| March 21, 2010
During the NYC Half-Marathon’s early miles in Central Park, the men’s lead pack contained the eventual winners, but one unexpected event would change everything: Ethiopia’s Haile Gebrselassie would drop out near mile 9 due to asthma-related issues. That’s when Kenya’s Peter Kamais took off on his own to finish in 59:53, the second-fastest time in event history. Moses Kigen Kipkosgei and Mohamed Trafeh followed in second and third.
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Though many speculated about who was fit to win, it was anyone’s race at the start.
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The early Central Park pack, led here by Abdi Abdirahman, changed many times, but always contained Haile Gebrselassie and Peter Kamais.
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Mohamed Trafeh, a self-coached American who’s trained with Khalid Khannouchi, came to New York one week after winning the USA 15K Championship.
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Four of these men would make it to the top-five, including Ethiopia’s Bekana Daba (fourth) and Shadrack Kiptoo Biwott (fifth).
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Kamais and Gebrselassie were in step to battle it out for the rest of the race…
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…even as they ran down Seventh Avenue. But suddenly, Gebrselassie pulled off to the side and stopped.
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This gave Kamais the break he needed to push ahead alone through Times Square—perfectly poised for first place.
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On the final straightaway, Moses Kigen Kipkosgei cranked out a 1:00:38, edging Trafeh.
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Biwott, who competed in multiple road races over the past few months to qualify for this race, made the top five in 1:01:52.
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Trafeh, who moved to America from Morocco when he was 14 years old, placed third, just one second behind Kigen.
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Kigen followed in the footsteps of his countryman, Kimais, by finishing second, and was one of five Kenyans in the men’s and women’s top five.
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Kamais, who said he knew he would win at the 10K mark, finished 29 seconds shy of the event record in 59:53.
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