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Press Release - London Marathon - 9/27/21

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                  From penalty flicks to fundraising ticks

Back in 2016, Crista Cullen was part of Great Britain's gold-medal-winning 
hockey team at the Rio Olympic Games. Fast-forward five years and she's 
taking on a challenge that has been on her bucket list for as long as she 
can remember: the London Marathon.

Like so many of the people who'll be tackling 26.2 miles on the streets of 
London on Sunday 3 October, Crista was all set to run last year's Virgin 
Money London Marathon until the Covid pandemic struck. She paused her 
training, moved back home to Kenya and has been there ever since, living on 
a small farm on a conservancy just outside Nairobi.

Unlike many of this year's participants, Crista knows what it takes to make 
it as an elite athlete and has been able to draw on her experience as a 
Team GB hockey player during her training – but she still feels like a 
rookie when it comes to distance running! So, when the new October date was 
announced for this year's event, she started training again and ramped up 
her fundraising for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust.

We caught up with Crista to find out what the London Marathon means to her, 
why she's fundraising for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust, and how it feels to 
train under the gaze of a giraffe…

"I was quietly confident in the build-up to the 2020 event. I'd done the 
training – although I'm definitely not cut out to be a marathon runner as 
I'm a power athlete – and got into the discipline of long runs in Richmond 
Park.

"And then Covid hit and I found myself in the same position as everyone 
else who had a place in last year's event. I went home to Kenya, where you 
can only really run in the early morning or later in the day when it's 
cooler – times that coincide with wildlife being on the move.

Running with wildebeest

"When I did a long run recently, I kept passing this one giraffe about 5m 
from the road who couldn't be bothered to move, which keeps the training 
exiting and interesting. I also sometimes see wildebeest and zebras darting 
in front of me, so it's a bit different to running in London!

"My training for this year's event has not gone well. Back and neck 
problems stopped me running for three months, so I'm nowhere near where I 
wanted to be – it's going to be about surviving out there and drawing on my 
mental resilience, but I'm looking forward to trudging round and doing my 
best.

"I've been lucky enough to be on the Finish Line of the London Marathon 
before, welcoming the amazing humans of all shapes and sizes who take on 
the challenge and get it done, so it will be amazing to be one of them this 
year. The positives are that I'll be able to enjoy the brilliant atmosphere 
on the day for longer if I'm not as speedy!

Feeling vulnerable

"I have no ambition to run multiple marathons – I just want to run the 
London Marathon. It's going to feel really special after the past 18 months 
and because London has been my second home since I relocated there in 2009 
ahead of London 2012.

"To go from being an Olympic gold medal winner to training for a marathon 
has made me feel really vulnerable. I've had the luxury of being at the top 
of a specific sport, but that doesn't make you good at everything. There is 
this perception that just because you're athletic and relatively 
successful, that you're going to be a ninja at anything you try, which has 
pressure associated with it!

'Better never stops'

"Running is a completely different discipline, so that is daunting but 
exciting at the same time. Hockey is quite a proactive sport, where you're 
adapting, making decisions and reading the situation. Those are my skills. 
Marathon running is a completely different world – it's about resilience 
and the ability to keep going when it starts to hurt. It's me against 
myself so it brings out a different skill set, but I'm always willing to 
learn. I live by this motto 'better never stops' so I feel vulnerable but 
excited.

"I founded my own charity in Kenya called Tofauti, which means 'different', 
so people assume I'll be fundraising for it, but I'm supporting the Cystic 
Fibrosis Trust as my godson was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. He's four 
and is doing really well, but it has such an impact on his daily life, so 
I'm fundraising to support all the amazing medical advances they're making.

Motivated by emotion…

"Listening to people's stories and why they're fundraising is also really 
motivating. I'll feel very privileged to be on the Start Line and I'll 
definitely use my emotional involvement to keep me going on the day.

     Anything that encourages you to find out more about
     yourself, set new targets, all the things that give us
     fulfilment, are good things – and running is definitely
     one of them. One of my bucket-list goals is to finish the
     London Marathon so I'm going to give it a good go on
     Sunday 3 October!

     Crisa Cullen


…and Kipchoge

"When Eliud Kipchoge won the Olympic gold in Tokyo there was an amazing 
response here in Kenya, as you'd imagine. He's such a humble guy, but he 
believes that no human is limited and this chimes with the sentiment in a 
country like Kenya where everyone is trying hard. His ability to share his 
success and encourage others is really inspiring; Kenyans really look up to 
him and that includes me, so I'll be channelling that spirit on Marathon 
Day."

You can donate to Crista's fundraising page for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust
here.

Crista will also be supporting the TogetherForWater campaign, which is a 
challenge to get active and accumulate the 6,000 miles from the UK to Kenya 
to raise money to create water security for rural communities in Africa.

                                     ###

 

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