From Berlin to New York: We Preview the Autumn Marathons
Wilson Kipsang Runs in Berlin
Fast Times Expected in Chicago, Amsterdam, and Frankfurt
New York Returns After Hurricane Sandy
Selected Autumn Races
For running enthusiasts around the globe, that combination of well-known cities can mean only one thing: fall marathon races packed with joy and excitement. In the coming weeks, the events over the classic distance of 26.2 miles will once again be in the international spotlight with many of the world’s leading runners toeing the starting line.
The fastest marathon this year took place eight months ago when five runners went under 2:05 in Dubai in January. That amazing performance leaves many intriguing questions this autumn. Is it possible for someone to improve on the men’s (2:04:05) and women’s (2:20:15) world-best time this year? Can someone get close to the men’s world record (2:03:38)? Will a woman go under the 2 hours and 20 minutes barrier this year? Or will there be a performance lull before athletes like Kenenisa Bekele (Ethiopia), Mo Farah (Great Britain), or the Ethiopian female duo of Tirunesh Dibaba or Meseret Defar move up to the marathon distance? Those questions will undoubtedly be answered, starting in Berlin on September 29.
Can Wilson Kipsang Run Close to his Best of 2:03:42 Hours in Berlin?
It is two years since Wilson Kipsang demonstrated the potential to improve Patrick Makau’s world record when he ran 2:03:42 in Frankfurt, Germany, and came within four seconds of the record. Equating this to a 100-meter race, that would mean less than a hundredth of a second’s difference! It is hard to judge his current form, however. After coming in fifth at the Virgin London Marathon, where he was hampered by a toenail problem, Wilson was then second in a 10K race in Manchester, England. He went on to take fourth at the Bogota Half Marathon in July where he clocked an impressive 65:26 minutes at a race run under tough conditions at 2,600m elevation.
The man who won in Bogota will also be on the starting line in Berlin: Geoffrey Kipsang, no relation to Wilson, ran 63:46 in Colombia. In his marathon debut at the age of just 20, he finished third in Berlin in 2012 in 2:06:12. Geoffrey must therefore be counted as one of the big favorites along with his compatriot Eliud Kipchoge. In his own marathon debut in Hamburg (Germany) in April, Eliud recorded an impressive 2:05:30.
In the women’s race, three Kenyan marathoners will be the favorites. Among them is Florence Kiplagat, who recorded her best time of 2:19:44 when she won in Berlin two years ago and who has gold medals from the World Cross-Country and Half-Marathon Championships (2009 and 2010 respectively). Georgina Rono, second in Frankfurt in 2:21:39 last year, and Sharon Cherop, third in the World Championships in Daegu, South Korea in 2011 and who has a best of 2:22:39, are also in the mix to win.
Take The Magic Step’s Uta Pippig will be watching the 40th BMW Berlin Marathon with special interest as one of that race’s guests of honor. Uta won this marathon three times in the 1990s. You can read some of her fascinating memories of her Berlin races in an interview which she gave in the build-up to the anniversary of this marathon by clicking here on our Website.
More Marathon Highlights Will Be in Frankfurt, Chicago, and Amsterdam
Meanwhile the women’s race in Chicago sees a renewal of the rivalry between Atsede Baysa (Ethiopia) and Rita Jeptoo (Kenya). In a thrilling contest last year, the pair ran neck and neck to the finish line, with Atsede finally claiming victory by a one-second margin in 2:22:03.
At the BMW Frankfurt Marathon on October 27 the field will include Kenya’s Vincent Kipruto. The 2009 Paris Marathon champion (best time: 2:05:13) and 2011 world silver medalist showed highly promising form when he won the Lille Half Marathon in 60:39 as recently as the beginning of September. Among others he will face in Frankfurt is his fellow countryman Gilbert Kirwa who won the 2009 race in what was then a course record of 2:06:14. The women’s race marks a return for the 2010 winner, Caroline Kilel of Kenya, who also triumphed at the 2011 Boston Marathon in 2:22:36.
New York Returns After Hurricane Sandy Cancellation
On the women’s side, a definite starter is the London champion Priscah Jeptoo, who has the fastest time in the world this year with 2:20:15. The Kenyan athlete showed outstanding form recently when she won England’s Newcastle Half Marathon in a leading time of 65:45. Among her rivals will be Edna Kiplagat of Kenya (2:19:50), who was crowned the 2013 World Champion in Moscow. It is also possible that we will see Olympic champion Tiki Gelana and the World Half-Marathon winner, Meseret Hailu.
Germany’s Sabrina Mockenhaupt (2:26:21), who was among the top runners who lost the chance to run in the Big Apple last year, will have the opportunity to make up for her 2012 disappointment, and looking ahead to the 2014 European Championships, this will be a challenging fall race for her.
