21.09.2009
Chapple, Fearnley rewrite the record books
On a big weekend of running around the world, Victorian
Nikki Chapple has recorded the fifth fastest half
marathon on Australian record and wheelchair athlete
Kurt
Fearnley has smashed his own event record at the Sydney
Wheelchair Marathon.
Just one day after finishing third in the two-mile event at the
Great North City Games on Saturday, Chapple returned to the city
streets of Newcastle for the 21.1km Great North Run.
The 28-year-old clocked an impressive 1:10.03 over the fast
Newcastle course to move from No. 31 to No. 5 on the Australian
all-time list and take more than four minutes off the personal best
time of 1:14.38 she recorded in Melbourne in September last
year.
Chapple now sits fifth on the Australian all-time list over the
half marathon distance behind
Kerryn McCann’s
1:07.48 (Tokyo, 2000),
Benita Willis’ 1:07.55
(Newcastle, 2004),
Susie Power’s 1:07.56
(Newcastle, 2002) and
Lisa Ondieki’s career best
mark of 1:08.33 (Tokyo, 1992).
Two of the top four times – set by Willis in 2004 and Power in 2002
- were recorded on the same city streets of Newcastle, northern
England, as Chapple’s weekend result.
A former world junior championships and world cross country
championships representative, Chapple made a quiet comeback to the
sport in 2008, lining up for her first half marathon at Burnley in
Victoria late last year.
Entering that race with hopes of a sub-80 minute run she clocked
1:14.38 to take out line honours. In October she contested the
Melbourne Half Marathon, battling tough conditions to finish second
in 1:16.34.
In May this year she won the Victorian state 10km championship,
stopping the clock at 32:38.
In July she won the Launceston 10 in 32:44 before departing for
Europe for a training stint with distance guru Nic Bideau. Earlier
this month she placed third in the Great Yorkshire Run, securing a
podium finish with her time of 32:41. She went on to place fourth
in the Great Capital Run, clocking 16:03 over the 5km course.
Joining Chapple in the Newcastle field at the weekend was
Australian running great Benita Willis, who placed second over two
miles in the Great North City Games on Saturday and finished 10th
in a time of 1:11.57 over the half marathon course the next
day.
In the men’s race,
Shawn Forrest placed ninth in a
time of 1:03.41 and Great North City Games milers
Mitch
Kealey (1:29.15) and
Collis Birmingham
(1:29.16) placed 39th and 40th respectively.
Closer to home, Australian Paralympian Kurt Fearnley has taken out
his second Sydney Wheelchair Marathon, smashing his previous event
record by almost seven minutes. Fearnley powered through the course
in 1:36.43, over six minutes ahead of his 2008 time of
1:43.01.
Fearnley is chasing six wins from six major international starts in
2009, and with wins in Paris, Seoul, London and now Sydney under
his belt, needs only to win in Chicago in October and New York in
November to achieve the feat.
Following yesterday’s win Fearnley said he was confident of
rounding out the season on top.
“There’s three weeks to go until Chicago and then I go on to New
York and my performance here is a great indicator for those
upcoming events,” Fearnley said.
“This is the only marathon I do in Australia and I rarely get the
chance to race on home soil so it’s great to be able to do this
event with family and friends.”
The Sydney Marathon was won by Kenyan Julius Kiprotich Seurei
(2:17.07), followed by Koji Taniguchi of Japan in 2:26.15 and New
South Wales local
Jeremey Horne, third for the
second year in a row in 2:33.48.
The women’s marathon field was led by Japan’s Naoko Tsuchiya, who
collected her third win following victories in 2006 and 2007, in a
time of 2:52.46. Norie Furuya, also of Japan, was second in 2:59.08
and Cronulla’s
Verity Tolhurst finished third in
3:03.33.
Over the half marathon distance, a race that doubled as the
Australian half marathon championships, Canberra’s
Brett
Cartwright took out the national crown in a time of
1:07.29.
New South Wales runner
Magda Karimal-Poulos
stopped the clock at 1:19.29 to take out the women’s title for
2009.
At the 12km City-Bay event in Adelaide,
Michael
Shelley stormed home to win in 33:57, a full minute ahead
of
Clint Perrett in 34:58 and third place-getter
Liam Adams in 35:12.
Five-time national 1500m champion
Sarah Jamieson
was the first female across the line, stopping the clock at 40:05
ahead of
Cassie Fien in 40:21 and
Lisa
Flint in 40:46. Fien will contest the world half marathon
championships in Birmingham, England, on October 11.