Benson Barus

Benson Kipchumba Barus (born 4 July 1980) is a Kenyan long-distance runner who competes in marathon and half marathon competitions. He has a personal best of 2:07:07 hours for the distance, set at the 2011 Prague Marathon, which he won. He also won the 2009 Turin Marathon and has placed top three in Rome, Beijing and Chuncheon.

Benson Barus
Medal record
Men's athletics
Representing  Kenya
World Junior Championships
1998 Annecy10,000 m

He was the 10,000 metres World Junior Champion in 1998. Based in Italy, working with Federico Rosa and Claudio Berardelli, Barus has won numerous road races in the country, including the Giro di Castelbuono, Giro Media Blenio, Udine Half Marathon and Roma-Ostia Half Marathon. His best for the half marathon is 59:41 minutes.

Career

Born in Nakuru, capital of the Rift Valley Province, Benson Barus is of the Tugen ethnic group, which has also produced runners including Paul Tergat.[1] Barus had his first success as a teenager competing at the junior level, taking the gold medal over 10,000 metres at the 1998 World Junior Championships in Athletics.[2] He began to focus on road running competitions and, being managed by Italian Federico Rosa and trained by Claudio Berardelli, he ran in a number of races in Italy.[3] He had consecutive victories at the Amatrice-Configno race in 2000 and 2001,[4] and also took three straight wins at the Giro di Castelbuono from 2000 to 2002.[5] He was the winner of the 10.5 km race at the 2001 Miglianico Tour.[6] Running at the 2001 Kenyan Championships, he achieved a personal best of 28:09.32 minutes over 10,000 m on the track, but this was not enough to make the team for the 2001 World Championships in Athletics as he came fifth overall.[7]

Barus had a series of circuit wins in Italy in early 2002, claiming first place at the Montefortiana Turà, Corrida di San Geminiano, Trofeo Sant'Agata, Vivicittà Firenze 12K, Giro Media Blenio, and the Luzerner Stadtlauf.[8][9][10][11][12][13] A 10K best of 27:52 minutes came at a race in Gualtieri in April 2003 and this proved to be one of the fastest runs by any athlete in the world that year.[14] He won Cesena's Notturna di San Giovanni 10K race later that year.[15] He served as the pacemaker for the Carpi Marathon that October, leading up to the half-way point.[16] Returning to competitive racing the next year, Martin Lel beat him into second place at the 2004 Trofeo Sant'Agata, but he defeated all opposition at the Corrida di San Geminiano race.[17] He won the 25th edition of the Golden Shoe 8 km Road Race in April.[18] Barus made his debut over the half marathon distance at the 2004 Udine Half Marathon and he set a best of 1:01:31 hours, taking fourth.[19]

He won in a course record time of 1:01:14 at the 2005 Nice Half Marathon.[20] After taking pacemaking duties at the City-Pier-City Loop,[21] He set bests at the Berlin Half Marathon (fourth in 60:57 min) and the Rotterdam Half Marathon (fourth in 60:17 min).[22][23] A month after his race in Rotterdam, he made his marathon debut at the Milano City Marathon and established himself as a top competitor in the event, taking the runner-up spot behind Benson Kipchumba Cherono in a time of 2:08:33 hours. It was the fastest marathon race in the country that year.[1]

He took back-to-back wins over the half marathon in February the next year, taking the title at the Eldoret Half Marathon in Kenya and then the Roma-Ostia Half Marathon.[24][25] He made his second outing over the full distance at the JoongAng Seoul Marathon in November and recorded another sub-2:10 time, being edged into fourth place by Ethiopian Yerefu Berhanu.[26] In 2008 he served as the pacemaker for the Rome City Marathon,[27] a run which was his preparation for the Paris Marathon the month after, where his time of 2:09:23 brought him ninth in a high quality field.[28] He completed his first half marathon under an hour to win the Udine race and his course record of 59:41 minutes ranked him as the eleventh fastest runner that year.[29] His next marathon came in Frankfurt and he remained consistent in his time, recording 2:08:57 for fifth in a Kenyan sweep of the top fourteen.[30]

He paced the field in course record time at the 2009 Brescia Marathon,[31] going on to win the Turin Marathon in rainy conditions.[32] He retained his title at the Udine Half Marathon in September and at the Beijing Marathon he yet again dipped under 2:09, coming third behind Samuel Mugo and Nicholas Manza.[33] He was among the favourites for the 2010 Rome Marathon and came second behind Siraj Gena.[34] Attempting a third straight win, he entered the Udine Half Marathon, but he had to settle for the runner-up spot behind William Chebor.[35] He headed to Korea for October's Chuncheon Marathon and he had his third second place finish of the year, finishing behind Benjamin Kiptoo Kolum.[36]

The 2011 season marked a high as he won the Prague Marathon in 2:07:07 hours (more than a minute faster than he had run before).[37] He ran at the Virginia Beach Half Marathon as preparation for the Beijing Marathon in September. He won over the shorter distance in a time of 1:02:22 hours and placed top three in the Chinese marathon.[38] The 2012 Daegu Marathon saw him run one of his fastest marathon times in his career and his mark of 2:08:36 hours was enough for third.[39] He made only two more outings that year: he won the Porto Half Marathon,[40] then came fourth at the Gyeongju International Marathon.

gollark: Ah, the power of mutability.
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gollark: Ah, so not quite then.
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gollark: Bye until tomørrow!

