Geofry Kipchumba (Photo Amsterdam Marathon)
Geofry Toroitich Kipchumba triumphed in the jubilee edition of the Amsterdam Marathon, setting a new course record of 2:03:30, the fourth-fastest marathon time in the world this year.
The 25-year-old Kenyan ran an attacking race, crushed his personal best, and erased Tamirat Tola’s previous record of 2:03:39 from the books.
In the women’s race, Ethiopia’s Aynalem Desta took victory in 2:17:37, while Khalid Choukoud and Anne Luijten were crowned Dutch marathon champions after an exciting race.
The start list featured several big names, including Olympic champion Joshua Cheptegei and Gabriel Gaey.
A new course record seemed likely, but Kipchumba’s victory still came as a surprise. Up to the halfway mark along the Amstel River, a large lead group stayed together behind a single pacemaker. They passed the halfway point exactly on record pace, after which the tempo increased further. A clear split followed, but the favourites remained in the mix, and calm briefly returned to the group.
With the wind at their backs, everything pointed toward a world-class time. The race truly ignited at the 33 km mark: Gaey surged ahead, forcing Cheptegei to drop back. Not long after, Kipchumba made his decisive move — running solo, unstoppable, and uncatchable.
The final seven kilometres were a lonely battle against the clock, but it paid off: he crossed the line nine seconds under the record. “I’m very happy. I felt strong and thought, let’s push. I was hoping for 2:04, so this is even better,” Kipchumba said relaxedly afterwards. Former winner Tsegaye Getachew had to settle for second place in 2:04:18, finishing just one second ahead of Getaneh Molla, who was clocked at 2:04:19.
The women’s race was also won with negative splits, and while there was an Ethiopian victory as expected, eventual winner Desta was considered one of the outside contenders.
The former steeplechase specialist was part of the lead pack through 10km (32:41) and half way (1:09:10).
By 30km, reached in 1:38:07, the lead pack was down to four Ethiopian athletes: Desta, Bertukan Welde, Mekides Shimeles and Waganesh Mekasha. A few kilometres later, Mekasha started to fade. By 40km, it was down to just Desta and Welde.
Desta managed to forge a lead in the closing stages and won in 2:17:37, chopping more than four minutes from her PB and coming within 45 seconds of the course record set last year by Yalemzerf Yehualaw.
Welde finished second in a PB of 2:17:56 and Shimeles completed the Ethiopian podium sweep in 2:19:56.
Amebaw and Hafashimana triumph in Amorebieta
Meanwhile, Ethiopia’s Likina Amebaw and Burundi’s Emile Hafashimana impressed at the Cross Internacional Zornotza – the first Gold level meeting of this season’s World Athletics Cross Country Tour – claiming victory on a cloudy and slightly rainy day.
While Amebaw was an overwhelming winner of the women’s race, Hafashimana held off a late challenge from Spain’s Nassim Hassaous to maintain the Burundian supremacy at the event for the fourth year in a row.
After a delayed start due to an incident in the mass participation race, the women’s 8.7km race started at a moderate pace, the opening kilometres timed at 3:34 and 3:39 with Portugal’s Mariana Machado making most of the pacing duties followed closely by Spain’s Majida Maayouf and Naima Ait Alibou. Pre-race favourite Amebaw was biding her time in the middle of the large lead group.
The pace increased on the second 2km lap as Maayouf and Amebaw led a seven-woman pack. With 3km to go, 27-year-old Amebaw unleashed a devastating change of tempo to open up a significant lead while Machado led the chase pack.
A 3:13 split for the seventh kilometre effectively sealed Amebaw’s victory. Further back, Machado had got rid of Ait Alibou, herself also clearly ahead of Angela Viciosa while Maayouf faded over the closing kilometres.
Following splits of 6:49 and 6:42 for the final two laps, Amebaw crossed the line in 30:21, finishing 21 seconds ahead of Machado with Ait Alibou completing the podium.
The Spain-based winner managed her second victory in Amorebieta after winning in 2023; she commented:
“After the long delay in the start, I thought the race was going to be cancelled, but fortunately we could finally compete,” said Amebaw, who won here in 2023. “During the early stages my body was cold and it made me uneasy so I decided to wait and see how the race developed, not taking any unnecessary risks. During the second part I felt much better and managed to set my own rhythm until the end.
“I’m very satisfied for my second win here in my season opener and look forward to this cross country season as the World Championships in January will be my next big goal,” added Amebaw, who intends to compete in Seville on 9 November.
Unlike the women’s contest, the men’s 8.7km race got off to a swift start by Burundi’s Emile Hafashimana. Competing in Spain for the first time, the 20-year-old took early command of the race and covered the opening kilometre in 2:56 followed by his compatriots Elie Sindayikengdera and Thierry Irakoze plus the Spanish duo of Nassim Hassaous and Yahya Aouina.
After a brisk first lap of 5:38, Hafashimana had an eight-second margin on the chasing pack led by Sindayikengdera. That grew to 15 seconds at half way with the Burundian completing successive laps of 5:45 and 5:50 while Hassaous and Aouina managed to break free from the rest of the pack, moving into podium positions.
On a thrilling final lap, Hassaous – who finished seventh at last year’s European Cross Country Championships – started to make up ground on Hafashimana, much to the delight of the home crowd. At one point it looked as though the Spaniard would catch the long-time leader, but Hafashimana managed to resist Hassaous’ late attack to win by two seconds in 25:50. Aouina claimed third place in 26:03.
Leading results
AMSTERDAM MARATHON
Women
1 Aynalem Desta (ETH) 2:17:37
2 Bertukan Welde (ETH) 2:17:56
3 Mekides Shimeles (ETH) 2:19:56
4 Waganesh Mekasha (ETH) 2:20:26
5 Gadise Mulu (ETH) 2:21:04
6 Bosena Mulate (ETH) 2:21:23
7 Rose Chelimo (BRN) 2:22:55
8 Margaux Sieracki (FRA) 2:25:50
9 Zinah Senbeta (ETH) 2:27:32
10 Louise Small (GBR) 2:27:51
Men
1 Geoffrey Toroitich Kipchumba (KEN) 2:03:30
2 Tsegaye Getachew (ETH) 2:04:18
3 Getaneh Molla (ETH) 2:04:19
4 Gabriel Geay (TAN) 2:04:36
5 Joshua Cheptegei (UGA) 2:04:52
6 Bazezaw Asmare (ETH) 2:05:17
7 Bute Gemechu (ETH) 2:06:12
8 Aron Kifle (ERI) 2:07:12
9 Tadesse Getahon (ISR) 2:07:15
10 Phil Sesemann (GBR) 2:07:18
CROSS INTERNACIONAL ZORNOTA
Women (8.7km)
1 Likina Amebaw (ETH) 30:21
2 Mariana Machado (POR) 30:42
3 Naima Ait Alibou (ESP) 30:56
4 Angela Viciosa (ESP) 31:11
5 Majida Maayouf (ESP) 31:30
6 Ana Marinho (POR) 31:41
7 Irene Pelayo (ESP) 31:43
8 Clara Las Heras (ESP) 32:00
Men (8.7km)
1 Emile Hafashimana (BDI) 25:50
2 Nassim Hassaous (ESP) 25:52
3 Yahya Aouina (ESP) 26:03
4 Elie Sindayikengdera (BDI) 26:47
5 Thierry Irakoze (BDI) 26:55
6 Nick Jager (GER) 27:00
7 David de la Fuente (ESP) 27:06
8 Tom Hoogeboom (NED) 27:15

