
Recalling Catherina McKiernan's once-in-a-lifetime London Marathon victory
The plan was to sneak in with my dad and act like one of the proper running journos. It might have worked too, if only there weren't so many other chancers like me trying to spoof their way into the elite finish area of the
London Marathon
.
Accreditation please!
Can it really be 27 years ago this Sunday? Because there is still so much clear recall of my part-fluke and part-fate experience of witnessing
Catherina McKiernan
winning the 1998 women's race by almost half a minute. If her London Marathon victory proved a once-in-a-lifetime moment for McKiernan, it still feels the same for most of us also there on the day.
As a fledgling freelancer with a bank account to match, getting to London made little sense financially, but perfect sense spiritually. McKiernan had won the Berlin Marathon the previous September in 2:23:44, the then fastest debut in women's marathon history. And her very appearance in London marked an unprecedented moment in Irish athletics history: a Cavan woman among the leading favourites to win. Nothing could beat being there, especially not a cheap last-minute flight.
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As it turned out, no one could come near to beating McKiernan, who finished 28 seconds ahead of two previous winners in London – Scotland's Liz McColgan, and Kenya's Joyce Chepchumba – in a race that prided itself on bringing together the best marathon runners in the world. The way the so-called marathon majors are going now, it's becoming increasingly difficult to imagine how any other Irish athlete will ever repeat this feat. Never say never, but who knows?
There's been a lot of talk and debate lately about who Ireland's greatest sports person of all time is. We ran our little poll on this fanciful subject last week, and it was no surprise Rory McIlroy got 23 per cent of the responses, still fresh off his Masters win, completing a career Grand Slam earlier this month.
Catherina McKiernan on her way to winning the London Marathon in April 1998. Photograph: Inpho/Allsport
This is a little different from debating the greatest Irish sporting moments, or indeed sporting achievements. Which is where McKiernan's victory in London in 1998 will always rank so highly in the Irish stakes for me. Not just because of the esteem around the event, and the great modern tradition of the Sunday morning coverage on the BBC. But also because it came at a time when Irish women were still only beginning to scratch the surface of the upper echelons of world sport.
The night before Paula Radcliffe won the 2002 London Marathon, she had a dream about McKiernan, as if some unconscious reminder of how that 1998 victory had made such a critical impression on her. Radcliffe explains this in her foreword to McKiernan's 2005 autobiography, Running for My Life. Normally, Radcliffe would sleep soundly before any race, yet somehow McKiernan came to mind, whom she'd known since the World Cross Country was staged in Boston in 1992.
That was the day McKiernan made her global breakthrough to finish second in the women's race, while Radcliffe won the junior women's title.
'In many ways it inspired me even more to see the way she ran, how close Catherina came to winning the gold medal,' Radcliffe writes. 'Even winning the silver medal was really impressive. She was young and yet determined and able to run with the best of them.'
Later in Running for My Life, McKiernan's writes about her own influences and motivations ahead of her London Marathon. After going on to win four successive silver medals in the World Cross Country, and helping Ireland to team bronze in 1997, she skipped the event for the first time in 10 years in March of 1998, despite showing excellent form.
So while the event was staged in Morocco, McKiernan was away at altitude training in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was not an easy decision, especially as McKiernan was preselected for Marrakesh, but London had to take priority.
Sonia O'Sullivan after winning the 8,000m event of the Cross Country World Championship in Marrakesh. Second placed was Britain's Paula Radcliffe. Photograph: Getty Images
On the first Saturday morning in Albuquerque, which coincided with the first day of the World Cross Country, McKiernan called home to her mother Kathleen, who gently informed her that Sonia O'Sullivan had just won the gold medal in Marrakesh. That was also the first year of the new long-course and short-course races, and O'Sullivan also came out on the Sunday and won the short-course gold.
'I am not an envious person and I always loved to see Sonia and other Irish athletes win wearing the green, white and gold,' wrote McKiernan. 'I'd run the World Cross Country nine times and finished second four times. The first year I decide not to run, Sonia wins ... A part of me was delighted for Sonia, but I knew I had made a huge effort to win that title over the years and had just come up short. I think it was only natural to feel a little upset.'
It was a stunning comeback for O'Sullivan, whose unbeatable form had deserted her in the previous two years. It also reinforced McKiernan's mindset going into London: 'If there was one race in my whole career where I went to the starting line knowing I would win, it was the London Marathon in 1998.'
Despite experiencing an upset stomach at about 15 miles, everything else went perfectly to plan. Unlike my plan to spoof my way into the finish area. Later that evening, at the Tower Hotel where the elite athletes stayed, one of the first people to drop in to congratulate her was O'Sullivan, and straight away McKiernan congratulated her back.
