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Press Release - London Marathon - 4/10/18

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     Elite Men's Preview: Wanjiru defends against three of the greats

10/04/2018

Daniel Wanjiru will face a daunting task when he defends his London 
Marathon title against three of the greatest distance runners of their 
generation on Sunday 22 April.

Wanjiru was a surprise winner of the 2017 men's race when he held off the 
challenge of Ethiopian track legend Kenenisa Bekele to clinch his first 
Abbott World Marathon Majors victory and succeed Olympic gold medallist 
Eliud Kipchoge as London Marathon champion.

At just 24, Wanjiru had only three marathons behind him and just one 
victory – although that was a spectacular triumph, coming at the Amsterdam 
Marathon in October 2016 when he took almost three minutes from his 
personal best to beat a field of far more experienced runners.

In London, he proved that performance was no fluke when he made a break 
just before the 21-mile mark and battled hard over the final five miles to 
beat the fast-finishing Bekele who had fallen behind after suffering with 
blisters caused by ill-fitting shoes. "I am the happiest man in the world," 
said the Kenyan afterwards.

Both Bekele and Kipchoge, the second and third fastest men in history over 
26.2 miles, will be back on the London start line in 2018 alongside 
Britain's multiple world and Olympic track champion, Mo Farah, who became 
the second fastest British marathon runner on his debut four years ago and 
defeated Wanjiru in the Vitality Big Half in London last month.

Bekele and Kipchoge will start as the two fastest in the field, heading a 
line-up that contains three who have run the distance under 2 hours 4 
minutes and seven who have finished quicker than 2:06. Among them are five 
World Marathon Majors winners and two former world champions.

Kipchoge returns to London looking to make it a hat-trick of wins in the 
British capital after skipping last year's race for a stab at breaking the 
two-hour barrier. The Kenyan superstar triumphed in 2015 and was an 
agonising eight seconds away from the current world record of 2:02:57 when 
he won again a year later.

"The Virgin Money London Marathon is a race that holds very special 
memories for me," said the 33-year-old who became the fastest marathon 
runner in history when he clocked 2:00:25 in an unratified race in Monza, 
Italy, last May.

"I won it in 2015 and 2016 and both are days I will never forget. I came 
close to breaking the world record in 2016 and it is natural for anyone in 
that situation to think what might have been. But that race gave me the 
confidence to go on and win the Olympic title in Rio and run so well 
throughout 2017."

Kipchoge was again close to the world record in Berlin last September when 
he finished in 2:03:32, just 35 seconds off the mark set by his countryman 
Dennis Kimetto in 2014.

"I feel like I'm in good form," said Kipchoge. "Berlin was difficult 
because the weather was not good but my time showed I was in the right 
shape. I know I have the world record in me so we will have to wait and see 
what happens."

With his best of 2:03:03, Bekele is the second quickest man in history and 
the fastest in the London field. After finishing third on his London debut 
in 2015, the 35-year-old placed second last year when he came agonisingly 
close to catching Wanjiru in the closing stages.

He is joined by compatriot Guye Adola who ran the fastest debut in history 
when runner-up behind Kipchoge in Berlin last September. Having led the 
race until the final few miles, the 27-year-old became the seventh quickest 
marathoner of all time when he crossed the line in 2:03:46, just 14 seconds 
after the winner.

The Kenyan challenge is boosted by the experienced Abel Kirui, a two-time 
world champion who won the Chicago Marathon in 2016 and was second there 
last October. Also in the field is Bedan Karoki who clinched third on his 
debut last year and ran the fourth fastest half marathon in history in the 
United Arab Emirates this February.

But they will be without Stanley Biwott, a former New York Marathon 
champion who was runner-up behind Kipchoge in London two years ago. Biwott 
has had to withdraw from the race with a left leg injury that prevented him 
from training for two weeks.

Former world and New York champion, Ghirmay Ghebreslassie, is one of three 
talented Eritreans in the line-up, while Farah heads a select British cast 
that includes Rio Olympian Tsegai Tewelde and the fast-improving Jonny 
Mellor.

While that pair will train their sights on selection for the European 
Championships, Farah is focused on a bigger prize – breaking Steve Jones' 
long-held British record of 2:07:13 and perhaps cracking the European 
record of 2:05:48, a time that could well put him on the London Marathon 
podium.

     - 2018 Virgin Money London Marathon elite men's start list

                                    ###

 

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