the marathon mark is now much 
STRONGER than the other marks.  How do you explain that discrepancy?  Over 
time, the longer distances have tended to get faster relative to the 
shorter distances as training volume increased and the number of top line 
athletes competing in the event has increased.  For example, how many 10k 
WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly medalists (Tergat) have run 
the men's marathon at or near the peak of their career?  Salazar is the 
only one that I can think of.  (Zatopek's triple doesn't count, but even 
that was a WR, showing how weak the mark was.)  What's interesting about 
the women is that they've had many more top elites at shorter distances run 
the marathon, in part because the 5k and 10k were not Olympic distances 
until 1992.

As for the drop in marathon from 2:08:34 to 2:08:18, remember that the 10k 
record only fell from 27:39 to 27:22 in the same period, yet the 10k record 
is now 26:22.  The marathon record should be 2:04:06 if it is to improve an 
equivalent amount.  That's in line with my previous assessment.

Your assessment is purely subjective as to whether a 2:05:50 marathon 
should be considered on par with a 26:30 10k.  You then leap to unfounded 
conclusions based on your purely subjective assessment.  I offer a counter 
assessment which is backed by some quantitative analysis.  I'm probably not 
on the mark, as most quantitative assessments of the real world require 
oversimplification.  However, those types of analyses give a good 
indication of the general direction--much better than anecdotal subjective 
assessments.

As for record bursts that have occurred, it's not always evident until 
after the fact as to why those bursts have occurred.  If I was going to 
offer an explanation about the current burst it would be that African 
runners began to enter the distance running events in large droves in the 
1980s.  They ran along with the Europeans and Americans with their 
preexisting notions about running limits until the early 1990s.  Then the 
Africans began to compete solely with each other and discovered that they 
could push beyond those limits, due in part because their own lifestyles 
are so harsh (much harder than even 19th century Europe and America), and 
in part because the added nutritional and technology benefits (not 
necessarily drugs given the leaps by young athletes who are too poor to buy 
drugs) that are becoming more available in East and North Africa.  The 5k 
and 10k marks have stood since 1998.  Now those top athletes are moving up 
to the marathon, and the performances in that event are beginning to 
improve similarly.

The introduction of a new competitive population with the right 
predisposition may have been the reason for the Finnish-driven burst in the 
1920s, and the Eastern European-driven burst in the 1950s (emerging from 
the WWII disaster).  The 1940s and 1960s bursts were driven almost solely 
by new training techniques, although the emergence of Kip Keino had some 
effect on the latter (the only man who could run toe to toe with both Ryun 
and Clarke.)  The late 70s burst was much more of mixed bag, with Rono 
on  one hand, and Walker, Coe and Ovett on the other.

RMc

At 02:36 PM 10/14/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
You need to realize that the current men's marathon WR is still
quite weak, and should be well under 2:04 to be equivalent to the classic 
distances WRs.  Even Tergat's half marathon record is better than his 
marathon.
I friggin hate assumptions like that. Using that logic all of the women's 
WRs fail in comparison to the 400 mark. You can not compare a time at one 
distance to a time at another distance. It's just stupid. The marathon is 
an entirely different ball game than the 10k or even the half-marathon. 
You can however compare times at one distance across decades. It took 21 
years to drop from 2:08:34 to 2:08:18. Even if you question the validity 
of the first time it still took 24 years to drop from 2:09:36 to 2:08:18. 
That's the largest gap between drops in the men's record. One would think 
that an event record would drop dramatically at first and then level off 
unless there are major training breakthroughs (late 60s) or very gifted 
individuals (Peters, Clayton, KK) who break the record multiple times. 
What I don't buy is the record being broken by a different person every 
year or every week.

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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champ  Zakharova win at Chicago
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Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread alan tobin
How about KK? Sure he hasn't touched a track race in a long while, but I'm 
sure he could take down a few of his PRs if he chose to do so.