Before the year was out, O'Sullivan won a European Championship 5,000m-10,000m double in Budapest, and McKiernan would also win the Amsterdam Marathon in 2:22:23, which still stands as the Irish record, on the day missing the world record by just 96 seconds.
Which, together, unquestionably, make up some of the greatest Irish sporting achievements, not just in a once-in-lifetime sense, but unlikely to be repeated.
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The 42
37 minutes ago
- The 42
Minimal change in low-key squad announcement for Ireland's US summer tests
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Eight players were listed by the FAI as unavailable, four of them long-term injury absentees in Jamie Finn, Jess Ziu, Lily Agg and Tara O'Hanlon. Heather Payne and Leanne Kiernan had both been ruled out of the last camp, while Aoife Mannion joined the captain as the other name: the Manchester United defender played the first half of the Türkiye game, but didn't feature against Slovenia as her load — and a quad knock — was managed. Aside from the now-retired Louise Quinn, Shelbourne's Aoibheann Clancy was the only other player from the last squad not included following a recent bereavement. 'The WNT players and staff send their condolences to midfielder Aoibheann Clancy following the passing of her mother, Siobhan. She is being given the time to deal with this difficult period and has the full support of the WNT squad,' read the press release. Advertisement Hayley Nolan and Izzy Atkinson (centre) return to the squad. Ryan Byrne / INPHO Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO Ellen Molloy, Hayley Nolan and Izzy Atkinson were the three headline inclusions. Molloy and Nolan receive their first call-ups under Ward. Molloy has been impressing in the SSE Airtricity Women's Premier Division since returning to Wexford, and now gets a fresh opportunity with Ireland. The 21-year-old midfielder was a regular under Vera Pauw, before an ACL injury interrupted her rise. A move to Championship outfit Sheffield United followed, and Molloy won her first senior cap since 2022 in last October's Euro 2025 playoff semi-final against Georgia. Another injury followed, she left Sheffield in January after four months due to personal reasons, and has been thriving amid home comforts. Nolan is back in the fold for the first time since late 2023 under Eileen Gleeson, having last played for Ireland in the pre-World Cup friendlies against the US. 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The 42
38 minutes ago
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US Open: Scheffler the man to beat, Lowry better primed than distracted McIlroy
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Rory McIlroy played a practice round last Monday week and birdied the final two holes to card an 81. While the course has been deluged by rain in the weeks leading up to the tournament, the forecast for the opening days of action is more agreeable, although the weekend face the risk of disruption from thunderstorms. Without this rain, says McIlroy, the course would have been 'impossible.' There are only two Irish golfers in the field, as all of Seamus Power, Graeme McDowell, Tom McKibbin and Padraig Harrington failed to make it through qualifying. Organisers have handily paired them together, and so McIlroy and Shane Lowry will play alongside each other and Justin Rose, teeing off early on Thursday and among the late wave on Friday. McIlroy playing alongside Rose evokes easily-accessed memories of the Masters, and trust McIlroy to take the aftermath as interesting as it could possibly have been. 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Lowry is a much better player now, though, and this is a course which will reward his accuracy off the tee – where he ranks among the top-30 on the PGA Tour – along with the quality of his iron play and his hands around the green, where greenside rough will reward only the very best. His contention will rest, though, on how he performs on the greens: he has shown an ability to catch fire with his putter, but these sprawling, sloping greens are redolent of those at Augusta National, on which Lowry has occasionally struggled. That said, Lowry arrives in a better position to contend than McIlroy. Their biggest issue for all may not be the brute of the course, but Scottie Scheffler. Having made a slow(ish) start to the season after hand surgery in the off-season, Scheffler is once again the dominant man in the sport: he has won on three of his last four starts and arrives exuding that air of apparent invincibility. Given Scheffler's awesome form, the brutality of the Oakmont test may ultimately be a favour to everybody else in the field. Scheffler has never won this championship, though victory this week will see him rocking up to Portrush next month seeking to complete the career Grand Slam. Scottie Scheffler: 2025 PGA Championship winner. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Who can stop him? Jon Rahm finally returned to relevance at a major championship with his Sunday charge at Quail Hollow, where his finishing score did not reflect the pressure he exerted on Scheffler. He has the muscle to deal with the Oakmont rough, along with the form to compete. Bryson DeChambeau has meanwhile 3D-printed a new set of irons in the hope he can successfully defend his title this week: at the Masters and Quail Hollow, he contended despite his ball-striking, rather than because of it. Oakmont, though, is going to be too tough to hide any aspect of your game. DeChambeau is now undoubtedly the most popular player in the game, thanks mainly to his YouTube videos, which he says has given him a new lease of life on the course. 