ap

Skip to content
(KO) RUNBB26_KSO_5_26_08361 - The 30th annual Bolder Boulder 10K race takes place in Boulder on Monday, May 26, 2008 beginning at 30th Street and Iris Ave. and winding through town before ending in Folsom Field on the CU campus. An estimated 54,000 will brave the cool rainy weather to run in the third largest road race in America. It has been 13 years (1995) since race day experienced any precipitation, with rainfall for just three of the previous 29 races. Today looks like it will be the forth with light rain falling on and off throughout the race. Crowds of runners take off from the starting line for the citizen's race. Kathryn Scott Osler, The Denver Post
(KO) RUNBB26_KSO_5_26_08361 – The 30th annual Bolder Boulder 10K race takes place in Boulder on Monday, May 26, 2008 beginning at 30th Street and Iris Ave. and winding through town before ending in Folsom Field on the CU campus. An estimated 54,000 will brave the cool rainy weather to run in the third largest road race in America. It has been 13 years (1995) since race day experienced any precipitation, with rainfall for just three of the previous 29 races. Today looks like it will be the forth with light rain falling on and off throughout the race. Crowds of runners take off from the starting line for the citizen’s race. Kathryn Scott Osler, The Denver Post
Adrian Dater of The Denver Post.
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

BOULDER — You can add two Ethiopians to the list of people with gripes about the airlines.

The two countrymen runners, Dmessew Tsega and Gebo Berka, gave proper credit to Morocco’s Ridouane Harroufi for his second consecutive Bolder Boulder triumph Monday.

But, no, the two weren’t done any favors by the airline responsible for getting them to Boulder, an odyssey that included 36 stranded hours without food in London’s Heathrow Airport.

“We were a little tired getting here,” Tsega said through an interpreter.

Tsega, who finished second, one second behind Harroufi, still pocketed $3,500 for his trip, and Berka received $3,000 for finishing third. But the mechanical problems that stranded the two in London didn’t allow them to get to Boulder until Thursday, and the lost time adhering to the altitude here could have been a factor at the end.

And it was an exciting finish to the men’s race. Harroufi was trailing the two Ethiopians at the 5-mile mark, but his tremendous kick gave him the first feel of the finishing tape.

Harroufi, who finished in 28:32 and won $4,500, said his strategy was indeed a tortoise-and-hare one.

“I stayed back a little to watch them, and then wanted to make my move at the end,” Harroufi said through translation. “I’m very happy to win again. I plan on training even harder for next year, to make it three in a row.”

Harouffi passed Berka on the downhill stretch leading into Folsom Field to become the first back-to-back men’s Bolder Boulder winner since Kenya’s Thomas Osano in 1991 and 1992.

“I thought they might be a little tired at the end,” Harouffi said. “They got off to a very fast start for a 10K.”

The cool temperatures allowed Harouffi to post the third-fastest time in the 30-year history of the race.

“The conditions might have not been good for the spectators,” Harouffi said. “But for the runners, it was very, very good. It would be nice to have it like that every race.”

Adrian Dater: 303-954-1360 or adater@denverpost.com

RevContent Feed

More in Sports