Mary Akor
Short description|Nigerian-American long-distance runner}} Éwn malábó:Infobox sportsperson
Mary Adah Akor Beasley (born September 24, 1976) is a Nigerian–American athlete who competed for the US at the 2005 and 2007 World Marathon Championships.[1] In 2006, she was ranked the seventh fastest U.S. woman marathoner of the year; in 2007, the sixth.[2] She runs (and often wins) multifarious marathons around the United States, Mexico and Africa. After running the Gobernador Marathon in Mexicali, Mexico, in December 2012, she was found to be using a banned substance.[3] She accepted her sanction and returned to competition in 2015.
She is the women's national record-holder in the marathon distance for Nigeria.[4]
Early career
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]Like many of her peers, Akor began running at a young age in her home of Nigeria. She took to the longer distances and ran her first marathon at the age of 13. When she was 15, she had qualified for the 1992 Olympic Games, but the Nigerian Olympic Committee decided against sending her to Barcelona, Spain (and ultimately not sending any women runners except the 4x100 meter team, which earned a silver).[5][6]
In 1993, 16-year-old Mary Akor came to the United States to live near cousins in Pasadena, California. She was the sole runner on the John Muir High School cross country team and made it to the state meet.[7]
She then went to California State-Dominguez Hills college and ran cross country, but transitioned to El Camino College in Alondra Park, California. She ran from 1997 to 1999 and competed at the state's 10,000-meter and 5,000-meter and 3,000-meter track events.[7] In her first year, she became the CCCAA champion in all three events as she led the Warriors to a team championship.[8][9][10]
She graduated, earning a degree in social work. In 2006, she was inducted into the El Camino College Hall of Fame.[11]
Professional career
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]At the 2005 World Championship Marathon in Helsinki, Finland, she lined up with the best in the world, which included her US teammates Turena Johnson-Lane, Jill Boaz, Emily Levan and Jenny Crain. But it would be the British runner Paula Radcliffe who would storm the race and win in the fastest time ever for a championship race: 2:20:57. Johnson-Lane was the first US finisher at 26th place. Akor finished 50th in nearly three hours.[12][13]
In the early fall of 2007, Akor was at the starting line of her second Marathon World Championship race, this time in Osaka, Japan. After the gun went off, Catherine Ndereba negotiated the course with aplomb and took the win in 2:30:37. The first US finisher was Anna Alyanak (31st in 2:42:23), followed by Zoila Gomez (35th) and Dana Coons (38th). Akor finished 42nd in 2:47:06, just before German Susanne Hahn.[14][15]
Grandma's Marathon three-peat
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]In 2005, Akor ran and placed second at Grandma's Marathon, a point-to-point race in Minnesota from Two Harbors to Duluth. The year previous, she had placed 27th at the event's half marathon (named after local Olympian, Garry Bjorklund). Her second-place finish in 2005 landed her in the prize money, and she returned in 2006 to finish fourth, but moved to third after winner Halina Karnatsevich was found to be doping.
In 2007, Grandma's Marathon had instituted a drug-testing policy. Akor was 30 years old and faster than ever. She ran 2:35:40 in the 70-degree heat to beat all women including Liza Hunter-Galvan and Russian Ramilya Burangulova and Tatyana Titova.[16] Afterward, she voiced support for the drug testing and said she was working through her asthma without taking an inhaler that might disqualify her.[17]
It began a dominant streak, as she returned every June to win a total of three titles ('07, '08 in a headwind with a time of 2:41:43; and '09 in 2:36:52 en route to the medical tent for severe dehydration), defeating runners such as Zinaida Semenova, Violetta Kryza, Janet Cherobon, Alina Ivanova, Serkalem Abrha, and Robyn Friedman.[18][19] The only other woman to win three in a row is Olympic marathon bronze-medalist Lorraine Moller.[20]
In 2010, her streak ended when she finished fourth as Buzunesh Deba ran to the win. In 2011, she dropped out after 20 miles. The following year, she ran the half again, competing in the National Championship. She finished 19th in the race won by Kara Goucher. She attempted a comeback to Grandma's Marathon in 2017, finishing 12th, then moving up to 11th in 2019, where she was the first master's finisher. The organization did not award her prize money though, instead the next master's woman (Heather Lieberg) received it.
