
Blow to British hopes as injury forces Emile Cairess out of London Marathon
Emile Cairess's hopes of becoming the fastest British runner over 26.2 miles have been put on hold after he was forced to pull out of the London Marathon with an ankle injury.
Cairess, who finished third in the race last year before coming fourth in the Paris Olympics, had been targeting Mo Farah's national record of 2hr 5min 11sec. However, he will now miss April's race due to an ongoing ankle tendon issue.
'I was really looking forward to racing the world's best marathon runners and to build on the progress I have made over the marathon distance,' the 27-year-old athlete said.
'It is an absolutely stacked elite men's field at this year's event which makes it a really hard one to miss. But, unfortunately, a setback in my buildup has persisted which has significantly impacted the consistency of training that is required to be at my best. My focus now is recovering properly, getting back to full training and returning to racing as soon as possible.'
Cairess became the fastest British debutant of all time in 2023 when he ran the marathon in 2:08:07 and he followed it up with a time of 2:06:46 in the race last year – making a shot at Farah's record a legitimate goal. However, the elite fields of both races are still incredibly strong, with new world half-marathon record-holder Jacob Kiplimo facing the defending champion Alex Mutiso, the former world record-holder Eliud Kipchoge and the Olympic champion Tamirat Tola.
The elite women's field, meanwhile, includes the world record holder Ruth Chepngetich, the Olympic champion Sifan Hassan and the former world record-holder Tigst Assefa. There is also strong British interest in both races with the Olympic triathlon champion Alex Yee and the Commonwealth 10,000m champion Eilish McColgan running their first marathons.
Meanwhile, the Kenyan marathon runner Brimin Kipkorir has been provisionally suspended after he tested positive for the banned blood booster EPO. Kipkorir won the Sydney Marathon in 2024 in a course-record time of 2:06:18, and the Frankfurt Marathon in 2022 and 2023.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
42 minutes ago
- The Independent
The memories and scars that brought Galal Yafai to the edge of glory
It has been a hard road for Galal Yafai, from being the baby boxer in the family to winning a gold medal at the Olympics, and now being the main attraction in his hometown. On Saturday, at Resorts World on the outskirts of Birmingham, Yafai defends his WBC interim flyweight title against the Mexican Francisco Rodriguez Jr. It is not an easy fight, it's a difficult fight. A real fight. • Yafai is now 32, this will still only be his 10th professional fight, but his amateur career was long and established; he fought and lost at the Rio Olympics, and then in 13 days of glory, he won five times in Tokyo in 2021 to win a gold medal. It is arguably the best gold-medal streak in British history. Every single one of the bouts was hard; Galal fights that way. Yafai was the youngest and smallest of three fighting brothers; that can be a constant battle. His two brothers could both really fight: Khalid went to the 2008 Olympics, won a British title and was world champion at super-flyweight; Gamal won the European and Commonwealth titles as a professional. All three brothers won international medals. Khalid was, in 2005, just the second British boxer to claim any version of a world amateur title when he won the under-17 world championship in Liverpool. They are one of the world's great fighting families. 'It's been a long journey to just get here,' Galal said. 'It's not finished yet, not even close.' Last November, Yafai stopped former world champion Sunny Edwards in the best pairing of two British flyweights for close to 40 years. That night, he sent a fine boxer into retirement. The WBC's interim belt was the official bounty on the night, but the real prize was pride and respect. Edwards had beaten Yafai in 2015 over three rounds and had always been critical of Yafai's selection for the Rio Olympics in 2016. When Yafai was selected, he was working at Land Rover – he was always a long, long shot for a medal in Rio. That was not the plan the men making the selection had; they had an agenda for gold in Tokyo. Yafai hated leaving Rio without a medal in the summer of 2016, but decided to stay for one more Olympic cycle. In early March 2020, he qualified for the Tokyo Olympics, but just 14 days later, as Covid slowed the world, the Olympics were postponed, pushed back indefinitely at a cruel time of endless unknowns and sudden deaths. It looked like Yafai had lost his window, lost his chance. The delay broke a lot of fighters. The boxing business stopped, the Olympic dream was gone in a tumble of real concerns. But Yafai decided to wait, to be patient, to keep dreaming that Olympic dream. It was not easy, and not everybody did the same. 'I had to stay and hope it happened,' said Yafai. 'I had worked so hard, I had qualified, I was ready, and then there were lonely months of waiting for news.' The British boxers prepared in isolation, but under the relentless and watchful eye of the GB coaches. It was remote, but it worked. The squad won six medals, reaching four finals in a record haul. They had a hunger from the very start, a desire as a team to succeed. In Tokyo, at the games of isolation and paranoia, Lauren Price and Yafai won gold. It was the old-fashioned dream ending – one that had looked in doubt. The risk of waiting and the Olympics being scrapped was very real, but Yafai and Price gambled and won. Yafai was a giant in Tokyo, unstoppable – and had the Val Barker Trophy for the best boxer been available, he would have been a real contender. As a professional, Yafai has been moved fast, matched hard, and has gained some crucial rounds of experience. Rodriguez Jr will give him more rounds and a test. The Mexican has lost six times, mostly on the road in fights where the odds were massively stacked against him. He has lost world title fights on points in the Philippines and Japan. And three years ago, he went the full 10-round distance with Junto Nakatani, the double world champion, also in Japan. He is unbeaten in four since then and is the same age as Yafai. 'It's another fight, another test,' said Yafai. 'I'm getting closer, and this is the attitude I had in Tokyo. This is no different, it's just a fight, and then I move on.' The top boxers all learn from the years in obscurity on the international circuit, fighting over five rounds in Kazakhstan against Cubans, winning a gold at the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, getting a bad decision in Ukraine and having to box four and five times at tournaments just to get a medal. Yafai and his brothers have those memories and those scars – now the baby in the family can go on and become a very big star in modern boxing. His two brothers will be by his side, obviously.