Round-Up of Autumn Marathon Dates
September 29 | Berlin |
October 13 | Chicago |
Eindhoven | |
Munich | |
Cologne | |
October 20 | Amsterdam |
Toronto | |
Beijing | |
October 27 | Frankfurt |
Venice | |
Osaka | |
November 3 | New York |
Seoul | |
November 10 | Athens |
November 17 | Turin |
Yokohama (Women’s Elite Race) | |
December 1 | Fukuoka (Men’s Elite Race) |
Singapore |
Dates and Leading Runners of Selected Autumn Races
Berlin (September 29)
World Marathon Majors (WMM)-Race
IAAF Gold Label Race
Entries: appr. 40,000
Entries still possible: No
Internet: www.BMW-Berlin-Marathon.com
TV: Live on ARD und Eurosport and also later on RBB
Prize Money: 40,000 Euros
Total Prize Money: 233,000 Euros
Course Records:
2:03:38—Patrick Makau (KEN) WR
2:19:12—Mizuki Noguchi (JPN)
Elite Athletes and their Personal Bests:
Men: Wilson Kipsang (KEN/2:03:42), Eliud Kipchoge (KEN/2:05:30), Eliud Kiptanui (KEN/2:05:39), Geoffrey Kipsang (KEN/2:06:12), Sisay Jisa (ETH/2:06:27), Marilson dos Santos (BRA/2:06:34), Negari Terfa (ETH/2:07:32), Stephen Chemlany (KEN /2:07:55), André Pollmächer (GER/2:13:09), Falk Cierpinski (GER/2:13:30), Marcin Blazinski (GER/Frankfurt/2:14:45), Wilfred Kirwa (KEN/Debut), Jacob Kendagor (KEN/Debut).
Women: Irina Mikitenko (GER/2:19:19), Florence Kiplagat (KEN/2:19:44), Georgina Rono (KEN/2:21:39), Desiree Davila (USA/2:22:38), Sharon Cherop (KEN/2:22:39), Remi Nakazato (JPN/2:24:28), Eri Hayakawa (JPN/2:26:17), Helah Kiprop (KEN/Debut).
Chicago (October 13)
World Marathon Majors (WMM)-Race
IAAF Gold Label Race
Entries: 45,000
Entries still possible: No
Internet: www.ChicagoMarathon.com
TV: Live on NBC 5 Chicago and Live-Stream on Internet (NBCChicago.com)
Prize Money: $125,000
Total Prize Money (without time bonuses): $485,000
Course Records:
2:04:38—Tsegaye Kebede (KEN)
2:17:18—Paula Radcliffe (GBR)
Elite Athletes and their Personal Bests:
Men: Moses Mosop (KEN/2:03:06), Dennis Kimetto (KEN/2:04:16), Ayele Abshero (ETH/2:04:23), Emmanuel Mutai (KEN/2:04:40), Tilahun Regassa (ETH/2:05:27), Sammy Kitwara (KEN/2:05:54), Dathan Ritzenhein (USA/2:07:47), Yoshinori Oda (JPN/2:09:03), Zersenay Tadese (ERI/2:10:41), Atsedu Tsegaye (ETH/Debut), Matt Tegenkamp (USA/Debut).
Women: Atsede Baysa (ETH/2:22:03), Rita Jeptoo (KEN/2:22:04), Jemima Sumgong (KEN/2:23:27), Ehitu Kiros (ETH/2:23:38), Maria Konovalova (RUS/2:23:50), Abebech Afework (ETH/2:23:59), Yukiko Akaba (JPN/2:24:09), Aliaksandra Duliba (BLR/2:26:08).
Amsterdam (October 20)
IAAF Gold Label Race
Entries: appr. 15,000
Entries still possible: Yes (deadline is September 29)
Internet: www.TCSAmsterdamMarathon.nl
Prize Money: not known
Course Records:
2:05:41—Wilson Chebet (KEN)
2:21:09—Meseret Hailu (ETH)
Elite Athletes and their Personal Bests:
Men: Getu Feleke (ETH/2:04:50), Bernard Koech (KEN/2:04:53), Wilson Chebet (KEN/2:05:27)—other runners and women still to be announced.
Frankfurt (October 27)
IAAF Gold Label Race
Entries: probably 15,000
Entries still possible: Yes
Internet: www.BMW-Frankfurt-Marathon.com
TV: Live on hr and Live-Stream on Internet
Prize Money: 20,000 Euros
Total Prize Money (without time bonuses): 124,000 Euros
Course Records:
2:03:42—Wilson Kipsang (KEN)
2:21:01—Meselech Melkamu (ETH)
Elite Athletes and their Personal Bests (announced so far):
Men: Vincent Kipruto (KEN/2:05:13), Gilbert Kirwa (KEN/2:06:14), Meftah Abdellatif (FRA/2:09:46), Johnstone Maiyo (KEN/2:10:03), Günther Weidlinger (AUT/2:10:47), Sören Kah (GER/ 2:13:57), Dave Webb (GBR/2:15:48).
Women: Caroline Kilel (KEN/2:22:36), Maja Neuenschwander (SUI/2:30:50), Lisa Hahner (GER/2:31:28), Katharina Heinig (GER/2:34:20).
