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Press Release - London Marathon - 8/25/22

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

      Inspiring participants preparing for the 2022 TCS London Marathon

              Meet some of the incredible people taking on the              
                        26.2-mile challenge this year         

Thousands of participants will take on the 2022 TCS London Marathon on 
Sunday 2 October, each with their own powerful reason to run. But for some, 
the event holds even more poignance and significance.

Read on for a selection of inspiring stories from some of this year's 
participants.


Anoosheh Ashoori, 68, and son Aryan Ashoori, 33, from London
- Charities: Amnesty International and Hostage International

Anoosheh is an Iranian-British dual national who, like Nazanin 
Zaghari-Ratcliffe, was arrested in Iran in August 2017. In 2019, he was 
sentenced to 12 years in jail, accused of spying.

While in captivity, Anoosheh dreamt of running the London Marathon during 
the small windows of exercise allotted to him.

He said in one of his journal updates: "I run for an hour at least every 
day. I have a plan, or a dream, that I will participate in the London 
Marathon after my release. The time restrictions in the gym do not allow me 
to test myself to discover the unexplored boundaries of my existence, but I 
hope, dear reader, you will be with me to help me when I run in London."

Anoosheh will be taking part with his son, Aryan, who now works at Amnesty 
International after all the help the charity gave the family during the 
time Anoosheh was imprisoned.


Kostiantyn Bidnenko, 35, and Viktoriya Kiose, 29, from Ukraine, now living 
in Tower Hamlets, London
- Charity: United 24

Kyiv residents Kostiantyn and Viktoriya awoke to bombs falling in their 
city at 0:500 on February 24 and immediately packed up and fled.

Kostiantyn registered to join Ukraine's military but was unable to sign up 
because of a very rare genetic disease called alkaptonuria, which occurs 
when the body can't produce enough of an enzyme called homogentisic 
dioxygenase, causing pain in weight-bearing joints.

The couple fled Ukraine on a long journey to the UK which involved stops in 
Hungary, Poland, and Italy.

Kostiantyn needed treatment for his condition and learned the Liverpool 
Royal Hospital had specialists in this area, but he had to be a British 
citizen to be treated. Staff at the hospital told them about the Homes for 
Ukraine scheme, which is how they ended up living in the Canary Wharf flat 
of former Tower Hamlets councillor, Andrew Wood.

The couple have been running around London since arriving here, and decided 
they wanted to run the TCS London Marathon to raise funds for United 24, an 
initiative launched by Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy to collect 
charitable donations in support of the country.


Dylan O'Shea, 24, from London
- Charity: Laureus Sport For Good

Dylan's cousin Ashling Murphy was a schoolteacher who died following a 
fatal assault in January 2022, while out jogging in her hometown of 
Tullamore, Ireland - sparking outrage across Ireland and the UK.

Dylan said: "She did everything right. She went out at 16:00 when it was 
light, on a crowded canal where it is seen to be safe. I am running the TCS 
London Marathon to try to keep her memory burning. I use the anger, 
frustration and pain to fuel my long runs."

Dylan is running for Laureus Sport For Good - a charity that uses the power 
of sport to empower the next generation of females to participate in 
activity, to feel safe in underprivileged communities and to learn life 
skills they otherwise wouldn't have.


Hannah Delmas, 25, from London
- Charity: Young Lives vs Cancer

Hannah is a junior doctor working in East London who, in April last year, 
was diagnosed with a rare germ cell tumour and immediately paused her 
medical training to start chemotherapy.

She completed four rounds of chemotherapy followed by a laparotomy (major 
abdominal surgery) and an ICU stay to remove the tumour. Six weeks after 
her final treatment was completed, she was back at work caring for patients 
once again.

Hannah said: "Running the TCS London Marathon is a wild idea and be under 
no impression that I am a runner. Especially after having stayed in bed for 
almost six months during my treatment.

"However, six weeks post major surgery I was back at work full time as a 
junior doctor, and I am still on track to finish my training with my 
original cohort thanks to the support network around me."


Jade Laura, 19, from Herne Bay, Kent
- Charity: Missing People

In 2018, Jade lost her ability to walk due to being in a coma with a 
tracheostomy. While recovering she joked to a nurse that she would run a 
marathon when better - and now she is.

At the end of lockdown Jade started running and went from struggling with 
100 metres to completing her first marathon in February. Jade was told she 
would never fully recover, so she feels extremely lucky to be here today 
and able to walk, let alone run.

Jade said: "It has been so hard, but I gave it my all every day and didn't 
give up when things got rough. I suffer from severe chronic illness at just 
19 years old, but I don't let it stop me. I even complete my runs with a 
feeding tube and glucose monitor! It's not about what has happened, it's 
how you heal that matter."


Maria Keen, 42, from Kent
- Charity: British Heart Foundation

Maria, a physiotherapist from Kent, is taking on the 2022 TCS London 
Marathon for this year's Charity of the Year, the British Heart Foundation 
(BHF) inspired by her husband's battle with cancer and heart disease.