Powys County Times
44 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
Katie Boulter opens up over level of online abuse sent to tennis players
British number two Katie Boulter has lifted the lid on the level of abuse aimed at some tennis players and revealed she and her family have received death threats. Boulter shared her experiences with BBC Sport to highlight the issue of players receiving toxic messages online. The 28-year-old's examples included a message telling her to buy 'candles and a coffin for your entire family' with a reference to her 'grandmother's grave if she's not dead by tomorrow', one stating she should 'go to hell' as she had cost the poster money, and another stating 'hope you get cancer'. Boulter said: 'I just wonder who the person is that has sent that. I don't think it's something that I would ever say to my worst enemy. It's just an awful, awful thing to say to anyone. It's horrible.' Boulter believes much of the abuse comes from gamblers who have lost money and while she has learned how to better handle it over the years, incidents can raise genuine concerns for her safety. She said: 'I think it just kind of shows how vulnerable we are. You really don't know if this person is on site. You really don't know if they're nearby or if they know where you live or anything like that.' The message Boulter received relating to her family came during her French Open first-round victory over Carole Monnet on May 29. And she is concerned that both the frequency and severity of the abuse is increasing and worries about the potential impact on younger players. She said: 'I think it increases in number and it also increases in the level of things that people say. I don't think there's anything off the cards now.'


STV News
an hour ago
- STV News
Sexton defends Irish dominance in Lions squad ahead of Australia tour
Johnny Sexton has defended the record number of Ireland players included in the British and Irish Lions squad for this summer's tour of Australia. Lions boss Andy Farrell, who has also been head coach of Ireland since 2019, named 15 in his initial 38-man selection before Finlay Bealham's call-up as injury replacement for Zander Fagerson increased the total to 16. Leinster's 12-strong contingent arrived in camp on Monday afternoon following their United Rugby Championship success, joining Munster captain Tadhg Beirne and Connacht trio Bundee Aki, Mack Hansen and Bealham. Former Ireland captain Sexton, who is part of Farrell's coaching team for the three-Test series against the Wallabies, pointed to the form of his country's national team when asked about the selection. 'Well, Ireland have done pretty well over the last few years, having won the (Six Nations) championship last year, the Grand Slam the year before, so you're probably looking over the last three years,' he told a press conference. 'With some players, coaches would look at form over eight, nine years. It's not just if you've played well in a couple of games in the Six Nations, you can't force your way in, but sometimes you take a bigger-picture look with players. 'They know the way Andy coaches, they know the system. It didn't surprise me because, historically, let's say when there was a Welsh coach and the Welsh team did well, there were the majority of the Welsh team. 'I think the teams that performed the best in the Six Nations got selected.' Farrell's squad contains 13 England players and just two from Wales, while Scottish representation reduced to seven following the withdrawal of prop Fagerson. The Lions are preparing for Friday evening's pre-tour send-off against Argentina in Dublin. 'With Andy, I've never seen such a thorough process with all the combinations and the amount of players that were considered and talked about,' Sexton said. 'Andy did all those players justice in terms of doing enough research and work, asked relevant people and he's picked the squad he thinks gives him the best chance to win the tour.' Bath duo Will Stuart and Finn Russell also joined the Lions squad on Monday after celebrating victory in Saturday's Gallagher Premiership final, in addition to lock Ollie Chessum, who played for runners-up Leicester. Scotland full-back Blair Kinghorn is now the only absent player as he is in Top 14 semi-final action with Toulouse on Friday. Front-row forwards Jamie George and Asher Opoku-Fordjour are set to be released back to the England camp. Having initially taken a job in the commercial sector following his retirement after the 2023 Rugby World Cup, former Leinster fly-half Sexton is relishing his current role after being tempted into coaching by Farrell. 'No matter what role you come into a Lions set-up, it's a huge privilege and an honour to be here,' said the 39-year-old, who toured as a player in 2013 and 2017. 'It's no different being an assistant kicking coach and helping out with the lads, there is still a huge amount of pride to come in here and put – not a jersey – but a badge on your chest. It's been great to be a part of, a great group so far. 'I'm enjoying being back and hopefully I can add value because that's ultimately what you want when you come into a job.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country