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Press Release - Marathon Hamburg - 4/25/24

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                     HASPA MARATHON HAMBURG ON SUNDAY               

      Course records and Olympic qualification the targets in Hamburg

World-class fields will go for course records and target Olympic 
qualification in Sunday's Haspa Marathon Hamburg. Kenya's defending 
champion and course record holder Bernard Koech, who tied his personal best 
with 2:04:09 a year ago, is back while Gotytom Gebreslase, the World 
Champion from 2022, is the favourite in the women's race. The Ethiopian, 
who has a PB of 2:18:18, wants to secure the third spot for the Paris 
Olympic race in Hamburg. Fellow-Ethiopian Yalemzerf Yehualaw holds 
Hamburg's course record of 2:17:23. Late entry Nienke Brinkman will also 
try to qualify for Paris. The Dutch runner is the bronze medallist from the 
European Championships in Munich in 2022.

Organisers of Germany's biggest and fastest spring marathon have registered 
a record total of 38,210 runners. Among them are 15,000 athletes who will 
compete in the classic event. "If all goes well on Sunday and the 
pacemakers run a bit more even and slightly faster we could see similar 
results to last year. I am curious to see if Gotytom Gebreslase manages to 
qualify for Paris and if she is able to break the course record. But even a 
sub 2:20 time is something special since we only have one so far," said 
chief organiser Frank Thaleiser, who introduced an additional bonus of 
20,000 Euros for the course records. All runners - men and women - who 
finish inside the course records share this amount. If there would be one 
man and three women who clock faster times than the previous records they 
would each receive 5,000 Euros. "This way we want to encourage the runners 
in a leading group to go for a fast time after the last pacemaker has 
dropped out," explained Frank Thaleiser.

"Training was going well and compared to last year in Hamburg I have 
reached the same level. So if the weather conditions are fine then a fast 
time is possible," said Bernard Koech. It is highly unlikely that he could 
still be selected for the Olympic marathon, but he said: "I will give 
everything and if they should select me then I will be ready." Bernard 
Koech is one of seven runners in the race who feature personal bests of sub 
2:05:00. While Ethiopia's Getaneh Molla is the fastest on the start list 
with 2:03:34 he has not reached such times in recent years. 

Brimin Misoi and Philemon Kiplimo are tipped to be among the strongest 
challengers for defending champion Koech. Both have done very well on 
German roads in the past. Misoi has won the Frankfurt Marathon twice in a 
row. When he defended his title last autumn the Kenyan improved to 2:04:53 
despite windy and rainy conditions. He now intends to run faster in 
Hamburg. "I ran the Paris Marathon at the beginning of April. But because 
of breathing problems I dropped out and then decided to go for Hamburg," 
said Misoi. It was in Berlin last year, where Philemon Kiplimo improved to 
2:04:56 and finished eighth in a very competitive race. "German roads are 
good for me, so I am looking forward to Sunday. I want to run with the 
leading group and improve my time," said Kiplimo, who has a superb half 
marathon PB of 58:11.  

"We are planning a pace in the region of the course record, may be slightly 
faster. Additionally there will be a really big group of probably 25 
athletes who will target the 2:08:10 Olympic qualifying time", said 
Hamburg's Elite Race Coordinator Jurrie van der Velden of Jos Hermens' 
Global management. "We are not quite sure yet, but the women's leading 
group might run a pace somewhere between 2:16 and 2:18. There is a group as 
well which targets Olympic qualification, running sub 2:26:50 pace."

"It is my goal to qualify for the Olympics on Sunday," said Gotytom 
Gebreslase, who surprisingly won her debut marathon in Berlin in 2021, then 
went on to become World Champion in the following year and took the silver 
medal at last year's global championships in Budapest. Jurrie van der 
Velden explained that the Ethiopian federation usually selects the two 
fastest runners during the qualifying window and then picks the athlete who 
performed best at major championships as long as that athlete confirms good 
form. When Gebreselase ran the Nagoya Marathon in March she did not finish. 
"I got stomach problems during the race and dropped out after 35k. Then I 
trained well and decided to run in Hamburg. I am in good form now and want 
to run sub 2:18 here. Perhaps I can attack the course record. I would think 
such a performance should be enough to get selected," said Gotytom 
Gebreslase. 