PR and Boston Marathon
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]In the two years of '06 and '07, Akor ran an average of a marathon every two months.[6] She was named the third-best American woman marathoner in 2007 by Running Times magazine, behind Deena Kastor and Ann Alyanak (though she was ranked sixth-best by Track and Field News).[21][2]
She achieved her personal record time for the distance at the Twin Cities Marathon in October 2006, where she ran 2:33:50 for second place behind Marla Runyan and ahead of Zoila Gomez and Michelle Lilienthal.[22]
She finished as the fourth American at the 2007 Boston Marathon (in 2:41:01, she was 10th overall). That year, she competed at the 2007 World Marathon Championships in Osaka, Japan, and finished 42nd in 2:47:06.[21]
In 2009, at the Boston Marathon, Akor was in the top pace pack with Americans Kara Goucher and Elva Dryer, though Kenyan Salina Kosgei broke away for the win. Akor finished 13th in 2:41:09.[23]
Akor was considered a top American contender at the 2012 Boston Marathon along with Ruth Perkins and Lauren Philbrook.[24]
Banned substance case
[nwọ́che | nwó étéwn che]In the last month of 2012, at the Gobernador Marathon in Mexicali, Mexico, her drug test result showed use of Clenbuterol, a substance banned by the United States Anti-Doping Agency. She would later claim the drug came from her asthma medication or the beef in Mexico. She also claimed that her inability to hire an expensive lawyer kept her from getting cleared (while other athletes were getting away with use of the same substance).[25]
The positive test prompted a back-and-forth case that lasted nearly a year. In November 2013, she accepted a two-year ban. Her results from December 6, 2012, to November 5, 2013, were all changed to disqualifications.[3]
She was involved in an award-ceremony brouhaha in 2018 after the finish of the Lagos Marathon in Nigeria. She had run the marathon before (in 2016) and finished ninth, winning $4,000. By 2018, the organizers were seeking to grow the race and achieve IAAF Gold Medal status for their race, so they set aside large prize purses for the top finishers and prizes for the top Nigerian runners as well.
Almenesh Herpha took first place in 2:38:23. Akor was several places back, but finished ahead of all the other Nigerian women. She thought she had won the top prize for Nigerians, but another woman was announced at the prize ceremony. Undaunted, Akor took to the stage and attempted to claim the prize check. Security attempted to remove her from the
- ↑ "Honda LA Marathon Presented by K-Swiss: Race Information Guide". 2.2: The Competitors (in English). Los Angeles, California: Los Angeles Marathon. 2011. p. 40. Archived from the original (PDF) on ochu ekegwa 26, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 23, 2022 – via Yumpu.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "U.S. Rankings — Women's Marathon" (PDF). 2006, 2007. Track and Field News (in English). Mountain View, California. 2020. p. 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on ochu ajodudu 25, 2023. Retrieved ochu ajodudu 23, 2023.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Douglas, Scott (ochu ekegwe–eji 18, 2013). "Prolific Marathoner Mary Akor Gets 2-Year Doping Ban". Runner's World (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ajodudu 19, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 25, 2022.
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Winfried Kramer, ed. (ochu ekelu 17, 2019). "National Records- Marathon" (in English). Mattole Valley, California: Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Archived from the original on ochu ekelu 17, 2022. Retrieved ochu ajodudu 24, 2023.
- ↑ "Nigeria at the 1992 Barcelona Summer Games". sports-reference.com (in English). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Sports Reference LLC. 2016. Archived from the original on ochu ekele 17, 2020. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 26, 2022.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Butler, Charlie (ochu ekele 18, 2008). "For Akor, an Unusual Pre-Trials Layoff". Races & Places. Runner's World (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 28, 2020. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 28, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 28, 2020 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ 7.0 7.1 Gambaccini, Peter (ochu ekele 13, 2008). "A Brief Chat with Mary Akor: 11 Qualifying times for this year's Olympic Trials". Runner's World (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwe–eji 6, 2021. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 25, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwe-eji 6, 2021 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ "Women's Track and Field Champions". cccaasports.org (in English). Sacramento, California: California Community College Athletic Association. 2022. Archived from the original on ochu ajodudu 29, 2023. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 26, 2022.