'I view my legacy as not just winning golf tournaments', DeChambeau told the press on Tuesday. 'I view it as how much good can I do for the game outside of playing professionally. That's a metric that I hold myself up to. 'The start is YouTube, but there is so much more that's coming down the line, and that's also what gets me up every day, as well.' Elsewhere within that press conference he began some megaphone negotiations with LIV over a contract renewal – 'They see the value in me. I see the value in what they can provide' – explained if he hadn't been a golfer he would be working on how AI will be integrated into biomechanics and hailed his own business sense with the deathless line that his Crushers LIV team have been 'EBIDTA positive for the past two years.' (LIV golf is hardly leaning into the traditional partisanship of other team sports. EBIDTA positive. . . you'll never sing that.') DeChambeau will be the most popular man on the golf course, though Scheffler is, as ever, the man to beat. The greater the test, the more likely the best player is to emerge from the field. And the best player by a street is Scottie Scheffler. Tips Gavin Cooney A winner not named Scottie Scheffler: Jon Rahm (9/1) A solid, make-your-money-back e/w bet: Harris English (55/1) A wild outsider who might make you a fortune: Aaron Rai (75/1) Fintan O'Toole A winner not named Scottie Scheffler: Xander Schuaffele (18/1) A solid, make-your-money-back e/w bet: Harris English (55/1) A wild outsider who might make you a fortune: Rasmus Hojgaard (150/1)


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Keane and Browne McMonagle double up at Limerick
Reigning champion jockey Colin Keane and future champion Dylan Browne McMonagle were the men in ascendency on Wednesday night's card in Limerick, both men recording a double. Keane, who recently took the role as first jockey for Juddmonte's European horses, completed his brace first, doing so with the Ray Cody-trained Enziya in the Conference & Banqueting Facilities At Limerick Handicap, and Michael O'Callaghan's evergreen Facethepuckout in the Jim Ryan Racecourse Services Memorial Handicap. Of the latter, Keane commented: 'He had a very good run the last day over six, around Listowel, which wouldn't be ideal for him, but you'd love the way he came home,' said Keanen. 'Today, he jumped well (from stalls) and everyone took back, so we were quite content after that. 'It was a three-and-a-half-furlong sprint, and when they started coming to him, they only helped me. 'He's a right lead horse at home, by all accounts. He does a lot of work for Michael, and he still loves the game at that age, so it's brilliant. He very much wants it, and he's a lovely horse to have around the place.' The drop back to a mile worked the oracle for Valorous Power, who ran out a comfortable winner of the Irish Stallion Farms EBF Maiden to give Browne McMonagle the first leg of his near 23-1 double. Riding for his boss, Joseph O'Brien, he set out to make all the running and always looked to be within his comfort zone. Newcomer Hellorhighwater, from the Gavin Cromwell stable, posted a superb effort to take second place and surely won't have to wait too long for his first turn. 'He did a bit too much early at the Curragh, but coming back to a mile was good for him,' said McMonagle, of the comfortable winner. 'I was always just going through the motions with him, and he did it well.' A very different ride was required to complete the brace aboard the Kieran Cotter-trained Martinelli, in the Summer Racing at Limerick Handicap. Held up early, he made steady progress to challenge a furlong out, and responded well to pressure to stretch more than two clear of his nearest rival, Heliogabalus. 'This fella is a fairly solid horse,' said the winning rider. 'He travels really well in his races, but probably doesn't kill himself when he gets there. 'He was second here a few weeks ago, to Church Mountain on heavy ground, but he didn't finish off the last furlong on the deep conditions. 'I didn't want to be any further forward than I was, to give him every chance of hitting the line today, so it worked out well. He relaxed fine, travelled into it really good, and won well.' A strong pace in the first division of the Follow Limerick On Instagram worked a treat for the Andy Slattery-trained Zaraahmando, who was dropping back to seven furlongs having run well over a mile last time. In sixth place for much of the trip, he made his move in the straight and, while he was inclined to edge right under pressure, his jockey, Andy Slattery, guided him to the front inside the final furlong and on to a clearcut success. The second division was won in similarly emphatic fashion by the Sean Davis-trained and ridden In The Minus, who came from midfield to sprint clear from over a furlong out to quickly put the race beyond doubt. The Wallstone Grant Thornton Optional Claiming Race opened up proceedings, and Solomon, who was best in at the weights, made the most of the opportunity. Dylan O'Connor brought Denis Hogan's four-year-old with a well-judged run to win quite readily. There were successful claims for the first five home. The finale produced one of the best finishes of the night, and it was the Jessica Maye-ridden and Willie McCreery-trained Party Dress who landed the spoils. In a share of the lead from a long way out, the grey mare, who was sporting a tongue-tie for the first time, looked like a sitting duck, but she responded generously to Maye's calls to fend off the late effort of Makaiah by a short head.