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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At 05:04 PM 10/14/2003 +, alan tobin wrote..
For example, how many 10k WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly 
medalists (Tergat) have run the men's marathon at or near the peak of 
their career?

Are you making the assumption that Geb and Tergat are at the peak of the 
their careers? I'd have to say that both were at their peak when they were 
setting 5k/10k WRs and winning Olympic golds/silvers (1995-2000). I think 
it's a pretty safe assumption that today there are more runners waiting 
until after their peak track 10k/5k fitness to run a marathon than 20-30 
years ago.
Gebreselassie won the 10k WC silver and ran 26:29, the fastest time in the 
world this year.   He might be just slightly slower than before, but he 
seems to be pretty damn close to his peak.  Tergat immediately jumped from 
an Oly silver to running marathons in 2:07.  Top marathoners are younger, 
not older, than they were 20-30 years ago relative to their performance 
peaks.  Think of how unusual Salazar was, yet many of the top Africans are 
about his age now.  (BTW, Shorter was the other top 10k runner who also 
marathoned in the past at his peak.)

RMc


Alan

From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ  
Zakharova win at Chicago
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I believe that you CAN make comparisons across distances.  What's 
interesting is that in the women's case, the marathon mark is now much 
STRONGER than the other marks.  How do you explain that discrepancy?  
Over time, the longer distances have tended to get faster relative to the 
shorter distances as training volume increased and the number of top line 
athletes competing in the event has increased.  For example, how many 10k 
WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly medalists (Tergat) have run 
the men's marathon at or near the peak of their career?  Salazar is the 
only one that I can think of.  (Zatopek's triple doesn't count, but even 
that was a WR, showing how weak the mark was.)  What's interesting about 
the women is that they've had many more top elites at shorter distances 
run the marathon, in part because the 5k and 10k were not Olympic 
distances until 1992.

As for the drop in marathon from 2:08:34 to 2:08:18, remember that the 
10k record only fell from 27:39 to 27:22 in the same period, yet the 10k 
record is now 26:22.  The marathon record should be 2:04:06 if it is to 
improve an equivalent amount.  That's in line with my previous 
assessment.

Your assessment is purely subjective as to whether a 2:05:50 marathon 
should be considered on par with a 26:30 10k.  You then leap to unfounded 
conclusions based on your purely subjective assessment.  I offer a 
counter assessment which is backed by some quantitative analysis.  I'm 
probably not on the mark, as most quantitative assessments of the real 
world require oversimplification.  However, those types of analyses give 
a good indication of the general direction--much better than anecdotal 
subjective assessments.

As for record bursts that have occurred, it's not always evident until 
after the fact as to why those bursts have occurred.  If I was going

Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread Richard McCann
It appears that you're conceding my point that top 10k runners are also 
running the marathon now.  I didn't make a broad generalization about 
everyone, rather that enough individuals are doing this that the overall 
competitive level has been raised so that the marathon record is beginning 
to catch up with the other records.

RMc

At 05:57 PM 10/14/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
How about KK? Sure he hasn't touched a track race in a long while, but I'm 
sure he could take down a few of his PRs if he chose to do so.

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
At 05:04 PM 10/14/2003 +, alan tobin wrote..
For example, how many 10k WR holders (Gebreselassie) or even 10k WC/Oly 
medalists (Tergat) have run the men's marathon at or near the peak of 
their career?

Are you making the assumption that Geb and Tergat are at the peak of the 
their careers? I'd have to say that both were at their peak when they 
were setting 5k/10k WRs and winning Olympic golds/silvers (1995-2000). I 
think it's a pretty safe assumption that today there are more runners 
waiting until after their peak track 10k/5k fitness to run a marathon 
than 20-30 years ago.
Gebreselassie won the 10k WC silver and ran 26:29, the fastest time in 
the world this year.   He might be just slightly slower than before, but 
he seems to be pretty damn close to his peak.  Tergat immediately jumped 
from an Oly silver to running marathons in 2:07.  Top marathoners are 
younger, not older, than they were 20-30 years ago relative to their 
performance peaks.  Think of how unusual Salazar was, yet many of the top 
Africans are about his age now.  (BTW, Shorter was the other top 10k 
runner who also marathoned in the past at his peak.)

