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Mumbai Marathon 2026: Ethiopians Tadu Abate Deme and Yeshi Kalayu Chekole clinch titles

Alex is web content writer who is covering various sports, technology in sports and igaming space from 2017.
Published at :January 18, 2026 at 4:39 PM
Modified at :January 18, 2026 at 4:43 PM
Mumbai Marathon 2026: Ethiopians Tadu Abate Deme and Yeshi Kalayu Chekole clinch titles

(Courtesy : Mumbai Marathon)

Ethiopia’s Tadu Abate Deme won the men’s elite marathon in 2:09:55.

Ethiopians Tadu Abate Deme and Yeshi Kalayu Chekole registered significant victories in the 21st edition of the Mumbai Marathon 2026, a World Athletics Gold Label Road Race, in Mumbai today. The top three finishers each took home prize money of USD 50,000, USD 25,000, and USD 15,000 respectively.

It was the first career win in a major marathon for Yeshi Chekole, although she had been running this distance since 2019.  The 28-year-old neatly executed what she revealed earlier during a pre-race media interaction, staying relaxed and finishing strong.   

About a dozen Ethiopian women started the race together. Important among them were last year’s third-place finisher Medina Deme Armino and Shure Demise, the fastest entrant, with a PB of 2:20:59, clocked some eleven years ago in Dubai. 

Armino wanted to triumph this time in the absence of the top two from last year — Joyce Chepkemoi and Shitaye Eshete. 

Using her knowledge of the Mumbai roads from her previous sojourn, Armino was in command during the first half of the race.  However, she faded away and started lagging behind the leader, Kidsan Alema, thereafter.

Yeshi remained with Kidsan and two other compatriots. Gojjam Tesgaye and Birke Debele, when the runners covered three-fourths of the distance. 

She broke away from the rest a couple of kilometres away and was running solo in the remaining part of the race.  She went on to win the race, clocking 2:25:13, which was the fifth-fastest time among Mumbai winners to date.  

“I am very happy to be the Champion today.  I came here expecting to break the course record, but I was a little shaky in the weather. 

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However, I am very happy with the result.  I felt strong and positive throughout, especially on both the uphill and downhill sections”, Yeshi said after the race.

Kidsan shared that she was encouraged by the support from spectators all along the course.  “In the middle of the race, my body started to feel a bit warm and I dropped slightly behind the leading group”, she further added.

In the Men’s Elite Marathon, Kenyan Leonard Kiprotich Langat was locked in a keen battle with last year’srunner-up Merhawi Kesete (Eritrea) and Tadu Abate (Ethiopia) right from the start.

Uganda’s 2023 World Marathon Champion Victor Kiplangat and Ethiopian Gada Gemsisa were hanging around them until the half-way stage.

Both Abate and Langat exchanged the lead until the 40 km mark, while Kesete was about 50 metres behind them.  Abate increased his pace in the last kilometre, while Langat struggled to catch up. 

The Ethiopian crossed the finish-line first in 2:09:55, with Langat finishing 15 seconds later for the runner-up position. Kesete could manage only a third place in 2:10:22.  

With today’s win, the Ethiopians took both men’s and women’s titles together in Mumbai for the seventh time.

“It was a very competitive and tactical race from start to finish.  The course was challenging, but it was well organised, and the roads were in good condition,” said Langat.

A joyful Tadu explained, “I am delighted to win this race and grateful to the organisers for the competition, and for all our partners. 

The hills were tough, but once I settled into the rhythm after the halfway point, I focused on conserving energy and choosing the right moments.  My body felt in good condition, and I am glad to be here in Mumbai and to win the race”.  

Sanjivani and Kartik top Indian finishers:

Sanjivani Jadhav’s name has been associated with distance running in the country for well over a decade.  However, excelling in a marathon on her debut at the distance gave her immense joy. 

She clocked 2:49:02 on her maiden attempt to finish overall tenth among the women runners and first among the Indian women.

Reflecting on her achievement, she said, “I’m really happy, I feel amazing. This was my first time running a marathon, and I won. After 35 km, I knew I was going to win gold.” 

The experienced Nirmaben Thakor, who was gunning for a hat-trick of marathon wins, finished a distant second at 2:49:13. Speaking after the race, she said, “I had trained really hard and was aiming for gold, but hard luck, maybe next time.”

Sonam completed the podium in third with a time of 2:49:24, describing the race as a learning experience rather than a battle.

“I kept following my senior and trained with her,” she said. “I learned how to manage my pace and run a marathon. It wasn’t a competition; we were running like sisters.”

For Kartik Karkera, who trains in Russia, it was only a second marathon of his career.  No one paid much attention to him at the beginning as he entered the fray with a nondescript 2:30:30 for a fifteenth place in the Moscow Marathon last year. 

A regular metric miler, Karthik surprised several experienced Indian road runners like Anish Thapa and Srinu Bugatha in today’s race as he finished with a new PB of 2:19:55 to snatch the Top Indian Male runner’s prize in Mumbai.

Speaking after his victory, Kartik said, “This was my first marathon in Mumbai, and it feels great to win on my debut. I had to push through the challenging course, but I enjoyed being here in Mumbai and participating in this special race. My next goal is to qualify for the Asian Games.”

Defending champion Anish Thapa delivered another solid performance to finish second in 2:20:08, reinforcing his consistency at the Mumbai Marathon.

Anish remained in contention through the race before settling for a podium finish. Reflecting on his run, he said, “Delighted to finish second, but I think I could have done better.”

