Ethiopia’s
Wude Ayalew Returns to Defend TD Beach to Beacon Title while Group of
Talented American Men Set to Challenge Stellar International Field
The 2016 TD Beach to Beacon also will feature an Elite Women’s Start for the first time in race history
CAPE ELIZABETH, Maine (July 22, 2016)
ÛÓ Ethiopia’s Wude Ayalew is competing in her fifth TD Beach to Beacon
10K this year, but when she returns to defend her title on Aug. 6 it
will mark the first time she won’t be required to navigate in and around
male runners to finish the race.
In
addition to unveiling the 27-member professional field for the 2016
race, TD Beach to Beacon organizers on Friday also announced that for
the first time in the 19-year history of the event, the TD Beach to Beacon 10K
will feature an Elite Women’s Start. The women’s field will start at 8
a.m., 12 minutes ahead of the men and the rest of the race field.
The
Elite Women’s Start will give the top female athletes a better
opportunity to compete head to head and also provide their race with
more exposure among spectators and media, said Race Director Dave
McGillivray, who also directs the B.A.A. Boston Marathon and Falmouth
Road Race, two other prominent races that start the women earlier than
the men.
“We
thought it would be a nice idea this year to showcase the women more,
that is, enable everyone to see them better in the race rather than
mixed in with the men,” he said.
Ironically,
there may be no bigger proponent of the Elite Women’s Start for the TD
Beach to Beacon than the defending champion ÛÓ and for good reason. In
2007, Ayalew arrived in Cape Elizabeth for her first TD Beach to Beacon
as the prohibitive favorite, only to see her hopes dashed when she got
tangled with a male runner along the course. (She fell, got up and still
managed to finish fourth.)
Ayalew,
who returned in 2010 and ran the second fastest time ever on the course
(31:07) only to place second on a course-record day, finally broke
through last year for her first TD Beach to Beacon crown.
The
reigning men’s champion, Stephen Kosgei Kibet of Kenya, could not
secure a visa and will not return to defend his title, said Elite
Athlete Coordinator Larry Barthlow, opening the door for someone among
an assembled list of young track speedsters, former world champions and
high-level marathoners.
In
addition, a $23,000 prize purse for American men and women, sponsored
by Dunkin’ Donuts, is back for a second year, and has again drawn many
top American distance runners to the TD Beach to Beacon. The prize
money, among the more generous offered at a U.S. road race, is split
evenly among the top five American men and women and breaks down: $5,000
for first, $3,000, $2,000, $1,000 and $500.
In
all, the total prize money available at the TD Beach to Beacon is more
than $90,000, with $10,000 awarded to the winners in the men’s and
women’s open races and payouts to the top 10 runners overall.
The
world-class athletes will join a race day field of more than 6,600
runners who will wind along the fast, relatively flat course that begins
near the Crescent Beach State Park entrance on Route 77 in Cape
Elizabeth and ends 6.2 miles later in Fort Williams Park at the Portland
Head Light, the most photographed lighthouse in America. The race was
founded by Olympic gold medalist Joan Benoit Samuelson, who trained on the same roads while growing up in Cape Elizabeth.
Eric Jenkins,
a New Hampshire native and former Oregon standout who won the inaugural
American-only prize category last year, is returning to defend his
title after finishing fourth at 5000m at the U.S. Olympic Trials, just
missing a trip to the 2016 Rio Olympics.
He will be challenged by Dathan Ritzenhein,
a two-time Olympian who once held the American record at 5000m and
finished ninth in the marathon at the 2008 London Olympics; Abdi Abdirahman, a four-time Olympian who was the third American in last year’s race and seventh overall; and Sam Chelanga, a two-time NCAA Cross Country Champion who has run 27:08:39 on the track at 10,000m.
The American men will look to make inroads into the Open Top 10 against a strong field of international athletes, led by Micah Kogo
of Kenya, who won Bronze at the 2008 Olympics at 10,000m. He is a
two-time TD Beach to Beacon champ (27:47 in 2011 and 28:03 in 2013) and
finished fifth a year ago. Kenyans Daniel Salel, who finished third in 2015 and has a PB 27:41 at 10K, and Patrick Makau, a 2:03 marathoner who took fourth (27:57) at the 2014 TD Beach to Beacon, also will challenge, as well as Adunga Takela of Ethiopia, who recently ran 27:20:65 at 10,000m in the Ethiopian Olympic Trials.
