Belfast man Stephen Scullion finished third in the men’s race at the Dublin Marathon as Ethiopian winner Kemal Husen set a new course record of two hours six minutes and 52 seconds.
Husen went to halfway in 1:02.56 and eventually bettered Othmane El Goumri’s 2019 mark by one minute and 14 seconds.
Uganda’s Geofrey Kusuro was second in 2:10.45 with Scullion clocking 2:11.51.
Scullion won the concurrently run Irish Championship with Ann-Marie McGlynn taking the national women’s title.
Ethiopia’s Amente Negash won the overall women’s race in a personal best of 2:26.22 as she was 42 seconds ahead of Kenya’s Joan Kipyatich with another Ethiopian Genet Abdurkadir a further 45 seconds back in third.
Kenya’s Peninah Jerop was fourth in 2:29.06 with 43-year-old Strabane-based McGlynn, who set her personal best of 2:29.34 in 2021, thrilled with her performance in fifth as she clinched the Irish national marathon title for the first time with a 2:34.13 time.
North Belfast athlete Gladys Ganiel, 46, was second in the Irish Championship as she took eighth overall in 2:37.08 – 26 seconds outside her personal best set in Dublin four years ago – while Donore’s Sorcha Loughnane was the next woman over the line as she completed the podium positions in the national event.
‘I needed to believe in myself again’
After finishing overall Dublin runner-up in a time of 2:12.01 in 2019, Scullion secured another podium spot as he produced his second fastest marathon and his quickest run over the 42km distance since his Irish record performance of 2:09.49 in London three years ago.
The 34-year-old Belfast man went to halfway in 1:05.37 and maintained his form impressively in the damp conditions to hold off Kenya’s Kimal Kipruto for the final overall podium position by four seconds.
After speaking frankly about his mental health battles on previous occasions, Scullion was delighted with his performance after what he described as a “rough period”.
“I needed to believe in myself again,” said the 34-year-old, who admitted that a disappointing recent half-marathon performance had led to more doubts about his future.
“I ran 70 minutes and 40-something seconds for a half-marathon five or six weeks ago and I raced that… I didn’t hold back.
“We thought there was something better there but you just never know.
“All you have to focus on is ‘are you enjoying yourself?’ What’s the crowd doing? Are you happy to be here?”
Scullion qualified for the Tokyo Olympics only to drop out amid the searing heat in Sapporo but the Dublin performance should give him renewed belief that next year’s Paris Games is an achievable target for him even though the qualifying mark is a penal 2:08.10.
As was the case before Tokyo, there is another route to Paris which will enable athletes who secure top-five finishes in one of the globe’s 14 platinum marathons, which include the likes of London, New York, Chicago and Berlin, to earn qualification.
Another Ethiopian, Asefa Bekele, was also under 2:12 as he clocked 2:11.57 to take fifth.
Leevale’s Ryan Creech was second in the Irish Championship as he ran 2:14.08 – a minute and five seconds outside his personal best – for seventh overall with Newcastle AC’s Ryan Forsyth completing the national event podium spots as he was eighth overall in an impressive 2:14.43 on his marathon debut.
Husen’s course-record winning men’s time also took one minute and 17 seconds off his previous personal best set when he placed sixth at the Dubai marathon in February.
The Ethiopian’s task was made easier after last year’s winner Morocco’s Taoufik Allam dropped out early on with an apparent hamstring injury.
Kildare man Patrick Monahan earned his seventh wheelchair race victory in Dublin as he clocked 1:41.04.
Monahan will be back in action at next Sunday’s New York Marathon where he has previously achieved a top-five finish.