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Press Release - Marathon Niedersachsen (Hannover) - 5/3/13

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

     Former Winners Kiptum and April Go for Course Record in Hannover

Germany's busy spring marathon season will see its final race of 
international significance this Sunday: The TUI Marathon Hannover will have 
the defending champion Joseph Kiptum on the starting line. The Kenyan, who 
ran a personal best of 2:09:56 in 2012, will be up against the winner from 
2011, Lusapho April. The South African also clocked his PB in Hannover when 
he won with 2:09:25. Five more Kenyans are in the race who have run sub 
2:10 times before, making this the best quality elite field in the history 
of the race so far. The men will be targeting the course record of 2:08:52. 
In the women's race Ukraine's Olena Burkovska is the fastest athlete 
entered with a PB of 2:28:31. Here organisers hope for a first sub 2:30 
time. Adding races at shorter distances a total of around 15,000 athletes 
is expected to take part in the TUI Marathon Hannover, which is an IAAF 
Bronze Label Race.

With weather conditions expected to be almost perfect and Hannover 
providing a very flat course Elite Race Coordinator Christoph Kopp intends 
to instruct the pacemakers for a 64:20 half way pace. "We are careful not 
to overpace. I hope that a group of eight to ten runners will still be 
together at the 25 k point and possibly until 30 k. Then we should be on 
schedule for a course record," said Christoph Kopp. A year ago he had hoped 
that Joseph Kiptum would be able to improve the course best of 2:08:52 set 
by Yussuf Sangoka (Kenya) in 2010. But Kiptum had severe stomach problems 
during the race. However he still managed to win with 2:09:56. "I would 
think Joseph can run at least one minute faster," said Christoph Kopp.

"A 64:20 for half way should be easy," said 25 year-old Joseph Kiptum. "I 
hope to run well, to run a personal best, a course record and may be even a 
time slightly under 2:08," said the defending champion, who had run the 
Berlin half marathon a month ago. There he finished sixth with 61:38 
minutes. Asked about his stomach problems a year ago the runner from Iten 
explained: "I woke up in the night before the race and was very hungry. So 
I had six bananas and then I was sick during the race." 

For Lusapho April the TUI Marathon Hannover will be his first race at the 
classic distance since the Olympic Games in London. "Despite some smaller 
injury problems in the build-up to London he ran well in the first 30 
kilometres. Lusapho was in the group with Meb Keflezighi, who went on to 
finish fourth. But he was unlucky since he fell hard at the 30 k 
refreshment point. So he was limping during the final lap," explained his 
coach Karen Zimmerman. Lusapho April finished 43rd in London with 2:19:00. 
On Sunday his coach hopes that he will be back in peak form. The 30 
year-old runner from Uitenhage near Port Elizabeth had a good half marathon 
test in the Two Oceans race in March. On the hilly course he was 
outsprinted and finished second with 63:40. "I am back in Hannover to do 
well and I want to win," said Lusapho April.

The fastest runner in the field is Wilfred Kigen (Kenya), who has a PB of 
2:07:33 from Hamburg in 2007. While he was second in that race he is the 
three-time Frankfurt Marathon winner (2005 to 2007). The 38 year-old may no 
longer be a big favourite but he still trains seriously. "I will run with 
the leading group on Sunday and then see what I can do," said Wilfred 
Kigen. He had been a pacemaker at the Seoul Marathon in March, where he ran 
until 25 k in a 2:06 pace.

Four more Kenyans are in Sunday's race with PBs of sub 2:10: Daniel Kosgei 
(2:08:45), David Kisang (2:08:54), Sila Toek (2:09:09) and Jonathan Yego, 
who won the Rome Marathon in 2008 with 2:09:57.

For various reasons the TUI Marathon Hannover still has no women's time of 
sub 2:30. Last year Russia's Natalya Puchkova improved the course record to 
2:30:17. This Friday there was an early set-back for the organisers. Mercy 
Kibarus was regarded as the big pre-race favourite because the Kenyan 
recently clocked 68:18 in the Rome Ostia Half Marathon. But her visa was 
made void apparently by a French embassy official at Nairobi airport on 
Friday evening. "She had a Schengen visa for France, but the flight was 
going into Amsterdam. So they stopped her and fellow-Kenyan Patrick Terer, 
who was supposed to do very well on Sunday as well," said a furious 
Christoph Kopp. There was nothing he could do. "If they would not have made 
the visas void we could have rebooked the flights. This is unbelievable and 
puts the athletes in a very bad position – months of training for nothing."

Hopes for a course record and a sub 2:30 times now remain with Olena 
Burkovska (Ukraine/2.28:31) and Russia's national champion from 2012, 
Natalya Sokolova (2:30:10). But Marta Megra (Ethiopia) and debutant Edinah 
Kwambai (Kenya) could also do well. Megra has improved to 2:31:01 in Mumbai 
this January while Kwambai has a half marathon PB of 70:36 from 2012.

More information about the TUI Marathon Hannover is available online at: 
www.marathon-hannover.de

                                       ###

 

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