ATLANTA — Galen Rupp reclaimed his status as the nation’s top distance runner Saturday, winning his second straight U.S. Olympic marathon trials and earning a spot in the Tokyo Games.

Rupp pulled away in the final miles for a dominant victory. Carrying a U.S. flag in his right hand, Rupp was all alone as he crossed the finish line, almost 43 seconds ahead of Jacob Riley. Abdi Abdirahman also earned a spot on the U.S. team that aims to compete in the Tokyo Olympics this summer, despite the outbreak of the coronavirus.

“It’s incredible, I feel relief almost more than anything,” said Rupp, who completed his comeback from heel surgery.

Aliphine Tuliamuk edged Molly Seidel by seven seconds in the closest women’s finish in the trials. Seidel became the first woman to make the U.S. Olympics team while running in her first marathon. Sally Kipyego was third.

Tuliamuk and Kipyego are natives of Kenya who have become U.S. citizens. Kipyego won the silver medal in the 10,000-meters race at the 2012 Olympics for Kenya.

Rupp qualified for his fourth Olympics with a winning time of 2:09:20. The 33-year-old runner won the bronze medal in the marathon at the 2016 Rio Games.

Advertisement

He’s only the second man, after Frank Shorter in 1972 and 1976, to win two U.S. trials. Shorter tied for the 1972 win with Kenny Moore.

Rupp earned the win with his new coach, Mike Smith, after former coach Alberto Salazar received a four-year doping ban in 2019.

Riley is a first-time Olympian. The 43-year-old Abdirahman became a five-time Olympian and the oldest man to make the U.S. marathon team. He finished third in the 2012 trials but missed the 2016 trials with a calf injury.

Runners competing for spots on the U.S. team dealt with uncertainty about the Olympics. IOC member Dick Pound said this week there is a window of two to three months to decide if conditions are too dangerous to hold the Olympics in Tokyo. Pound said if the coronavirus outbreak poses a threat too great to hold the Olympics in Tokyo, the games likely would be canceled instead of postponed or moved.

The Olympic marathon is to be staged in Sapporo, more than 500 miles from Tokyo. The event was moved to protect the runners from the heat in Tokyo.

Heat was no issue Saturday in Atlanta. Brisk winds made the temperature of 48 degrees at the race start feel more like 41. The chilly day was ideal for distance runners, but the city’s 26.2-mile course, with combined uphill climbs of 1,389 feet, posed a challenge.

Advertisement

Brian Shrader set the men’s pace for much of the first half of the race but dropped out soon after he was passed by Rupp and others on the 16th mile.

More than 700 runners qualified for the trials. The women’s field was twice as large as in 2016, when Amy Cragg was the winner. Cragg withdrew last week because of illness. Parker Stinson withdrew from the men’s field because of injuries.

The course took the runners past the Olympic cauldron used for the Atlanta Games. The cauldron was lit on Saturday for the first time since boxing great Muhammad Ali lowered the torch during the opening ceremony in 1996.

Eight runners with Maine ties participated in the trials. In the women’s race, Amanda Nurse, a South Portland native now living in Boston, finished 94th with a time of 2:43.35, and Sarah Mulcahy of Fort Kent finished 356th in 3:01:04. Michelle Lilienthal of Portland, who gave birth to her son not quite five months ago, did not finish the race. In the men’s race, Henry Sterling, a native of South Freeport who ran at North Yarmouth Academy, finished 95th overall in 2:24:40; Dan Vassallo, a Colby College graduate who holds the Maine Marathon record, finished 100th in 2:24:59; Matt Rand of Portland finished 108th in 2:25:42; Ryan Smith of Auburn finished 115th in 2:26:14; and Matt McClintock, a native of Athens who ran at Madison High, did not finish.

Comments are not available on this story.