Barthlow said he also is intrigued by a pair of Kenyan track burners who train in Japan: William Malel Sitonik, who finished second behind Mo Farah in the 10,000m at the Prefontaine Classic in late May with a blazing 26:54:66, and James Mwangi Macharia, who has clocked 27:23:04 at 10,000m.
On the women’s side, Wude Ayalew, a World Championship Bronze medalist, will seek a repeat against a stellar field, including Kenyan Joyce Chepkirui,
who won the 2013 TD Beach to Beacon in 31:23 – the third fastest time
on the course. Her best 10K time is 30:37 and she recently finished
second to American Molly Huddle in an exciting photo finish at the NYC
Half Marathon.
The field also includes Mary Keitany of Kenya, one of the best marathoners in the world with a NYC Marathon win and two London Marathon titles; Berhane Dibaba, one of Ethiopia’s top young marathoners; and Kim Smith of New Zealand, a three-time Olympian who has held national records at 3000m, 5000m and 10,000m.
The American field is anchored by Jordan Hasay,
a high school phenom and 16-time All-American at Oregon who ran her
first 10K as a professional runner at the 2014 TD Beach to Beacon,
finishing fourth with an impressive 32:20. She will be challenged by Emily Sisson, who won both the NCAA Indoor (in record time) and Outdoor 5000m in 2015 and has a PB 32:18 at 10K since turning pro last fall.
Barthlow said he is pleased with the field despite the challenges encountered in an Olympic year.
“The
main issue with the Olympics is you are waiting until the last-minute
to see who makes a team and who doesn’t,” Barthlow said. “And in many
cases, top athletes who don’t make their teams and would otherwise be
available are mentally and physically exhausted from the effort. We lost
a few athletes who just decided to shut it down. But all in all, we’ve
got some tremendous athletes and I think we’re going to see highly
competitive races from both the men and the women.”
The TD Beach to Beacon 10K is directed by Dave McGillivray of DMSE Sports (www.dmsesports.com), who also directs the B.A.A Boston Marathon and is regarded as one of the world’s elite race directors.
In 2015, a record-setting 6,602 runners from 15 countries, 41 states and more than 265 Maine cities and towns finished the winding, rolling, often breathtaking 6.2-mile coastal course.
The 2016 race beneficiary is My Place Teen Center
(MPTC), a free, year-round, after-school youth development program for
kids in Greater Portland, which receives a $30,000 donation from the TD
Charitable Foundation, the charitable giving arm of TD Bank, America’s
Most Convenient Bank®. TD Bank has now donated $570,000 to Maine
charities over the history of the race.
In
addition to TD Bank, other major corporate partners include Nike,
Hannaford, Poland Spring, MaineHealth, L.L.Bean, IDEXX, Northeast Delta
Dental, WCSH6 TV and Olympia Sports. For additional information about
the race, visit www.beach2beacon.org, and follow the race on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
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# # #
Elite Athlete Fields for the 2016 TD Beach to Beacon 10K (as of July 22, 2016)
MEN
Micah Kogo Kenya
Patrick Makau Kenya
William Malel Sitonik Kenya
James Mwangi Macharia Kenya
Daniel Salel Kenya
Adunga Takele Ethiopia
Tariku Bekele Ethiopia
Markos Geneti Ethiopia
Eric Jenkins USA
Dathan Ritzenhein USA
Abdi Abdirahman USA
Sam Chelanga USA
Maverick Darling USA
Joe Bosshard USA
Brendan Gregg USA
WOMEN
Wude Ayalew Ethiopia
Joyce Chepkirui Kenya
Mary Keitany Kenya
Gladys Yator Kenya
Berhane Dibaba Ethiopia
Wudnesh Takele Ethiopia
Kim Smith New Zealand
Lily Partridge United Kingdom
Tina Muir United Kingdom
Emily Sisson USA
Jordan Hasay USA
Sara Hall USA