Sports
August 31, 2008
Mutisya wins sixth CDR title
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- It's fitting that Gideon Mutisya on Saturday won yet another Charleston Distance Run.

He's been a familiar figure - a 5-foot-3, 96-pound bundle of running efficiency - in the city's annual 15-mile race since first winning in 1994, and he always seems grateful for the local hospitality.

"The first time I came to West Virginia to run in this race, I won it,'' he said afterward. "And everybody in Charleston showed me kindness, and that's why I like to come here.''

Not even the infamous hills posed much of an annoyance.

It was midway through the six-mile stretch of South Hills, in fact, that the 41-year-old Mutisya, a Kenya native now living in Hartford, Conn., began pulling away from his only two challengers, who incidentally were about half his age.

He took the lead for good after the first three miles, opened a 200-yard lead at the six-mile mark near the South Side Bridge and cruised to victory Saturday morning, hitting the Laidley Field finish line in one hour, 22 minutes, 48 seconds. It was his sixth Distance Run victory.

Along the way, he bypassed most water stops but, having built a comfortable lead of 400 yards by the final mile, allowed himself a few sips on Hansford Street. 

Finishing a distant second was Festus Cherus, 20, a Kenyan now living in Marietta, Ga., in 1:24:14, and third was Bryan Morseman, 22, of Addison, N.Y., in 1:25:05. Jason Pyles, 27, of Huntington, a Point Pleasant native and Marshall University graduate, placed fourth in 1:25:47.

Mutisya's time was the slowest winning time in the race's 36-year history, more than four-and-a-half minutes slower than the previous low of 1:18:03 run by Philip Ndoo of Kenya in 1974. Last year, running in cooler, less humid conditions, Mutisya ran fourth in 1:22:53, five seconds off his time Saturday.

At the 7:30 a.m. start on Virginia Street, Saturday's temperature stood at 70 degrees under cloudy, runner-friendly skies, but the August humidity was delivering its customary agony. Later in the race, the sun began peeking through and the temperature rose about 10 degrees.

Mutisya, who in 1996 set a Distance Run course record of 1:12:24, offered an explanation for Saturday's unimpressive pace.  

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