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Showing posts with label Record. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Record. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Kenyan Makau sets marathon record

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
Kenya's Patrick Makau Makau sets marathon record in Berlin

Patrick Makau retained the Berlin men's marathon title in a world record time.

The Kenyan finished in a time of two hours, three minutes and 38 seconds to shave 21 seconds off the record set by Haile Gebrselassie on the same course.

The Ethiopian great failed to finish having experienced apparent stomach problems around the 27km mark.

"In the morning my body was not good but, after I started the race, it started reacting very well. I started thinking about the record," said Makau.

Continue reading the main story 2006 - First in 2:05.56 (fastest time of year)2007 - First in 2:04.26 (world record)2008 - First in 2:03.59 (world record)2009 - First in 2:06.082010 - Did not compete

"I didn't have any problems in the race. Last year I had some problems with my soles inside my shoe, but today everything went very well."

Gebrselassie, the 38-year-old double Olympic champion at 10,000m, had also been looking to post a fast time and ease the pressure on him to qualify for the Games ahead of strong Ethiopian rivals.

But he found himself forced to step off the road midway through the race as Makau, sensing the Ethiopian great was struggling, upped the pace.

Gebrselassie set the previous world record time with a mark of 2:03.59 in the third of his four consecutive Berlin victories between 2006 and 2009.

However, this year he halted for a full minute as his hopes of a quick time evaporated, then pulled out for good at the 35km mark.

"He was still feeling good at 25km but then his lungs started tightening up. He could not breathe - we don't know why," his agent Jos Hermens said.

Hermens added that Gebrselassie suffers from asthma and is allowed to take medicine, but had not taken any because he had not had any problems for months.

"Maybe this was a mistake, but he felt fine before, his preparation was good," he said.

"Qualifying [for London 2012] may be a problem now, we don't really know where to get it."

Gebrselassie is now expected to head to Dubai in a bid to ensure he reaches the London Olympics.



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Peliculas Online

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Multiple sclerosis patient finishes record 50th marathon

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
By Marice Richter

DALLAS | Sun Sep 25, 2011 7:51pm EDT

DALLAS (Reuters) - Life has taken long-distance runner Patrick Finney down many paths, but few have been so rewarding as the one that led him across the finish line on Sunday at the Bellingham Bay Marathon in Washington state.

It was there that Finney, 48, of the Dallas suburb of Grapevine, achieved a personal milestone and made history.

"I am the first person with multiple sclerosis to complete a marathon in all 50 states," he said triumphantly, in a phone interview with Reuters moments after finishing. "It's been an amazing journey, and I'm on top of the world."

Strong, gusty winds made the race especially difficult, and Finney felt queasy when he finished. But he recovered quickly to celebrate with a group of nearly 30 friends and co-runners from Texas, who accompanied him to Bellingham, Washington, to witness an achievement that would have been unimaginable a few years ago.

In 1998, he was diagnosed with MS, an autoimmune disease that attacks the central nervous system and produces various impairments, including difficulty walking.

"My MRIs were consistent with someone who should be in a wheelchair," Finney said.

The diagnosis in 1998 by a doctor in Washington, D.C., was discouraging for the 6-foot-4 software test engineer, who had recently taken up running to shed some weight from his then-300-pound frame.

Finney was directed to "take my medicine and take it easy," but he refused to follow that advice.

Instead, he returned to a regimen of moderate running, which he continued when he relocated from the nation's capital to the Dallas area in 2000.

By 2004, however, the disease had left him unable to walk. But unwilling to endure a life of infirmity, Finney managed to regain his ability to balance on two feet, to walk -- and eventually to run -- through extensive rehabilitation therapy and new medications.

"The first year was a real struggle for me," he said of returning to the running trails. "I was going through a pair of running shoes every two weeks because I scraping them up as I dragged my feet."

But with training, he entered a half-marathon in Dallas in 2005 with only one goal -- to finish. Most of the runners did that in less than two hours. Finney took just over four.

The following year, he ran his first full marathon -- 26.2 miles -- and hasn't stopped since. He also took up coaching.

When a friend challenged him in 2010 to run 50 marathons in 50 states by his 50th birthday, Finney couldn't say no. He developed a plan, put together a spreadsheet and prepared to meet the challenge in 3 1/2 years.

But when he crossed the finished line in just under five hours on Sunday, a couple weeks past his 48th birthday and two years before his goal, he exceeded his own expectations.

"I have gotten to travel to a lot of new places and meet a lot of great people," he said. "It's been a wonderful experience."

This is hardly the end for him. Having completed a total of 71 marathons since 2006, he plans to run in seven more this year.

Long-time friend Jill Parker is in awe, but not surprised.

She recalled an incident several years ago in which a group of runners were preparing for a race on a hot, humid September day in Dallas.

"Everyone was moaning and groaning about the weather except Patrick," Parker said. "He was smiling. When someone asked why he wasn't bothered by the weather, he replied, 'I'm just happy to be able to run.'"

(Editing by Karen Brooks and Steve Gorman)



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Peliculas Online

Monday, September 19, 2011

Record cocaine bust in Hong Kong

 Photographer looks at cocaine haul on display at a Hong Kong police station on 18 September 2011 The cocaine haul was put on display at a police station in Hong Kong Hong Kong police have made their largest ever drugs bust, seizing nearly half a tonne of cocaine with a street value of around $77m (£49m), they say.Drugs officers raided five locations across the city, including a recycling warehouse and private residences.
Eight people - five men and three women - have been arrested. Six are due to appear in court on Monday, while two have been released on police bail.
The haul had been hidden under heaps of recycled plastic materials.
The recycled plastic is thought to have been brought into the city in shipping containers.
Chief Superintendent John Ribeiro of the Narcotics Bureau said police acted after receiving a tip-off about a South American transnational drug syndicate.
Five Mexicans, an American man and a Colombian woman with Hong Kong residency were among those arrested, a police spokesperson was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying.
A total of 567kg (1,250 pounds) of cocaine was found. Ch Supt Ribeiro said officers expected more drugs to be found.
Some of the drugs could have been intended for use in Hong Kong, the BBC's Annemarie Evans reports.
But there is also an increasing customer base across the border in mainland China where growing wealth has led to a bigger appetite for recreational drugs, she adds.