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Press Release - Prague International Marathon - 5/10/12

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

       Cheromei - From Youngest World Champion to Seasoned Marathoner
		 
Lydia Cheromei returns to what has proved a rewarding hunting ground as the 
Kenyan assumes the mantle of women's favourite in a strong field for the 
Volkswagen Prague Marathon on Sunday (May 13). The men's race looks wide 
open with Ethiopia's Deressa Chimsa the fastest man on paper but 
expectations are high for marathon debutant Philemon Limo of Kenya. 

When Lydia Cheromei arrives in Prague, she says it feels like a second home 
these days. As with any Kenyan on the road running circuit, she is much 
travelled but the pronouncement rings true: she broke the course record 
with an impressive 2:22:34  last year and set a personal best of 67:26 to 
finish runner-up in the half marathon here on March 31. Add the ingredient 
of a marathon personal best of 2:21:30 to finish sixth in Dubai at the end 
of January and she is quietly confident, which is ever the Kenyan style.

There is one more factor that soon emerges as the woman who won a world 
junior cross country title at the age of 13 in 1991 readily admits: one of 
Cheromei's regular training partners in Kenya is the new national record 
holder, Mary Keitany, thanks to the latter's 2:18:37 in winning in London 
three weeks ago.

"Training with Mary back home has been a big morale boost for me. I was 
very happy for her success and I'm going to try to follow in her footsteps, 
though I know that it's not easy to run under 2:20, but I'll do my best."

If Lydia Cheromei does join the select group of 17 women who have cracked 
that time barrier, she will have done it on a scenic but far from easy 
course, complete with a few sections of cobblestones, although these do not 
seem to have prevented the elite fields producing impressive times in 
recent years.

Cheromei's closest rival on paper is her fellow Kenyan Agnes Kiprop. Her 
best of 2:23:54 was set in finishing second in Frankfurt last October. A 
half marathon lifetime best of 67:22 as runner-up in Ostia at the end of 
February suggests she is rounding nicely into top form for the marathon. 
Lydia Cheromei acknowledges that she faces a genuine contest with the field 
including Filomena Chepchirchir (2:24:21) and the New York-based Ethiopian, 
Misiker Mekonnin (2:25:21). The favourite's preparations have gone well, 
but for one factor which Cheromei, or anyone else, could not control.

"I've trained well in Kenya but it was raining during the last part of my 
training so the build-up was not 100% - but I am ready."

Just how ready Philemon Limo is for his marathon debut will become apparent 
once the starting gun goes off at 9 am on Sunday in Prague's Old Square. 
The course record is the property of Kenya's Eliud Kiptanui with 2:05:39 in 
2010. 

Limo is another Kenyan who is a familiar face in the Czech capital: he was 
the first man to break the hour for the half marathon here, clocking a 
personal best of 59:30 for victory last year. Third place in the same event 
in 60:03 was an indication of solid preparation, but Limo, taking advice 
from Lydia Cheromei and his friend and rival Stephen Kibiwott (2:07:54), 
admits to first night trepidation: "Yes, I feel nervous. I know in the 
marathon you can expect anything to happen, especially the first one. My 
friends have been giving me advice, saying, it's nothing like a 10km or 
half marathon."

He emphasises that the questions to be answered on Sunday are about the 
technique of racing: "Don't start too fast and you must have practised 
drinking on the run. If you have even a small problem in the marathon, it's 
not easy to finish."

An experienced marathoner and the fastest man in the field is the Ethiopian 
Deressa Chimsa, who brought his time down to 2:05:42 when finishing eighth 
in Dubai in January. As ever, the Kenyan entry is strong with Nicholas 
Chelimo (2:07:38) and Francis Bowen (2:08:01) posing threats alongside 
Stephen Kibiwott.

Lee Troop is unlikely to be running at their kind of tempo, but the 
39-year-old has a tough target nonetheless: qualifying for his fourth 
Olympic marathon in the green and gold of Australia. He needs to run 
sub-2:12 to achieve this and his last marathon was a 2:15:45 in the Gold 
Coast marathon last July. Asked if his determination to qualify for a 
fourth Olympic Games is as strong as it was 12 years ago, the answer is 
unequivocal: "Yes."

                                  ###


 

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