References

  1. Sampaolo, Diego (8 October 2006). Fast times make Milan fastest Italian marathon of the year. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  2. IAAF World Junior Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  3. Barus Benson Kipchumba Archived 7 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Rosa & Associati. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  4. Civai, Franco & Gasparovic, Juraj (31 August 2010). Amatrice-Configno 8.4 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  5. Monti, Dave & Civai, Franco (27 July 2010). La Corsa Piu' Antica 11.2 km (M) and 5.6 km (F). Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  6. Franco Civai & Juraj Gasparovic (4 January 2009). Miglianico Tour 18 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  7. Njenga, Peter (23 June 2001). Kamathi steals the show in Kenyan trials Archived 27 September 2004 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  8. Civai, Franco & Gasparovic, Juraj (24 April 2011)Montefortiana Turà. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  9. Monti, David & Civai, Franco (5 April 2011).Corrida di San Geminiano 13.1 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  10. Civai, Franco & Gasparovic, Juraj (8 February 2010). Trofeo Sant'Agata 12 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  11. Civai, Franco (7 April 2011). Vivicittà Firenze Half Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  12. Franco Civai et al. (25 April 2011). Giro Media Blenio 10 km + 5 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  13. Kenianer dominierten in Luzern. News.ch (27 April 2002). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  14. 10 Kilometres 2003. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  15. Civai, Franco (25 June 2010). Notturna di San Giovanni 10 km + 6 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  16. Kenyans dominate Carpi Marathon. IAAF (12 October 2003). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  17. Lel defeats Tergat on road in Sicily. IAAF (4 February 2004). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  18. Barus follows in famous Golden Shoe tradition. IAAF (18 April 2004). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  19. Sampaolo, Diego (6 September 2004). Kwambai repeats in Udine. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  20. April 2004 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  21. van Hemert, Wim (25 March 2006). Kigen, Staicu winners at City-Pier-City Half Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  22. Wenig, Jorg (3 April 2006). Kosgei 59:07, Masai defeats Kastor – Berlin Half Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  23. Zersenay Tadesse wins third Fortis Half Marathon equalling course record of 59:16. IAAF (11 September 2006). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  24. Macharia, David (7 February 2007). Barus the best in Eldoret aims for Paris Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  25. Zorzi, Alberto (25 February 2011). Barus and Ait Salem produce fast Half Marathons. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  26. Yelena Kurdyumova and Sergey Porada (5 November 2007). Women’s course record broken in Seoul. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  27. Sampaolo, Diego (16 March 2008). Bogomolova conquers Rome in 2:22:53, Kiptoo takes men’s title. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  28. Vazel, Pierre-Jean (6 April 2008). Kebede takes Paris Marathon win in 2:06:40. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  29. Sampaolo, Diego (7 September 2008). Barus runs sub-60 in Udine. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  30. Butcher, Pat (28 October 2008). In debut, unknown Cheruiyot smashes Frankfurt Marathon record. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  31. Sampaolo, Diego (15 March 2009). Cheboi’s 2:10 tops out results in Brescia. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  32. Sampaolo, Diego (19 April 2009). Kenyan double – 2:09 and 2:26 – at Turin Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  33. Yung, Jean (18 October 2009). Bai and Mugo take Beijing Marathon titles. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  34. Sampaolo, Diego (7 March 2010). Ethiopian double as Rome celebrates Bikila – Rome Marathon report. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  35. Udine Half Marathon 2010. Run International (26 September 2010). Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  36. Jalava, Mirko (24 October 2010). Kiptoo smashes Chuncheon record with 2:07:54 victory. IAAF. Retrieved on 1 May 2011.
  37. Edwards, Andy (8 May 2011). Cheromei smashes women’s Prague Marathon course record – UPDATED. IAAF. Retrieved on 19 April 2012.
  38. Jalava, Mirko (16 October 2011). Kiprop and Wei Xiaojie triumph in Beijing. IAAF. Retrieved on 17 October 2011.
  39. April 2012 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 19 April 2012.
  40. Fernandes, Antonio Manuel (16 September 2012). Mogire and Barus victorious at Oporto Half Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 20 January 2013.
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