Press Release - METRO GROUP Marathon Duesseldorf: Both course records broken
Press Release - METRO GROUP Marathon Duesseldorf: Both course records broken

PRESS RELEASE – METRO GROUP MARATHON DUESSELDORF:
Tola breaks course record
as does
Jeruto in her marathon debut in Duesseldorf
Both course records were broken and a number of Olympic
qualifying standards achieved at the 10th METRO GROUP Marathon
Duesseldorf. EthiopiaÂ’s Seboka Diriba Tola ran 2:08:27 and improved the
two year-old mark by five seconds. He finished ahead of Duncan Koech
(Kenya/2:08:33) and former Kenyan Abraham Kiprotich (France/2:08:35). In
contrast the womenÂ’s winner caused quite a surprise: Agnes Jeruto
(Kenya) ran a great debut in fine weather conditions and finished with
2:25:49. She improved the course record by 55 seconds. Nastassia
Staravoitava (Belarus) finished second with 2:27:24 while Melkam Gisaw
(Ethiopia) took third in 2:27:50.
The METRO GROUP Marathon
Duesseldorf is an IAAF Bronze Label Race. A total of 14,000 athletes had
entered the various events. 4,000 of them participated in the marathon.
It was the best quality race in the history of the event with seven men
clocking sub 2:11 times and five women running inside 2:30.
In almost ideal weather conditions with temperatures around
15 Celsius at the start, overcast skies and hardly any wind the menÂ’s
leading group was on course for a sub 2:08 time. 10 k were passed in
30:21 minutes and the half way mark reached in 64:14 after the pace had
slightly slowed. But then the leading group of around a dozen runners
picked it up again. Among those runners who were dropped from the first
group at this stage was JapanÂ’s Yuki Kawauchi, who got a lot of media
attention and drew many Japanese spectators to the course. He finished
eighth with 2:12:58. “It did not work out for me today. The Africans set
the pace and it was up and down. But it was a great experience to run
here in Duesseldorf and I would like to come back. I will certainly
learn from this race and next time I will compete with a better
strategy,” said Yuki Kawauchi.
Six runners were still in
contention for victory at 30 k (1:31:12): Besides Seboka Diriba Tola,
Duncan Koech and Abraham Kiprotich there were Evans Ruto, Abraham
Chelanga plus the defending champion Nahashon Kimaiyo (all Kenya). It
was Kimaiyo who was dropped first. After Ruto and Chelanga had lost
contact as well a tactical race developed around the 35 k mark. None of
the three left in the leading group made a move. The pace dropped and
vital seconds for a possible sub 2:08 time were lost. Even the two
year-old course record set by Iaroslav Musinschi (Moldova) seemed to
slip away, but when Tola finally did take off with one kilometre to go
he produced the fastest 1000 metres of the race: After a 2:49 minutes
sprint he did break the mark by five seconds with 2:08:27.
Behind Duncan Koech (2:08:33) France‘s Abraham Kiprotich
(2:08:35) and fourth placed Marcin Chabowski (Poland/2:10:07) achieved
the Olympic qualifying times set by their national federations. Ruto
(2:10:10), Kimaiyo (2:10:28) and Chelanga (2:10:40) ran inside 2:11 as
well. “For me today it was all about winning. After I ran my personal
best of 2:06:17 in Dubai in January I am happy with today’s victory,”
said 24 year-old Tola. Â
In the womenÂ’s race a leading group of six athletes ran
together in the first half of the marathon: Pre-race favourite Kebebush
Haile Lema and her fellow-Ethiopians Gishu Mindaye, Melkam Gisaw and
Fantu Eticha Jimma formed this group together with the Kenyans Agnes
Jeruto and Jane Rotich. After they had passed half way in 1:12:25 the
group began to break up. Between 30 and 35 k 29 year-old debutant Agnes
Jeruto was on her own. She had indicated that she would go for a 2:25
finish before the race, although her half marathon best is only 1:12:03.
She almost broke that PB during the marathon on Sunday. “It was a great
debut for me. I had no problems during the race and the pacemakers
guided me well. It was only on the final four kilometres that I slowed a
bit,” said Agnes Jeruto.
Second placed Nastassia Staravoitava ran inside the
Olympic qualifying time of Belarus with 2:27:24 as did her
fellow-countrywoman Volha Dubovskaya who took fourth with 2:28:07. In
between them Melkam Gisaw (2:27:50) was third. Fellow Ethiopian Haile
Kebebush Lema took fifth place with 2:29:02.
GermanyÂ’s Anna Hahner ran a
fine marathon debut, but she just missed the national qualifying
standard for London by 14 seconds. Clocking 2:30:14 for sixth place, the
22 year-old hopes that selectors might still pick her after a good race.
In contrast there is still no light at the end of the tunnel for the
German men. Jan Fitschen dropped out because of muscle problems after
24.5 k so that no German runner will compete in the Olympic menÂ’s
marathon once again.
More information is available at:
www.metrogroup-marathon.deÂ
Please note: You may use
the attached photo showing Agnes Jeruto for online purposes. Photo
credit essential: Victah Sailer / photorun.net
Service by: race-news-service.com