2009 London Marathon

29th annual mass participation marathon race in London From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2009 London Marathon

The 2009 London Marathon was the 29th running of the annual marathon race in London, England, which took place on Sunday, 26 April. The elite men's race was won by Kenya's Samuel Wanjiru in a time of 2:05:10 hours and the women's race was won by Germany's Irina Mikitenko in 2:22:11.[1]

Quick Facts 29th London Marathon, Venue ...
29th London Marathon
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Leaders during the men's race
VenueLondon, England
Date26 April 2009
Champions
MenSamuel Wanjiru (2:05:10)
WomenIrina Mikitenko (2:22:11)
Wheelchair menKurt Fearnley (1:28:56)
Wheelchair womenAmanda McGrory (1:50:39)
 2008
2010 
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In the wheelchair races, Australia's Kurt Fearnley (1:28:56) and American Amanda McGrory (1:50:39) won the men's and women's divisions, respectively. Fearnley defeated David Weir by one second, taking the Briton's course record in the process.[2]

Around 155,000 people applied to enter the race: 49,995 had their applications accepted and 35,884 started the race.[3] A total of 35,266 runners, 24,228 men and 11,038 women, finished the race.[4]

In the under-17 Mini Marathon, the 3-mile able-bodied and wheelchair events were won by Ronnie Sparke (14:20), Ciara Mageean (16:16), Daniel Lucker (12:30) and Hannah Cockroft (15:42).[5]

Results

Men

More information Position, Athlete ...
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1st place, gold medalist(s)Samuel Wanjiru Kenya2:05:10
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Tsegaye Kebede Ethiopia2:05:20
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Jaouad Gharib Morocco2:05:27
4Emmanuel Kipchirchir Mutai Kenya2:06:53
5Hendrick Ramaala South Africa2:07:44
6Yonas Kifle Eritrea2:08:28
7Atsushi Sato Japan2:09:16
8Meb Keflezighi United States2:09:21
9Felix Limo Kenya2:09:47
10Dathan Ritzenhein United States2:10:00
11Tessema Abshero Ethiopia2:11:18
12Andi Jones United Kingdom2:15:20
13Martin Dent Australia2:15:24
14Rafał Wójcik Poland2:16:41
15Benedict Whitby United Kingdom2:18:14
16Elmore Sibanda Zimbabwe2:19:02
17Richard Gardiner United Kingdom2:19:48
18Tomas Abyu United Kingdom2:20:09
19Neil Renault United Kingdom2:20:30
20John McFarlane United Kingdom2:20:44
Abderrahim Goumri MoroccoDQ
Luke Kibet Bowen KenyaDNF
El Hassan Lahssini FranceDNF
Zersenay Tadese EritreaDNF
Hicham Bellani MoroccoDNF
Elijah Keitany KenyaDNF
Sammy Kiprono KenyaDNF
John Kales KenyaDNF
Philip Wicks United KingdomDNF
Simon Tanui KenyaDNF
William Chebor KenyaDNF
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  • Morocco's Abderrahim Goumri originally placed sixth with a time of 2:08:25 hours, but this was subsequently disqualified due to doping.[6]

Women

More information Position, Athlete ...
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Wheelchair men

More information Position, Athlete ...
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1st place, gold medalist(s)Kurt Fearnley Australia1:28:56
2nd place, silver medalist(s)David Weir United Kingdom1:28:57
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Ernst van Dyk South Africa1:28:58
4Masazumi Soejima Japan1:30:13
5Heinz Frei Switzerland1:30:15
6Denis Lemeunier France1:32:40
7Saúl Mendoza Mexico1:37:12
8Rafael Botello Spain1:37:38
9Jose Antonio Iniguez United States1:39:17
10Brain Alldis United Kingdom1:40:15
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Wheelchair women

More information Position, Athlete ...
Position Athlete Nationality Time
1st place, gold medalist(s)Amanda McGrory United States1:50:39
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Sandra Graf Switzerland1:50:40
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Diane Roy Canada1:50:41
4Edith Hunkeler Switzerland1:50:42
5Christie Dawes Australia1:50:43
6Shelly Woods United Kingdom1:50:46
7Margo Whiteford United Kingdom2:46:10
8Jacqui Kapinowski United States2:57:49
9Nikki Emerson United Kingdom3:17:37
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References

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