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BMW Berlin Marathon – News – Stage Is Set For Kipchoga At Berlin Marathon

BMW Berlin Marathon - News - Stage Is Set For Kipchoga At Berlin Marathon

STAGE IS SET FOR KIPCHOGE AT BERLIN MARATHON
By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2023 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved – Used with permission.

(22-Sep) — At 38 years-old with two Olympic Marathon gold medals, the World Athletics marathon record (2:01:09), and the only all-conditions marathon performance under two hours (1:59:40), what does Eliud Kipchoge have left to prove?  Well, at Sunday’s BMW Berlin Marathon, the 49th edition as an in-person race, he can become that event’s first five-time champion breaking the tie between him and Ethiopian legend Haile Gebrselassie.  He could also cement his place on the Kenyan team for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, where he could attempt to become the first-ever three-time Olympic Marathon champion.

“Berlin for me is like home,” he said at a press conference today.  “Looking at the Olympic Games in Paris next year, I considered which races would be the best preparation for me and Berlin was the best option.”

Kipchoge first ran Berlin ten years ago, finishing second in the 2013 edition in 2:04:05.  He was defeated by compatriot Wilson Kipsang who set a then world record of 2:03:23 (in 2020 Kipsang was handed a four-year ban for doping).  Kipchoge didn’t return to Berlin until 2015 when he recorded his first victory in 2:04:00, then he returned to the race in 2017 (after winning the 2016 Olympic title) and got his second win in 2:03:32.  That set the stage for his two world record runs in 2018 (2:01:39) and 2022 (2:01:09).  Could he go even faster this year?  Kipchoge made no promises.

“But that was 2022,” he said.  “It’s a different year now and a different race.  He added: “I’m nervous, but that shows I’m ready.  I’ll try to run a good time.”

Kipchoge is coming off of a rare marathon setback.  At the Boston Marathon last April, held in cold and rainy conditions, Kipchoge finished sixth in 2:09:23, the slowest marathon of his career.  He had started the race very fast, splitting 14:17 for the first (downhill) 5-K.  Although he hit halfway with the leaders (1:02:19), his second half was completed in a painful 1:07:04.  

“I live for the moments where I get to challenge the limits,” Kipchoge said through a statement provided by his management company, Global Sports Communications.  “It’s never guaranteed, it’s never easy.  Today was a tough day for me.  I pushed myself as hard as I could but sometimes we must accept that today wasn’t the day to push the barrier to a greater height.”

Of course, victory is…

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