- ↑ Lee, Kirby (ochu ekelu 11, 1997). "Akor's stamina key to ECC title". Sports. The Daily Breeze (in English). Torrance, California. p. D10.
- ↑ Davis, Jeff (ochu ekelu 18, 1997). "Washington ready for world after state double". Sports. The Fresno Bee (in English). Fresno, California. p. D4.
- ↑ Ann M. Garten, ed. (ochu ekele 30, 2009). "El Camino College 22nd Annual Athletic Hall of Fame" (PDF). 2006 Inductees. Torrance, California: El Camino College. p. 26. Archived from the original on ochu ajodudu 29, 2023. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 23, 2022 – via Yumpu.
- ↑ Baum, Bob (ochu ekejo 15, 2005). "U.S. Finishes with 14". Inside Sports. The Tribune (in English). San Luis Obispo, California. p. 1D, 3D – via Associated Press.
- ↑ "Sunday's Results World Championship". Scoreboard. Chicago Tribune (in English). Chicago, Illinois. ochu ekejo 15, 2005. p. 11.
- ↑ "Wariner, Richards anchor relay golds". Track and Field: World Championships. Fort Worth Star-Telegram (in English). Fort Worth, Texas. ochu ekela 3, 2007. p. 3D.
- ↑ "Wariner, Richards anchor relay golds". Scoreboard: World Track and Field Championships. Austin American Statesman (in English). Austin, Texas. ochu ekela 3, 2007. p. C6.
- ↑ Nowacki, Jon (ochu ekefa 15, 2007). "Some Like It Hot". Duluth News Tribune (in English). Duluth, Minnesota: Forum Communications. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 22, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 21, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 22, 2022 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Pates, Kevin (ochu ekelu 1, 2007). "Grandma's Marathon announces zero tolerance drug policy: Mary Akor says she plays by the rules". Duluth News Tribune (in English). Duluth, Minnesota: Forum Communications. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 22, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 21, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 22, 2022 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Nowacki, Jon (ochu ekefa 20, 2008). "Mary Akor struggles against the wind but defends her elite women's title". Duluth News Tribune (in English). Duluth, Minnesota: Forum Communications. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 22, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 21, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 22, 2022 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Nowacki, Jon (ochu ekefa 20, 2009). "Grandma's women's race: Akor makes it three in a row". Duluth News Tribune (in English). Duluth, Minnesota: Forum Communications. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 22, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 21, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 22, 2022 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Walburn, Roberta (ochu ekefa 21, 1981). "Beardsley races to record in marathon". Sports. Duluth News Tribune (in English). Duluth, Minnesota. p. 1C, 5C.
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 Running Times Editorial Staff (ochu ekele 20, 2009). Ken Young (ed.). "2007 Marathoners of the Year". Running Times (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ekejo 11, 2020. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 29, 2022 – via Runner's World.
- ↑ Youngblood, Kent (ochu ekegwa 2, 2006). "Hussein wins friendly battle to the finish: ... Legally blind Marla Runyan cruised to the women's title". Twin Cities 2006 Marathon. Star Tribune (in English). Minneapolis, Minnesota. p. S1, S2, S8.
- ↑ Vigneron, Peter (ochu ekele 20, 2009). "Kara Goucher Represents, Still Pines for Victory". Races & Places. Runner's World (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ekejo 10, 2020. Retrieved ochu ekegwa 25, 2022.
- ↑ Gambaccini, Peter (ochu eketa 26, 2012). "Reyes, Akor and Herron in Boston Marathon". Races & Places. Runner's World (in English). Easton, Pennsylvania: Hearst. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa–oka 28, 2020. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 19, 2022.
{{cite news}}:|archive-date=/|archive-url=timestamp mismatch; ochu ekegwa-oka 28, 2020 suggested (help)CS1 maint: date format (link) - ↑ Emons, Brad (ochu ekegwa 17, 2022). "Free Press Marathon women's winner explains two-year ban for doping: I have nothing to hide". Detroit Free Press (in English). Detroit, Michigan: USA Today. Archived from the original on ochu ekegwa 18, 2022. Retrieved ochu ekegwa–oka 14, 2022.
{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)