In 2017, just months after getting married, Maria's husband, Jason, was 
diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma at the age of 29. Jason subsequently 
underwent chemotherapy and radiotherapy, which badly damaged his heart. In 
December 2018, aged 31, Jason suffered a heart attack and as a result 
underwent a triple heart bypass operation to save his life.

Maria has also seen heart and circulatory disease tear apart her wider 
family. Tragically, she lost both her paternal grandparents to stroke, her 
maternal grandparents to heart disease and other members of her family to 
heart conditions. Maria ran her first marathon for the BHF back in 2008 and 
is looking forward to taking on the 26.2-mile challenge again to raise 
money for regenerative research.


Ian Johnson, 39, from Liverpool
- Charity: Alzheimer's Society

Ian Johnson is the grandson of Liverpool FC legend Ronnie Moran - the 
former captain and coach who worked for the club for 49 years and twice 
served as caretaker manager in the early 1990s.

Ronnie passed away suffering from Alzheimer's in 2017 and his wife Joyce 
died earlier this year (2022) with the same condition.

Ian said: "To see your loved ones fade away and not remember the lives 
they've had is very sad, so hopefully the money I raise for the charity 
will help towards their research and hopefully, one day, a cure."


Bradley Winstanley, 43, from Southend-on-Sea
- Charity: Great Ormond Street Hospital

Bradley's sons Austin and Freddie were born in August 2014 at 25 weeks, 
weighing just 1lb 10oz and 1lb 11oz each, with less than a one per cent 
chance of survival. Due to such extreme prematurity, both boys had a bleed 
on the brain at birth: Freddie's cleared, but unfortunately Austin's 
didn't.

Austin and Freddie spent many months in intensive care, coming home for the 
first time on December 31, 2014. At just five weeks old, weighing a tiny 
2lb, Austin had his first emergency brain surgery at Great Ormond Street 
Hospital.

In his short life, Austin has endured seven lifesaving brain surgeries, two 
other major operations and a life-changing/pioneering operation called SDR 
to give him the best chance of walking and an independent life.

Bradley said: "We owe everything to Great Ormond Street. As a family we had 
been warned Austin would never walk, talk or see. Well, in true Austin 
style, with his pure determination and the amazing support of Great Ormond 
Street, Austin now attends mainstream school, walks with just the aid of 
splints and smashes life in general."

Bradley is leading a team of seven runners called 'Austin's Next Big Step' 
with the aim of raising as much money as possible for Great Ormond Street 
Hospital.


Aaron Kerr, 25, from Northern Ireland

Assisted wheelchair user Aaron Kerr will be able to compete in the London 
Marathon for the first time after a change in entry rules for 2022 to make 
the event more inclusive.

Aaron, his father, David, and mother, Sandra, from Annahilt, Northern 
Ireland, have completed 48 marathons together. They started in 2015 and 
have always dreamed of running the London Marathon. They helped to review 
changes to the rules so that wheelchair users who require help from others 
will be permitted to take part.

Aaron is non-verbal and is affectionately known throughout the running 
community for his hugs and headlocks. At the 2016 Dublin Marathon he was 
awarded the Lord Mayor's Medal, voted for by his fellow runners - the first 
person with complex needs to receive this award.


Tommy Price, 26, from Huddersfield
- Charity: Keswick Mountain Rescue Team

Fell runner Tommy Price 'clinically died' in the Lake District in January 
and is taking part in the 2022 TCS London Marathon to raise money for the 
mountain rescue team who saved him.

Tommy was found showing no signs of life by Keswick Mountain Rescue Team on 
Hall's Fell, Blencathra, on January 6, 2022, and was airlifted to the Royal 
Victoria Hospital in Newcastle.

It was touch-and-go for Tommy, who had suffered a cardiac arrest caused by 
severe hypothermia. On arrival at the hospital, his core body temperature 
was 18.8°C - one of the lowest ever recorded. Normal core body temperature 
is 37.7°Cs. Tommy is running to say thank you to the rescue team that saved 
his life.


Kim Holcroft, 37, from Bolton, Lancashire
- Charity: The Miscarriage Association

During lockdown 2020, Kim found out she was pregnant with her second child. 
However, at 10 weeks into her pregnancy she received the news that her baby 
no longer had a heartbeat and she had experienced a silent miscarriage.

Kim had to wait two weeks to see if her body would recognise that she had 
lost her baby, saying: "It was so difficult for me to get my head around as 
I was still experiencing pregnancy symptoms."

After this time, she was admitted to hospital to medically manage the 
pregnancy as it hadn't happened naturally. Kim had to attend all her 
appointments alone without her partner, Alex, due to Covid-19 restrictions, 
which was heart-breaking. She was helped by family, friends and The 
Miscarriage Association.

The following year she fell pregnant again. She wanted to feel excited but 
was so anxious that the same thing would happen again. It wasn't until 
their beautiful, happy, and healthy boy Cooper arrived that Kim's worries 
fully went away.

Kim was able to defer her London Marathon place from April 2020 to October 
2022 and has been juggling training with looking after her two children. 
She is excited to take finally part in the marathon and raise funds for The 
Miscarriage Association.

                                     ###

 

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