RMc




Re: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-14 Thread Richard McCann
I have problems with the statistical methods used to develop most of these 
tables.  Even the comparison method I used, which is similar to Hoffman's 
is a bit too simplistic.  However, the correct method is rather data 
intensive.  I would want to use the top 100 marks over a series of years to 
estimate the underlying variance in performances.  This would be the means 
of identifying which performances are the greatest outlier vs. other 
performances.  The one underlying assumption is that the same proportion of 
the population competes in each event so that the probability distributions 
are comparable among events.

If we're going to rely solely on subjective comparisons, then Tobin's 
evaluation is no more valid than mine and he has absolutely no basis for 
leaping to a conclusion that running a near a WR in one event implies drug 
use.  He's going to have to use a completely different basis for coming to 
that conclusion.

On the other hand, I'm not arguing that my comparison is subjective per se, 
but rather can be recreated by anyone else in a step by step fashion that 
is readily transparent.  If they want to change the underlying assumptions, 
they are free to do so and to come to their own conclusions.  Such 
transparency is the fundamental basis of objective 
comparisons.  Subjective comparisons are opaque and cannot be recreated.

RMc

At 01:23 PM 10/14/2003 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
ALL of these comparison tables are fundamentally flawed, as subjectivity 
is the common denominator. Don't believe me, just compare the projected 
equivalents from the various tables: Purdy, Coe and Martin, Portuguese, 
Mercier (I'm missing a few)



Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-13 Thread alan tobin
When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds off a 
record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50 marathon. 
Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if he's a part 
of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?

Alan


From: Richard McCann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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To: (TFMail List) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win 
at  Chicago
Date: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 11:16:41 -0700
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Sunday October 12, 06:50 PM

Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago
http://uk.sports.yahoo.com/031012/323/eawyq.html
Click to enlarge photo
CHICAGO (AFP) - First-time marathoner Evans Rutto of Kenya and reigning 
Boston Marathon champion Svetlana Zakharova of Russia won titles at the 
Chicago Marathon.

Rutto won in 2hr 05min 50sec, eight seconds off the race mark, American 
Khalid Khannouchi's old world best of 2:05:42 in 1999.
Click to enlarge photo
Kenya's Paul Tergat set the world marathon best of 2:04:55 at the Berlin 
Marathon on September 28.

But Rutto's run does break the world mark for first-time marathon runners, 
which had been 2:06:47 by Wilson Onsari in Paris this year.

I was very surprised by the time, Rutto said. I'm very happy. I felt 
good all the way, very strong.

Zakharova won in 2:23:07 with runner-up Constantina Tomescu-Dita 28 seconds 
behind.

It was hard to hold up at the end, Zakharova said. It was hot. I like it 
here very much and I'll be back next year.

Rutto took home 225,000 dollars while Zakharova received 110,000 dollars. 
Each won 100,000 dollars for the victory but the Kenyan captured more in 
bonus prize money.

A late-race surge brought victory for Zakharova, pulling away from her 
Romanian rival in the final mile for the triumph.

I tried to hold on for the win, but it was not possible, Tomescu-Dita 
said. I had pain in my legs and my stomach.

Latvian Jelena Prokopcuka was third, followed by Russia's Albina Ivanova 
and Poland's Grazyna Syrek.

Kenyans swept the top five men's spots with Paul Koech second in an 
unofficial time of 2:07:07 and Daniel Njenga third in an unofficial 2:07:41 
over the 26.2-mile course. Peter Chebet was fourth with Jimmy Muindi fifth.

Moroccan Abdelkader El Mouaziz was sixth, followed by American Mebrahton 
Keflezhigi and South Africa's Hendrick Ramaala.

