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27 Oct 2025

Waterford man impresses as he wins national title at Dublin Marathon

26-year-old Waterford AC athlete David McGlynn made his marathon debut in Dublin last year clocking 2:15.26 on that occasion

Waterford man impresses as he wins national title at Dublin Marathon

Waterford man impresses as he wins national title at Dublin Marathon

Waterford AC's David McGlynn took home his first national Irish marathon championship title in the 2025 Irish Life Health Dublin Marathon event running 2:10.59.

The hotly contested national championship saw three Irish men go with the lead group in the early stages. Hiko Tonosa was joined by fellow DSD athlete Paul O’Donnell and Ryan Creech (Leevale AC) in the lead elite group.

Tonosa, who confirmed his participation late, sat at the back of the elite leading group taking shelter from the damp conditions and came through the hallway mark in 64 minutes.

With just over ten kilometres left to run David McGlynn moved up to eighth overall, coming through 30 kilometres in one hour, 32 minutes.

The 26-year-old made his marathon debut in Dublin last year clocking 2:15.26 on that occasion.

Tonosa, who was unable to finish the marathon event in last month’s World Championships in Tokyo in tough conditions, stepped aside in Dublin before the 35km mark.

PICTURES: Spot the Waterford faces among thousands running the 2025 Dublin Marathon

David McGlynn took the national title and crossed the line in fifth position overall in a five-minute personal best.

Creech was just one place behind, taking second place in the national championship race for the third time in 2:11.46.

O’Donnell was seventh overall and third in the national race with a 2:12.11 clocking.

The race was won by Daniel Mesfin of the United States in 2:08.51.

Speaking after his national title win, David McGlynn said: “It’s hard to put into words. Training had gone really well; I’d been training the best I’ve ever been in the last few months. I had a big breakthrough over the half marathon in February…I’m over the moon to put a marathon on the board today that I’m really proud of. This is a day you dream of."

Ann-Marie McGlynn (Strabane AC) was in the hunt for her third national women's title but was challenged by 19-year-old Crean from early in the race.

Crean stuck to Ann-Marie McGlynn like glue in the opening half, coming through the 21.1km split in 1:17.12 with the two-time national champion just once second behind.

By the 35km mark, Crean extended her lead, creating a 70-second gap to the defending champion and looked set to take the national title comfortably.

The Limerick native crossed the line in sixth place overall, running a nine-minute personal best.

Ann-Marie McGlynn was roared home to eighth place in the women’s race, clocking 2:36.24 and was also the second Irish woman to cross the line.

Nichola Sheridan (Bohermeen AC) took bronze in 2:39.55 with Meghan Ryan (DSD AC) and Caitlyn Harvey (Roadrunners AC) close behind in tenth and 11th overall.

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