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Njenga Wins 2007 Tokyo Marathon
The man who was reduced to tears when he narrowly
finished second at last October's LaSalle Bank Chicago
Marathon, Daniel Njenga of Kenya, easily won on 18th
February 2007 Tokyo International Marathon, leading
a field of 25,000 in the first mass edition of this
race.
Njenga, 30, who runs for the Japanese corporate team,
Yakult, pulled away from the field off of a slow pace
around 25 km into the race, winning by more than a
minute and one-half over Tomoyuki Sato of Japan. Njenga
clocked 2:09:45 on a new point-to-point course to
Sato's 2:11:22. Sammy Korir, the second-fastest marathoner
of all-time, faded from contention after 15 km and
did not finish in the top-10.
The race was the first very large, mass marathon
in Japan, which welcomed 25,000 entrants (plus another
5000 in a companion 10-K). Although it was technically
the 28th edition of the Tokyo International Marathon,
the previous 27 editions only had a few hundred runners,
all of them elite. The previous largest marathon in
Japan, known to Race Results Weekly, was the Tsukuba
Marathon with 9708 finishers last year.
The race also served as a selection event for the
Japanese team for the IAAF World Championships in
Athletics which will be held in Osaka in late August
and early September. Sato would have nailed a guaranteed
berth on the team had he run at least 2:09:30, but
now he must wait for the results of the final selection
race, the Lake Biwa Mainichi Marathon scheduled for
Sunday, March 4 in Otsu, to see if he makes the team.
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