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Press Release - Berlin Marathon - 9/6/05

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                                         Contact: Phone: 030-301 288 10
                                                  Fax: 030-301 288 20
                                                  
                                                  

  Olympic Champion Mizuki Noguchi among record number of 40,000 runners
      Driss El Himer and Bong-ju Lee want to stop Kenyan win streak
                            Elite field released


The real,- BERLIN MARATHON is Germany’s premier road running event. It has 
been Germany’s biggest and best quality marathon for two decades. And 
regarding the founding of the Big Five the overall quality of the real,- 
BERLIN MARATHON should get even better in the near future. The Big Five 
include the BAA Boston Marathon, the Flora London Marathon, the LaSalle 
Banks Chicago Marathon, the ING New York City Marathon and the real,- 
BERLIN MARATHON.

When the athletes set off for the 32nd real,- BERLIN MARATHON on 25th 
September the race will boost a record field of 40,000 runners plus 
walkers, wheelchair athletes and handbikers. Additionally on the same day 
about 8,000 pupils take part in the real,- MINI-MARATHON. And on the day 
before another 8,000 inline skaters will participate in this separated 
real,- BERLIN MARATHON. Their race will be held in the afternoon in front 
of an expected crowd of about 250,000. More than a million spectators are 
expected to watch the race on Sunday. The Brandenburg Gate will once again 
be the spectacular background of the finish.

This year the focus will be pretty much on one athlete: Mizuki Noguchi. The 
Olympic Marathon Champion from Athens in 2004 will run her first marathon 
since her biggest triumph so far little more than a year ago. It was four 
years ago, when the real,- BERLIN MARATHON had an Olympic Champion in its 
elite field for the first time. In 2001 the gold medal winner from Sydney 
2000, Naoko Takahashi, became the first woman to break 2:20 hours in 
Berlin, clocking 2:19:46.

During the last five years Berlin’s women’s winner has always come from 
Japan. But Mizuki Noguchi not only intends to continue this unique win 
streak. The 27 year-old wants to clearly improve her personal best of 
2:21:18 from Osaka in 2003. She might well become the third women to break 
the 2:20 barrier in Berlin. Last year Yoko Shibui had improved Naoko 
Takahashi’s course record by five seconds to 2:19:41. While she had missed 
the Asian record of Yingjie Sun (China/2:19:39) by just two seconds this 
could well be in Mizuki Noguchi’s reach. Training in St. Moritz is said to 
have gone very well – even better than before the Olympic Games.

While Sonia O’Sullivan had to withdraw due to lack of form since her 
training did not go as well as she had hoped to Luminita Zaituc has to be 
watched. The number one German marathoner has a personal best of 2:26:01 so 
far. But the silver medallist from the Europeans in 2002 just needs to get 
the right race to clearly improve. The fast Berlin course should suit her.

There will be huge Japanese media interest in the real,- BERLIN MARATHON 
once again. And while the race is shown live on German TV (ARD/RBB) it will 
also be broadcasted live in Japan by Fuji TV.

The men’s race will not feature an Olympic Champion but at least an Olympic 
medallist. South Korea’s Bong-Ju Lee had been second at the Atlanta 
Olympics in 1996. He then went on to win the BAA Boston Marathon in 2001, 
stopping a Kenyan win streak of ten first places in a row, and improved to 
2:07:20 when he was second at the Tokyo Marathon in 2000.

As in Boston in 2001 Bong-Ju Lee will meet tough opposition from Kenya in 
Berlin. Kenyan runners have dominated the real,- BERLIN MARATHON in recent 
years. Since 1999 the winner has always been a Kenyan. And two of them will 
be running again: Joseph Ngolepus was the winner in 2001 while Raymond 
Kipkoech triumphed a year later. Additionally there will be another former 
winner of the BAA Boston Marathon in Berlin’s elite field: Kenyan Robert 
Cheruiyot had won that race in 2003. It was in the same year, when Michael 
Rotich had won the Paris Marathon with a course record of 2:06:33. The 
Kenyan will now try to win the real,- BERLIN MARATHON on 25th September. 
But he will not be the runner with the fastest marathon time in the field. 
Titus Munji had been third in the legendary world record race in the real,- 
BERLIN MARATHON 2003. Behind fellow Kenyans Paul Tergat (2:04:55) and Sammy 
Korir (2:04:56) he had clocked 2:06:15 for third place. Now Titus Munji 
comes back to Berlin, aiming to b e number one. But former Moroccan Driss 
El Himer (France) could as well produce an upset for the Kenyans.

ELITE RUNNERS IN THE 32nd real,- BERLIN MARATHON

MEN

2 Titus Munji            Personal best: 2:06:15 (3rd Berlin ’03)    KEN
 
4 Michael Rotich         Personal best: 2:06:33 (1st Paris ’03)     KEN
 
5 Raymond Kipkoech       Personal best: 2:06:47 (1st Berlin ’02)    KEN
 
6 Driss El Himer         Personal best: 2:06:48 (Paris ’03)         KEN
 
7 Bong-Ju Lee            Personal best: 2:07:20 (Tokyo ’00)         KOR
 
8 Joseph Ngolepus        Personal best: 2:07:57 (London ’03)        KEN
 
9 Jackson Koech          Personal best: 2:08:02 (Rotterdam ’05)     KEN
 
10 Philip Manyim         Personal best: 2:08:07 (Rom ’05)           KEN
 
11 Peter Chebet          Personal best: 2:08:43 (Chicago ’03)       KEN
 
12 Satoshi Osaki         Personal best: 2:08:46 (Tokyo ’04)         JPN
 
14 Paul Kiptanui         Personal best: 2:09:09 (Turin ’99)         KEN
 
16 Ernest Kipyego        Personal best: 2:09:55 (Eindhoven ’03)     KEN
 
17 Robert K. Cheruiyot   Personal best: 2:10:11 (1st Boston ’03)    KEN
 
18 Toshiya Katayama      Personal best: 2:10:12 (Lake Biwa ’05)     JPN
 
19 Stanley Leleito       Personal best: 2:10:16 (Zürich ’05)        KEN
 
25 Andrew Letherby       Personal best: 2:12:45 (Fukuoka ’03)       AUS
 

WOMEN

F2 Mizuki Noguchi        Personal best: 2:21:18 (Osaka ’03)         JPN
Olympic Champion 2004 
 
F5 Luminita Zaituc       Personal best: 2:26:01 (Frankfurt ’01)     GER
 
F6 Leila Aman            Personal best: 2:27:54 (Berlin ’04)        ETH
 
F7 Melanie Kraus         Personal best: 2:27:58 (Berlin ’00)        GER
 
F9 Monika Drybulska      Personal best: 2:29:58 (Berlin ’03)        POL
 
F10 Annemette Jensen     Personal best: 2:30:07 (2004)
 

 


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