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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Sean Ingle at the Japan National Stadium

A sprint finish and disbelieving bronze: women’s marathon brings worlds thrills

Julia Paternain reacts after taking the bronze medal in the women's marathon
Julia Paternain reacts after taking the bronze medal in the women's marathon. Photograph: Petr David Josek/AP

Julia Paternain was not sure where she had finished after a punishingly hot women’s marathon in Tokyo. So, as she crossed the line, she asked an official.

The answer had Paternain, the world’s 288th-ranked marathon runner, staring back at him in disbelief. She had won a bronze medal, Uruguay’s first ever at a world athletics championships.

“Usually in races, you have people yelling at you: ‘You’re this position, you’re this position,’” said Paternain, who was raised in Britain and won two English schools championships. “But everything was in Japanese, so I had no idea where I was.”

Several minutes ahead of her, the Kenyan Peres Jepchirchir had beaten the Ethiopian Tigst Assefa, in a thrilling finish. So Paternain was completely alone on the track as she crossed the line at the National Stadium.

“When I came on to the track, I couldn’t see a soul,” she said. “I had no idea where I was. I knew I was top eightish, I was too scared to look behind me because I didn’t want to get caught. I was trying to check with the officials that it was definitely the finish. And I didn’t really want to think that there was a medal, just in case there wasn’t. I’m just in shock, really.”

Jepchirchir crossed the line in 2hr, 24min 43sec, adding the world title to the Olympic crown she won in Sapporo in 2021, just two seconds ahead of Assefa, who won silver at the Paris Games last year.

Meanwhile, Paternain worked her way steadily through the field from about 12th at halfway to finish third in 2:27.23. “It was my second marathon,” she said. “And to be honest I was just trying to get from A to B and get to the finish line without my legs giving way.”

Paternain was born in Mexico to Uruguayan parents but moved to England where her father taught mathematics at Cambridge University. The 25-year-old was raised and went to school in the city, before moving to the US to study at the University of Arkansas. She also represented Britain, and finished sixth over 10,000m in the European under-23 championships in 2019, until switching allegiances to Uruguay in January.

“I grew up in England but my whole family is from Uruguay,” she said. “It’s a small country and I think it gets forgotten about a bit. But it has a lot of pride and it means a lot for me to represent Uruguay.”

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