Completing the podium in third with a time of 2:20:49, Pradeep Chaudhary reflected on a difficult race. “I was extremely nervous, and midway through the race I started experiencing cramps, which forced me to stop briefly. The upcoming season is crucial for me, with a packed calendar that includes the Asian Games,” he said.

The top three finishers in the Indian Elite men’s and women’s categories received prize money of INR 5 lakh, INR 4 lakh and INR 3 lakh respectively.

Following are the Provisional results: 

Marathon Elite Male –

RANKNAMECOUNTRYTIME
1TADU ABATE DEMEEthiopia02:09:55
2LEONARD LANGATKenya02:10:10
3MERHAWI KESETE WELDEMARYAMEritrea02:10:22
4GADA GEMSISA GUDETAEthiopia02:10:49
5VICTOR KIPLANGATUganda02:11:02
6BENJAMIN KIGENKenya02:15:28
7KIDANEMARIAM DESSIE ASFIEEthiopia02:15:36
8KELKILE GEZEHEGN WOLDAREGAYEthiopia02:16:48
9ASSEFA MARU HAILEEthiopia02:18:10
10KARTIK KARKERAIndia02:19:55

Marathon Elite Male Indian

RANKNAMETIME
1KARTIK KARKERA02:19:55
2ANISH THAPA02:20:08
3PRADEEP CHAUDHARY02:20:49
4KRESSTARJUNE PATHAW02:22:39
5IOHBORLANG NONGSPUNG02:24:19
6SRINU BUGATHA02:24:24
7MOHIT KUMAR SHARMA02:24:40
8VIKRAM BANGRIYA02:25:19
9ANANT GAONKAR02:27:18
10NIKHIL SINGH02:28:33

Imagicca Run-In Costume-

Individual-

1st- MANAS KUMAR (Neeraj Chopra)

2nd- SURESH RAJANI (Operation Sindoor)

3rd- RITIK INGLE (Milkha Singh)

Group-

1st- UDAYAN CARE (Para-Olympic Sports)

2nd- LOVE AND CARE (Social Change)

3rd- WAR WOUDED FOUNDATION (Converting Disability into Ability)

Marathon Elite Women – 

RANKNAMECOUNTRYTIME
1YESHI KALAYU CHEKOLEEthiopia02:25:13
2KIDSAN ALEMA GEBREMEDHINEthiopia02:27:35
3GOJJAM TSEGAYE ENYEWEthiopia02:28:27
4BIRKE DEBELE BEYENEEthiopia02:30:22
5MEDINA DEME ARMINOEthiopia02:33:02
6ZEMENAY AYANA DEMILEWEthiopia02:34:02
7TIGEST WORKU ANAGAWEthiopia02:36:15
8AYANTU IDOSSA ESHETEEthiopia02:36:33
9ASMARE BEYENE ASSEFAEthiopia02:36:42

Marathon Elite Women Indian

RANKNAMETIME
10SANJIVANI JADHAV02:49:02
11NIRMABEN THAKOR02:49:13
12SONAM .02:49:24
13SHYAMALI SINGH03:03:06
14BHAGWATI DANGI03:03:16
15JYOTI GAWATE03:06:29
16DIVYA S03:07:03
17BHARTI .03:11:14
18DISKET DOLMA03:18:46
10SANJIVANI JADHAV02:49:02

Half Marathon Men: 

RANKNAMETIME
1GAURAV MATHUR01:07:18
2RMESH GAVALI01:11:32
3TANMAY PAWAR01:12:27

Half Marathon Women: 

RANKNAMETIME
1REENU01:18:02
2PRIYANKA C01:19:13
3EKTA01:23:19

Police Cup Trophy Winners – Male

RANKTEAM NAMENAMES OF MEMBERSTIME
1PC MEN 14DINKAR MAHALE, PUNDLIK GAVALI, ABHIJIT PATIL3:50:06
2PC MEN 13MAHESH KAKAD, UMESH UIKE, BHIVA ZITE3:54:35
3PC MEN 12SURAJ DALVI, SAGAR KASHID, AKASH HAJARE4:32:27

Police Cup Trophy Winners – Female

RANKTEAM NAMENAMES OF MEMBERSTIME
1PC WOMEN 14AISHWARYA KHALADKAR, KOMAL KHANDEKAR, VARUNDAWANI AVHAO4:38:14
2PC WOMEN 13ARCHANA SHEP, GOURI RAUT, PRAJAKTA TENGALE4:55:07
3PC WOMEN 05PRIYA BHOR, AISHWARYA PETHE, SMITA BHOITE6:11:02

Who won the men’s elite race at the Tata Mumbai Marathon 2026?

Ethiopia’s Tadu Abate Deme won the men’s elite marathon in 2:09:55.

Who claimed the women’s elite title in Mumbai?

Yeshi Kalayu Chekole of Ethiopia won the women’s elite marathon with a time of 2:25:13.

Was Mumbai Marathon 2026 Yeshi Chekole’s first major marathon win?

Yes, this was her first career victory in a major marathon.

How much prize money did the top finishers receive?

The top three finishers earned USD 50,000, USD 25,000, and USD 15,000 respectively.

Which countries dominated the elite races?

Ethiopian athletes won both the men’s and women’s elite titles.

Who was the top Indian finisher in the women’s Mumbai Marathon 2026?

Sanjivani Jadhav finished as the top Indian woman with a time of 2:49:02.

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Alex
Alex

Alex graduated in mass communication in 2016 and has been covering global sports for Khel Now since then. He is covering sports tech, igaming, sports betting and casino domain from 2017.