Nienke Brinkman joined Hamburg's elite field at short notice. The European 
bronze medallist from 2022 has still not achieved the qualifying time for 
the Olympics. She ran her PB of 2:22:51 in 2022, but that was outside the 
qualifying period. A year ago Brinkman clocked a fine 2:24:58 in Boston, 
but this course is not record eligible and results do not count as 
qualifying times. However it is a far easier task for Brinkman to achieve 
qualification in Hamburg than for Gebreslase. Reaching the qualifying 
standard of 2:26:50 should be enough for the former Durch record holder.

A debutant could well be in the mix for at least a place on the podium: 
Irine Cheptai is the World Cross Country Champion from 2017. "I started 
preparing for my marathon debut in January and training went very well. I 
think I will go with the second group on Sunday," said the Kenyan who has 
already run a very fast and promising half marathon time of 64:53. 

Among a number of German runners Katharina Steinruck is probably the one 
who could produce the national highlight in Hamburg. She improved to 
2:24:56 this winter and now hopes to break the family record: It was 
exactly 25 years ago when Katrin Dörre-Heinig, the bronze medallist of the 
1988 Olympic marathon in Seoul, won the Hamburg Marathon with 2:24:35. For 
many years this remained the German marathon record. "It is my aim to break 
my Mum's record and it would be great if I could do it in Hamburg," said 
Steinruck.

Elite Runners with Personal Bests

MEN:

Getaneh Molla         ETH 2:03:34
Bernard Koech         KEN 2:04:09
Roland Korir          KEN 2:04:22
Dickson Chumba        KEN 2:04:32
Barselius Kipyego     KEN 2:04:48
Brimin Misoi          KEN 2:04:53
Philemon Kiplimo      KEN 2:04:56
Oqbe Ruesom           ERI 2:05:51
Haymanot Alew         ETH 2:05:57
Tsedat Ayana          ETH 2:06:18
Geoffrey Kirui        KEN 2:06:27
Olivier Irabaruta     BDI 2:07:13
Jake Robertson        NZL 2:08:26
Amaury Paquet         BEL 2:08:44
Martin Musau          UGA 2:08:45
Benjamin Preisner     CAN 2:08:58
Ebba Tulu Chala       SWE 2:09:06
Therence Bizosa       BDI 2:09:18
Maxim Raileanu        MDA 2:09:22
Jorge Castelblanco    PAN 2:09:24
Joaquim Arbe          ARG 2:09:36
Yohannes Chiappinelli ITA 2:09:46
Paul Tanui            KEN 2:09:57
Abraham Cheroben      KEN Debut

WOMEN:

Gotytom Gebreslase    ETH 2:18:18
Winfridah Moseti      KEN 2:20:55
Sharon Chelimo        KEN 2:22:07
Kidsan Alema          ETH 2:22:28
Nienke Brinkman       NED 2:22:51
Natasha Wodak         CAN 2:23:12
Margaret Wangari      KEN 2:23:52
Jessica Augusto       POR 2:24:25
Ayantu Kumela         ETH 2:24:29
Katharina Steinruck   GER 2:24:56
Fadouwa Ledhem        FRA 2:25:50
Ellie Pashley         AUS 2:26:21
Sara Ribeiro          POR 2:26:39
Rabea Schöneborn      GER 2:27:03
Daiana Ocampo         ARG 2:27:16
Kristina Hendel       GER 2:27:29
Isabel Oropeza Vazque MEX 2:27:57
Irine Cheptai         KEN Debut
Aminet Ahmed          ETH Debut

More information about the Haspa Marathon Hamburg is available at: 
www.haspa-marathon-hamburg.de 
 
                                     ###

 

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