DULUTH – Fatigue didn't stop Elisha Barno from a record-setting day at Saturday's 41st Grandma's Marathon.
His flight, delayed from Tuesday to Thursday, meant traveling from Nairobi, Kenya, to Amsterdam to Minneapolis to Duluth, arriving at 5 p.m. Friday. That was just 15 hours before the start of the 26.2-mile race along the North Shore from Two Harbors to Canal Park.
No matter. Barno, 31, from Eldoret, Kenya, shook off his final challenger — Geoffrey Bundi, in his marathon debut — at 22 miles and won a third straight Grandma's Marathon men's title in 2 hours, 12 minutes, 8 seconds.
The three victories in a row set a mark for supremacy.
Five other men had two championships in race history: Garry Bjorklund (1977, 1980), Dick Beardsley (1981, 1982), Doug Kurtis (1989, 1993), Patrick Muturi (1996, 1997) and Wesly Ngetich (2005, 2007).
"I was feeling very tired at the start. I was worried. There were so many good runners in the race, so many Kenyans," said Barno, who won the 2017 Los Angeles Marathon on March 19. "But the marathon is about preparation and doing long runs. I was prepared. I said, 'I will trust myself. I'm going to make it.' I'm very happy because I could win this race three times."
Hellen Jepkurgat, a 36-year-old Kenyan in her first Grandma's Marathon, won the women's division in 2:32:09. She and Barno won $11,500 each from a purse of $100,000.
There were 6,695 starters from a registered field of 8,727 in Minnesota's oldest marathon. For the 7:45 a.m. start it was calm under cloudy skies with 64 degrees. Yet, the sun broke through and temperatures rose slightly during the race. Humidity (83 percent) was the major issue.