London Marathon 2018: Mo Farah finishes third as Eliud Kipchoge wins
- Published
Britain's Mo Farah finished third at the London Marathon in a new British record as Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge won the race for a third time.
Farah kept pace with the leaders for much of the race but was two minutes and four seconds behind Kipchoge.
He crossed the line in two hours, six minutes and 21 seconds to beat Steve Jones' 33-year-old British record.
The four-time Olympic champion was competing in his first 26.2-mile race since retiring from the track.
Kipchoge - regarded as one of the greatest marathon runners of all time - was on course for a new world record but slowed in the final stages of a gruelling race in record-high temperatures to finish in 2:04:17.
That was 80 seconds outside the record held by his compatriot Dennis Kimetto.
Ethiopa's Tola Shura Kitata finished in a surprise second place, 32 seconds behind Kipchoge.
Farah impresses in eventful run
Farah's only previous marathon was in London in 2014 when he finished eighth.
He returned this year having given up track racing to focus on the marathon and faced a stellar field including Kipchoge, three-time Olympic gold medallist Kenenisa Bekele and last year's London Marathon winner Daniel Wanjiru.
He beat both Bekele and Wanjiru and finished 52 seconds inside Jones' British record, set in 1985.
That was despite confusion at a water bottle station earlier in the race where he missed his drink and turned back on the course to collect a different bottle before being involved in a heated exchange with one of the motorbike safety officers as he made his way back to the front of the race.
"I was saying to the people on motorbikes to tell the staff to be a bit helpful instead of taking pictures," Farah said afterwards.
"I wasn't wasting energy, I just needed a drink. I had to get it right."
Farah also said he was "knackered" after the race and has "a lot to learn about marathons".
"I really enjoyed today," he added.
"It's so different to being on the track, it's different pain and different training but I've enjoyed it.
"You get heavy legs. Mentally you need to be strong and pace yourself."
There was confusion after the race, when 10 or 11 seconds were incorrectly added to the official times of the leading three men.
Organisers apologised for the "clerical error" and corrected the mistake.
Analysis
BBC Sport athletics commentator Steve Cram:
This is the first time Farah has taken on the big boys seriously in a marathon.
This is about as tired as Mo could have ever felt in his whole career. It was a battle against his fatigue, the distance and the clock. That's more than job done.
A record for Mo in his first big event is great. World and Olympic marathons are always tough and he finished third against some of the best in the world so he did well.
- Published22 April 2018
- Published17 April 2018
- Published22 April 2018
- Published21 April 2018
- Published18 April 2018