FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Defending Champion Henry Sugut Returns and Faces Tough Opposition
The Vienna City Marathon is one or Europe's most traditional big city races
over the classic distance. When it will see its 30th edition on 14th April
there will be an elite men's field that will fit to the occasion. Defending
champion and course record holder Henry Sugut will return to what is
Austria's biggest sporting event. The Kenyan will be up against tough
opposition: Among them is Jafred Chirchir Kipchumba, who features a
personal best of 2:05:48. With this time the Kenyan will be the fastest
runner ever entered into the marathon race. The Vienna City Marathon is an
IAAF Gold Label road race. Adding other running events organisers expect a
record number of more than 38,000 runners to take part on 14th April.
A year ago Henry Sugut improved the course record of the Vienna City
Marathon significantly. He won the race with 2:06:58, which was 40 seconds
faster than the time fellow-Kenyan Abel Kirui had achieved in 2008.
Additionally it was the first sub 2:07 result on Austrian soil and Henry
Sugut became the first man to repeat a victory in Vienna since 1992. His
first victory had come in 2010. Next month he could make another
significant contribution to the history of the race. If the 27 year-old can
win again he would become the only athlete besides Austria's Gerhard
Hartmann (1985 to '87) to take the Vienna Marathon three times.
But it will get tough for Henry Sugut on 14th April. Among a number of
strong fellow-Kenyans there is Jafred Chirchir Kipchumba, who features a PB
that is more than a minute faster than Sugut's. The 29 year-old has won the
Eindhoven Marathon in 2011 with 2:05:48. And he has some good memories from
the Vienna City Marathon as well. It was in 2009 when he ran his debut in
the Austrian capital, clocking a fine 2:10:42 for sixth place. Additionally
next month's race will give Gilbert Yegon a chance to get his revenge. The
24 year-old was second in last year's race, when he precisely matched the
time of the former course record (2:07:38). His personal best however
stands at 2:06:18, which he ran winning the Amsterdam Marathon in 2009.
Two more Kenyans could do very well in Vienna: Peter Kamais is the winner
of the Xiamen Marathon 2012. He clocked his personal best of 2:07:37 in
China. Geoffrey Ndungu took the Dublin Marathon in 2011 with a PB of
2:08:35. He had been seventh in last year's Vienna City Marathon with a
time of 2:10:00.
Quite often in the past there have been fine performances by European
runners in Vienna. Mustafa Mohamed could do well this year. The Swede, who
originally comes from Somalia and who had been a training partner of
Britain's double Olympic Champion Mo Farah some years ago, has turned to
marathon running last year. Originally a world-class steeple chaser Mohamed
ran a debut time of 2:12:28 in Hamburg last April when he placed ninth. He
then was fourth in Italy's Firenze Marathon in November with 2:12:34.
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