Rutto, 25, ran the eighth-fastest 10,000m in the world in June of 2000, a 
personal best of 27:31:32.

He seized command in the men's race, zipping through the 20th mile in 4:35 
to pull away from a world-class field and handling the final 10km in 29:26.

Zakharova, 33, was coming off a ninth-place showing at August's World 
Championships in Paris, where she ran 2:26:53.

Zakharova won the Boston Marathon in April in 2:25:19 and ran her personal 
best here last year to place fourth in 2:21:31, a Russian national record.

The 26th running of the Chicago race featured 40,000 entrants and a record 
550,000-dollar purse.


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Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-13 Thread Richard McCann
Actually, he's 55 seconds off the WR.  By my calculation, his time equals 
about 26:55 for 10k.  Given that few marathoners run equivalent 10k 
performances, I don't think he's too far out of line.  You need to realize 
that the current men's marathon WR is still quite weak, and should be well 
under 2:04 to be equivalent to the classic distances WRs.  Even Tergat's 
half marathon record is better than his marathon.

RMc

At 06:35 PM 10/13/2003 +, alan tobin wrote:
When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds off 
a record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50 
marathon. Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if 
he's a part of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?

Alan


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Sunday October 12, 06:50 PM

Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago
http://uk.sports.yahoo.com/031012/323/eawyq.html
Click to enlarge photo
CHICAGO (AFP) - First-time marathoner Evans Rutto of Kenya and reigning 
Boston Marathon champion Svetlana Zakharova of Russia won titles at the 
Chicago Marathon.

Rutto won in 2hr 05min 50sec, eight seconds off the race mark, American 
Khalid Khannouchi's old world best of 2:05:42 in 1999.
Click to enlarge photo
Kenya's Paul Tergat set the world marathon best of 2:04:55 at the Berlin 
Marathon on September 28.

But Rutto's run does break the world mark for first-time marathon 
runners, which had been 2:06:47 by Wilson Onsari in Paris this year.

I was very surprised by the time, Rutto said. I'm very happy. I felt 
good all the way, very strong.

Zakharova won in 2:23:07 with runner-up Constantina Tomescu-Dita 28 
seconds behind.

It was hard to hold up at the end, Zakharova said. It was hot. I like 
it here very much and I'll be back next year.

Rutto took home 225,000 dollars while Zakharova received 110,000 dollars. 
Each won 100,000 dollars for the victory but the Kenyan captured more in 
bonus prize money.

A late-race surge brought victory for Zakharova, pulling away from her 
Romanian rival in the final mile for the triumph.

I tried to hold on for the win, but it was not possible, Tomescu-Dita 
said. I had pain in my legs and my stomach.

Latvian Jelena Prokopcuka was third, followed by Russia's Albina Ivanova 
and Poland's Grazyna Syrek.

Kenyans swept the top five men's spots with Paul Koech second in an 
unofficial time of 2:07:07 and Daniel Njenga third in an unofficial 
2:07:41 over the 26.2-mile course. Peter Chebet was fourth with Jimmy 
Muindi fifth.

Moroccan Abdelkader El Mouaziz was sixth, followed by American Mebrahton 
Keflezhigi and South Africa's Hendrick Ramaala.

Rutto, 25, ran the eighth-fastest 10,000m in the world in June of 2000, a 
personal best of 27:31:32.

He seized command in the men's race, zipping through the 20th mile in 
4:35 to pull away from a world-class field and handling the final 10km in 
29:26.

Zakharova, 33, was coming off a ninth-place showing at August's World 
Championships in Paris, where she ran 2:26:53.

Zakharova won the Boston Marathon in April in 2:25:19 and ran her 
personal best here last year to place fourth in 2:21:31, a Russian 
national record.

The 26th running of the Chicago race featured 40,000 entrants and a 
record 550,000-dollar purse

Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-13 Thread Mike Prizy
She's a tall, good looking blond. Gave up her job as an air traffic controller in 
Albuquerque so she
could train more. I would stake Alan's life on it that she's not taking 
performance-enhancing
drugs;)

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 not barely heard of...
 U. S. girl debut in sub 2:30. Where is the rant??