New York (November 3)
World Marathon Majors (WMM)-Race
IAAF Gold Label Race
Entries: appr. 60,000
Entries still possible: No
Internet: www.INGNYCMarathon.org
TV: Live probably on Eurosport and possibly Live-Stream on Internet
Prize Money: $130,000
Total Prize Money (without time bonuses): appr. $800,000
Course Record Holders:
2:05:06—Geoffrey Mutai (KEN)
2:22:31—Margaret Okayo (KEN)
Elite Athletes and their Personal Bests (announced so far):
Men: Ryan Hall (USA/2:04:58), Meb Keflezighi (USA/2:09:08), Jason Hartmann (USA/2:11:06). Probably: Geoffrey Mutai (KEN/2:03:02), Gebre Gebremariam (ETH/2:04:53), Stanley Biwott (KEN/2:05:12).
Women: Priscah Jeptoo (KEN/2:20:14), Kara Goucher (USA/2:24:52), Lisa Stublic (CRO/2:25:44), Sabrina Mockenhaupt (GER/2:26:21), Amy Hastings (USA/2:27:03), Adriana Nelson (USA/2:28:52), Janet Bawcom (USA/2:29:45). Probably: Tiki Gelana (ETH/2:18:58), Meseret Hailu (ETH/2:21:09), Jelena Prokopcuka (LAT/2:22:56), Firehiwot Dado (ETH/2:23:15), Valeria Straneo (ITA/2:23:44).
The Top Ten Fastest Marathon Times*
Men:
2:03:38 Hours | Patrick Makau | KEN | Berlin (GER) | 09.25.2011 |
2:03:42 | Wilson Kipsang | KEN | Frankfurt (GER) | 10.30.2011 |
2:03:59 | Haile Gebrselassie | ETH | Berlin (GER) | 09.28.2008 |
2:04:15 | Geoffrey Mutai | KEN | Berlin (GER) | 09.30.2012 |
2:04:16 | Dennis Kimetto | KEN | Berlin (GER) | 09.30.2012 |
2:04:23 | Ayele Abshero | ETH | Dubai (UAE) | 01.27.2012 |
2:04:26 | Haile Gebrselassie | ETH | Berlin (GER) | 09.30.2007 |
2:04:27 | Duncan Kibet | KEN | Rotterdam (NED) | 04.05.2009 |
2:04:27 | James Kwambai | KEN | Rotterdam (NED) | 04.05.2009 |
2:04:27 | Tsegaye Kebede | ETH | Chicago (USA) | 10.07.2012 |
*Boston: on April 18, 2011, Geoffrey Mutai (Kenya) won the Boston Marathon in 2:03:02 by four seconds from his compatriot Moses Mosop (2:03:06). However, the race cannot be recognized as official world or national records since the course does not meet the relevant regulations (max. drop of one meter per kilometer, start and finish must be situated a max. 50% of the entire course separate from each other. The drop on the point-to-point course in Boston is 139m.
Women:
2:15:25 Hours | Paula Radcliffe | GBR | London (GBR) | 04.13.2003 |
2:17:18 | Paula Radcliffe | GBR | Chicago (USA) | 10.13.2002 |
2:17:42 | Paula Radcliffe | GBR | London (GBR) | 04.17.2005 |
2:18:20 | Liliya Shobukhova | RUS | Chicago (USA) | 10.09.2011 |
2:18:37 | Mary Keitany | KEN | London (GBR) | 04.22.2012 |
2:18:47 | Catherine Ndereba | KEN | Chicago (USA) | 10.07.2001 |
2:18:56 | Paula Radcliffe | GBR | London (GBR) | 04.14.2002 |
2:18:58 | Tiki Gelana | ETH | Rotterdam (NED) | 04.15.2012 |
2:19:12 | Mizuki Noguchi | JPN | Berlin (GER) | 09.25.2005 |
2:19:19 | Irina Mikitenko | GER | Berlin (GER) | 09.28.2008 |
World Marathon Majors Rankings for the Series 2012-2013*
Men:
1. | Tsegaye Kebede | ETH | 65 Points |
2. | Stephen Kiprotich | UGA | 50 |
3. | Lelisa Desisa | ETH | 40 |
4. | Wilson Kipsang | KEN | 36 |
5. | Wesley Korir | KEN | 27 |
6. | Geoffrey Mutai | KEN | 25 |
7. | Feyisa Lilesa | ETH | 20 |
Women:
1. | Edna Kiplagat | KEN | 55 Points |
2. | Prisca Jeptoo | KEN | 50 |
3. | Rita Jeptoo | KEN | 40 |
4. | Sharon Cherop | KEN | 35 |
5. | Atsede Baysa | ETH | 30 |
Mary Keitany | KEN | 30 | |
7. | Tiki Gelana | ETH | 25 |
Aberu Kebede | ETH | 25 |
*Each WMM Series takes place over a two-year cycle. The men’s and women’s champions share equally prize money of $1 million. The top five in each WMM race score points with the winner receiving 25 and the remainder 15, 10, 5 and 1.
- Posted September 23, 2013