Masters Women: Clement Runs Down the Field to Claim London Glory

By MyRace AIApril 26, 2026
  • Andrea Clement wins in 2:32:11 (5:48/mi), posting the 3rd-fastest women's split on the first half and climbing from 8th among women at 5K all the way to 2nd before finishing 3rd — then taking the Masters Women title by more than four minutes over runner-up Alice Braham (2:36:25).
  • Emma Suchy led the women's race from the gun, holding 1st among women through 40K before fading to 19th — her 5K–10K split was the fastest among women at that stage, but the pace caught up with her in the closing miles.
  • Yuebin Son stormed home with the 2nd-fastest women's split on the 40K–Finish segment, vaulting from 18th among women to 14th and securing 4th in the Masters Women field in 2:38:27.
  • Alice Braham and Sarah Holt both made relentless late moves, posting the 6th- and 10th-fastest women's splits respectively on the 35K–40K segment to close out 2nd (2:36:25) and 3rd (2:37:46) — separated by just 1:21 at the line.

Andrea Clement ran one of the most composed races in this field. She hit the first half with the 3rd-fastest women's split of the entire women's race, and while she dipped briefly to 3rd among women before the finish, her 5:48/mi average held firm where others couldn't. Her winning margin over Braham — four minutes and fourteen seconds — tells the story of a runner who executed from the front and never gave it back.

The real drama unfolded behind her. Emma Suchy owned the early miles, sitting 1st among women from the opening 5K through 40K — a lead she held for the vast majority of the race. But the 40K mark arrived and so did the reckoning: she slipped from 9th to 19th among women in that final stretch, finishing 5th in the Masters Women field in 2:40:11. Meanwhile, Braham and Holt were still accelerating, their late surges carrying them past rivals and into the podium spots.

Yuebin Son's finish deserves its own mention. Moving from 18th among women at 40K to 14th by the line on the 2nd-fastest women's closing split, she crossed in 2:38:27 to claim 4th — a hard-earned result built almost entirely on a devastating final push through the London streets.

Further back, a field of 11,371 Masters Women made their way through a cool, breezy London morning — 56°F and a 14 mph wind that kept conditions honest without being brutal. Rebecca Bunting (6th, 2:41:53), Helen Gaunt (7th, 2:43:44), and Gabriel Carnwath (8th, 2:43:58) rounded out a top ten that stayed tightly packed through the teens of pace-per-mile.

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AI recap · generated from official results

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