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Vincent Kipruto Limo (born 13 September 1987) is a Kenyan long distance runner who specialises in the marathon. He made his debut in the event in 2008 and won the Paris Marathon a year later. He then placed top three at the Chicago Marathon and the Rotterdam Marathon (where he ran a personal best of 2:05:13 hours). In his first international appearance he won the silver medal at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics. He won the 2013 Lake Biwa Marathon and Frankfurt Marathon. ==Career== Born in the south of Kenya's Keiyo District, Kipruto was the eldest child in his family. His family had their own cattle and he often ran uphill to bring them water. He was inspired by the achievements of William Kiplagat, a marathon runner who lived locally, and Kipruto began representing his school in the 10,000 metres. He was academically focused as a child and even though he began to train with Colm O' Connell's group, he did not take up running full-time until he had finished his KCSE examinations. Impressed by his performances at the provincial championships, Kiplagat offered to become Kipruto's coach and mentor. Kipruto travelled to the Netherlands in 2007 to compete professionally for the first time and he won a series of road races.〔Komen, Jonathan (18 September 2011). (Kipruto Sets Sights On Olympics ). ''Daily Nation'' (All-Africa). Retrieved on 21 November 2011.〕 He made his debut over the marathon distance at the 2008 Reims Marathon, recording a time of 2:08:16 for third place. He began his 2009 season with a fourth-place finish at the Egmond Half Marathon in a time of 1:06:01.〔(Vincent Kipruto ). Chicago Marathon. Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 He was part of a strong field of runners for the 2009 Paris Marathon and he surprised the race favourites by winning in a course record time of 2:05:47, breaking Michael Rotich's six-year-old record by over 45 seconds. This established him as the thirteenth fastest runner over the distance at the time.〔Vazel, Pierre-Jean (5 April 2009). (2:05:47 course record for Kipruto in Paris, five others under 2:07 ). IAAF. Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 After this he won the Giro Podistico Internazionale race in Castelbuono, Italy, dispatching Duncan Kibet among others.〔Zorzi, Alberto (26 July 2009). (Vincent Kipruto wins Castelbuono race ). IAAF. Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 He was invited to the Chicago Marathon and managed to finish third, recording 2:06:08 to place behind Abderrahim Goumri and Samuel Wanjiru (who set a new course record).〔Ferstle, Jim (11 October 2009). (2:05:41 course record for Wanjiru while Shobukhova surprises in Chicago – UPDATED ). IAAF. Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 He opened the 2010 season with a run at the Zayed International Half Marathon and although he set a half marathon best of 1:01:43, he finished out of contention in eleventh place.〔(Half Marathon 2010 ). IAAF (4 August 2010). Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 Running at the Rotterdam Marathon, he again improved his marathon best with a time of 2:05:13 making him the tenth fastest runner over the distance at the time. However, this was only enough for third as rivals Patrick Makau and Geoffrey Mutai both ran under 2:05:00.〔van Hemert, Wim (11 April 2010). (Makau storms 2:04:48 in Rotterdam ). IAAF. Retrieved on 11 April 2010.〕 He returned to the Giro Podistico race in Sicily that year but could not defend his title and finished in third place as Zersenay Tadese went on to win.〔Zorzi, Alberto (27 July 2010). (Tadese cruises in Castelbueno ). IAAF. Retrieved on 27 July 2010.〕 An appearance at the 2010 Chicago Marathon resulted in a fifth-place finish in a time of 2:09:08, a mark below his best form.〔(Wanjiru, Shobukhova repeat at Chicago Marathon ). AFP (10 October 2010). Retrieved on 14 October 2010.〕 He opened 2011 with a second-place finish at the Discovery Kenya Half Marathon in Eldoret, coming behind Abraham Chebii.〔Macharia, David (31 January 2011). (Chebii impresses at Eldoret Half Marathon ). IAAF. Retrieved on 31 January 2011.〕 He returned to Rotterdam in April and posted a fast time of 2:05:33, taking the runner-up spot behind Wilson Chebet.〔van Hemert, Wim (10 April 2011). (Chebet impresses with 2:05:27 victory in Rotterdam ). IAAF. Retrieved on 16 April 2011.〕 He stepped down to the shorter distance for the World 10K Bangalore in June and came fifth. He was selected for the Kenyan marathon team at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics. In the race he edged past Feyisa Lilesa in the late stages to take the silver medal and form a Kenyan 1–2 with the defending champion Abel Kirui.〔Martin, David (4 September 2011). (Men's Marathon – Final – With runaway victory, Kirui becomes third man to defend title ). IAAF. Retrieved on 21 November 2011.〕 In November, he took on Haile Gebrselassie at the Zevenheuvelenloop race and finished second behind the Ethiopian.〔van Hemert, Wim (20 November 2011). (Gebrselassie heads Ethiopian double in Nijmegen ). IAAF. Retrieved on 21 November 2011.〕 Kipruto competed sparingly in 2012, running a best of 60:46 minutes at the Roma-Ostia Half Marathon and entering two marathons: he was 13th at the 2012 London Marathon and managed only ninth at the Hangzhou International Marathon.〔(Vincent Kipruto ). Tilastopaja. Retrieved on 4 March 2013.〕 The following year he returned to action with a runner-up finish at the Egmond Half Marathon (behind Abera Kuma) and won the Lake Biwa Marathon in Japan.〔Nakamura, Ken (3 March 2013). (Kipruto out-sprints Jufar to win Lake Biwa Marathon ). IAAF. Retrieved on 4 March 2013.〕 He continued his winning streak by finishing first at the Lille Half Marathon in a personal best 60:39 minutes and edging Mark Kiptoo by one second to take the title at the Frankfurt Marathon.〔Wenig, Jörg (27 October 2013). (Kipruto and Kilel make it a Kenyan double at Frankfurt Marathon ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2 November 2013.〕〔(„Ich will 2014 wieder in Frankfurt laufen“ ) . ''Runners World''. Retrieved on 2 November 2013.〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Vincent Kipruto」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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