KEY POINTS:
Paula Radcliffe made a triumphant return to marathon racing and Martin Lel reprised his thrilling London victory to win yesterday's New York City Marathon.
Britain's world record holder Radcliffe, running her first marathon in two years after taking a maternity break and recuperating from injury, beat Gete Wami after a race-long duel with a time of two hours, 23 minutes, nine seconds.
"I love this. I really enjoyed being back, full stop, and racing marathons," said Radcliffe, who gave birth to her first child, daughter Isla, in January.
Radcliffe and Wami, rivals for 15 years on the track, in cross-country and on the roads, waged a two-woman race from the second mile on as they left the other elite runners behind.
Wami ran behind Radcliffe, nudging past for less than 10 seconds in the final stages before the Briton surged ahead in the final few hundred metres in Central Park.
There was some consolation for Ethiopian Wami, whose runner-up finish clinched her a US$500,000 ($656,013) prize for winning the women's World Marathon Majors title, based on points accumulated in top marathons over the last two years.
In contrast to Radcliffe, Wami was running her second marathon in 35 days following her win in Berlin in order to stay ahead of twice-defending New York champion Jelena Prokopcuka in the World Marathon Majors standings.
"Running a [second] marathon in 35 days and coming in second, I feel, was quite an achievement for me," Wami, who finished 23 seconds behind Radcliffe, said through an interpreter.
"When Paula made the move, I found it difficult to catch up to her. I was feeling some stomach ache."
Prokopcuka, trying to become the first woman to win three in a row in New York since nine-times winner Grete Waitz in 1986, finished third.
The Latvian needed to finish ahead of Wami and in at least third place to overtake the Ethiopian in the standings.
In the men's race, Lel of Kenya pulled away from Moroccan Abderrahim Goumri in the last few hundred metres, heading into Central Park for victory in two hours, nine minutes, four seconds.
Lel, the 2003 New York winner who outsprinted Goumri to win by three seconds in London earlier this year, was 12 ahead of the Moroccan on Sunday.
"There are many ways of killing a rat," Lel said about his tactics. "I can say that [Hendrick] Ramaala and Goumri really gave me a hard time."
Goumri was shoulder to shoulder with the Kenyan as they headed for the Central Park finish but could not match his final kick.
Ramaala of South Africa, the 2004 champion, finished third.
- Reuters