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Press Release - Dubai Marathon - 1/23/13

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                         Dubai Marathon Preview

Yemane Tsegay is looking to extend Ethiopia's recent domination of the 
Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon on Friday morning, but with a prize pot 
of close to a million dollars, and a super-fast course to entice the speed 
merchants, there is no shortage of both colleagues and Kenyans, looking to 
upset his status as men's race favourite. His compatriot, Tirfi Tsegaye (no 
relation) will equally be looking over her shoulder in the women's race.

Tsegay is also keen to make amends for his poor showing last year when, 
despite running a time of 2.06.27, which would have been a world record 
little more than a decade ago, he could only finish tenth here. He quickly 
made up for that by winning the Rotterdam Marathon three months later in a 
personal best 2.04.48, beating 2.03 man Moses Mosop of Kenya into the 
bargain.

The two were due to renew their rivalry on Friday, but Mosop has had to 
stay in Kenya to deal with family problems. But Tsegay, fourth in the
2008 Olympic race was non-plussed at suggestions that the Kenyan's presence 
would have made any great difference.

"It's not really the opponents in the marathon," he said after Wednesday's 
press conference, "it's the marathon itself, the distance that's the 
problem. I ran well here last year, but so did everyone else (eight of his 
colleagues beat him). I put that right in Rotterdam, and ran fast (11th 
all-time). But I think this is a faster course, and I'm in better shape".

Of the dozen men in the field who have bettered 2.08, with a further half 
dozen under 2.10, Tsegay's colleague Dadi Yami is felt to have as good a 
chance as anyone of upsetting form. He ran 2.05.41 here last year, and like 
Tsegay feels he's in better shape.

There are at least another half dozen Ethiopians and a couple of Kenyans 
with designs on the top ten, if not better. But the most intriguing entrant 
is Moses Masai of Kenya. Marathon men (and women) have good reason to 
beware of debutants. Last year in Dubai was a case in point. Ayele Abshero 
of Ethiopia was on no one's radar, but he ran out a first-time winner in a 
superlative 2.04.23, to break his illustrious colleague, Haile 
Gebrselassie's course record, and post the fourth fastest time in history.

Abshero, unfortunately injured, cannot defend his title, but he is one of 
the new breed of young marathoners, who have never run quality races on the 
track, if at all, as a prelude to marathons. Masai, however is old style.

He is a former African junior 5000/10,000 metres champion, and won a bronze 
medal in the 2009 World Championships at the longer distance. If he has 
done sufficient preparation to augment his 26.49 10,000 metres speed, he 
can be a formidable opponent for anyone in the marathon.

Experienced manager, Federico Rosa thinks one of his athletes, Wude Ayelew 
has similar possibilities on her debut. Like Masai, she won a bronze at 
10,000 metres in the World Championships in 2009, with 30.11.87; even 
better, she has run the half-marathon in 67.58.

But with her victory in Paris last April, in 2.21.40, followed by a second 
place in Berlin in Autumn, in a personal best 2.21.19, Tirfi Tsegaye has 
all the credentials to go sub-2.20 here, and even attack the course record, 
set by her currently injured compatriot, Asselefech Mergia, of 2.19.31.

Like the marathon distance itself, this Dubai event has come a very long 
way since its launch in 2000. That first year featured 120 finishers in the 
marathon, and close to 350 in the 10k. Event organiser Peter Connerton 
proudly boasts that entrants for Friday's events, which now also include a 
3k fun-run have surpassed 20,000.

"I always thought that numbers like that were a possibility," said 
Connerton yesterday, "but I knew I'd be laughed out of court if I mentioned 
it to anyone back then. There was no history of distance running in this 
part of the world, and the idea of running for fitness had only just 
started to take root. But people here have really taken the race to their 
hearts, as have the sponsors, local and international".

                                  ###

 

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