Just four months after running the Olympic marathon, Fionnuala McCormack produced a brilliant new lifetime best by almost three minutes in Valencia on Sunday morning, moving ever closer to the Irish women’s marathon record which has stood untouched for over 23 years.
In near perfect running conditions, McCormack finished fifth best woman in two hours, 23 minutes and 58 seconds, significantly faster that the 2:26.47 she ran in Chicago in October 2019, at the time an improvement of almost four minutes on her previous marathon best.
Only Catherina McKiernan, with her Irish record of 2:22.23 from Amsterdam in 1999, is faster on the Irish all-time women's list, McCormack also eclipsing the 2:24.11 run in 2019 by Mayo-born Sinead Diver, now representing Australia.
Now aged 37, and a mother of two, it’s another highly impressive run for McCormack, coming just four months after she competed in her fourth Olympics, finishing 25th in the marathon staged in sweltering conditions 800km north of Tokyo in Sapporo, where she clocked 2:34.09. She also since improved her half-marathon best to 69.32 in Valencia in October.
McCormack sat a little back in the early stages before gathering momentum, passing the halfway mark in 71.33, and picking off several runners in the closing miles. Victory went to Kenya's Nancy Jelagat in 2:19.31 ahead of Etagegne Woldu (2:20.16), both those women finishing well clear of Woldu's Ethiopian team-mate Beyenu Degefa, who took in third 2:23.04. Lawrence Cherono also won the men's race for Kenya in 2:05.12.
McCormack now has just six days to recover before taking her place in the Irish women’s team at next Sunday’s European Cross-Country Championships in Abbotstown in Dublin. That will also extend her women’s record of Irish international caps in athletics to 42, and will also mark her 17th appearance in the event, from junior upwards, more than any other woman in European athletics history.
Despite the quick turnaround, McCormack was keen to make herself available for the Dublin event, and another crack at the title she has won twice before, in 2011 and 2012, the first women to win in successive years, in her words “can’t resist the allure” of a home European Cross-Country.
The Wicklow athlete will be central again to the Irish women’s medal chances, after leading them home to team silver with her fourth place in Lisbon 2019 (her fourth fourth-placing in the event), and also leading them to team gold in 2012.
Elsewhere, Barry Keane has set a new Irish indoor record over 5,000m at the Boston University Sharon Colyear-Danville meeting, the Waterford athlete clocking 13:25.96 to improve on Alistair Cragg’s mark of 13:28.93 which had stood since March 2003. The Waterford runner, competing for Butler University, finished 100th in the NCAA Cross-Country Championships two weeks ago.