 In a message dated 10/13/2003 12:47:55 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds
 off a record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50
 marathon.
 
 Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if he's a part
 
 of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?
 
 Alan
 



Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-13 Thread Kurt Bray
If a U.S. girl in her marathon debut ran within a minute of the world 
record, you'd probably hear plenty of ranting.

Kurt Bray


not barely heard of...
U. S. girl debut in sub 2:30. Where is the rant??
In a message dated 10/13/2003 12:47:55 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
writes:

When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds
off a record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50
marathon.

Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if he's a 
part

of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?

Alan

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Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-13 Thread Steve Shea
What's Khanouchi's 10k PR?

Steve S.

- Original Message -
From: alan tobin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2003 2:35 PM
Subject: Re: t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova
win at Chicago


 When a runner I barely heard of runs his first ever marathon 8 seconds off
a
 record that was just broke I start to wonder. 27:30 10k  2:05:50 marathon.
 Call me a pessimist if you want. Icing on the cake would be if he's a part
 of Dr. Rosa's camp. Anyone know?

 Alan



t-and-f: fwd: Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago

2003-10-12 Thread Richard McCann
Sunday October 12, 06:50 PM

Marathon debutant Rutto, Boston champ Zakharova win at Chicago
http://uk.sports.yahoo.com/031012/323/eawyq.html
Click to enlarge photo
CHICAGO (AFP) - First-time marathoner Evans Rutto of Kenya and reigning 
Boston Marathon champion Svetlana Zakharova of Russia won titles at the 
Chicago Marathon.

Rutto won in 2hr 05min 50sec, eight seconds off the race mark, American 
Khalid Khannouchi's old world best of 2:05:42 in 1999.
Click to enlarge photo
Kenya's Paul Tergat set the world marathon best of 2:04:55 at the Berlin 
Marathon on September 28.

But Rutto's run does break the world mark for first-time marathon runners, 
which had been 2:06:47 by Wilson Onsari in Paris this year.

I was very surprised by the time, Rutto said. I'm very happy. I felt 
good all the way, very strong.

Zakharova won in 2:23:07 with runner-up Constantina Tomescu-Dita 28 seconds 
behind.

It was hard to hold up at the end, Zakharova said. It was hot. I like it 
here very much and I'll be back next year.

Rutto took home 225,000 dollars while Zakharova received 110,000 dollars. 
Each won 100,000 dollars for the victory but the Kenyan captured more in 
bonus prize money.

A late-race surge brought victory for Zakharova, pulling away from her 
Romanian rival in the final mile for the triumph.

I tried to hold on for the win, but it was not possible, Tomescu-Dita 
said. I had pain in my legs and my stomach.

Latvian Jelena Prokopcuka was third, followed by Russia's Albina Ivanova 
and Poland's Grazyna Syrek.

Kenyans swept the top five men's spots with Paul Koech second in an 
unofficial time of 2:07:07 and Daniel Njenga third in an unofficial 2:07:41 
over the 26.2-mile course. Peter Chebet was fourth with Jimmy Muindi fifth.

Moroccan Abdelkader El Mouaziz was sixth, followed by American Mebrahton 
Keflezhigi and South Africa's Hendrick Ramaala.

Rutto, 25, ran the eighth-fastest 10,000m in the world in June of 2000, a 
personal best of 27:31:32.

He seized command in the men's race, zipping through the 20th mile in 4:35 
to pull away from a world-class field and handling the final 10km in 29:26.

Zakharova, 33, was coming off a ninth-place showing at August's World 
Championships in Paris, where she ran 2:26:53.

Zakharova won the Boston Marathon in April in 2:25:19 and ran her personal 
best here last year to place fourth in 2:21:31, a Russian national record.

The 26th running of the Chicago race featured 40,000 entrants and a record 
550,000-dollar purse.