This year, I learnt of the BMW Berlin results from my home in Wisconsin. I woke up this morning, in my own bed room, in my own home, in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. That has been unsual in itself this year, with the Olympics and World Indoors.
Geoffrey Mutai of Kenya re-established his claim to be the world’s best marathoner this morning, but only just.
Mutai won the 39th BMW Berlin Marathon in 2.04.15, narrowly beating his training partner, Dennis Kimetto, who clocked the fastest marathon debut in history, 2.04.16. Another Kenyan debutant, 19 year old Geoffrey Kipsang was third in 2.06.12.
Mutai, 31 next week, clocked the fastest marathon in history when he won a windswept Boston 2011, in 2.03.02. The drop on the point-to-point course means that the time was not considered for a world record. That honour went to his compatriot Patrick Makau, who won here in Berlin a year ago, in 2.03.38. But Mutai underlined his winning credentials when he won New York Marathon a month later, also in a course record (2.05.06).
But Mutai dropped out of this year’s Boston race, and, like Makau suffered the vagaries of Kenyan selection policy when he was not considered for the Olympic Games in London.
Determined to attack Makau’s time on a Berlin course which has hosted seven word records in the last 15 years, Mutai’s attempt seemed doomed at halfway, in 62min 12sec, when he and colleagues, Kimetto, Kipsang and Jonathan Maiyo were over 30 seconds down on their target time.
But so speedy was Mutai with a surge between 30 and 35k (14.18), which killed off Maiyo and Kipsang, that a record seemed a distinct possibility with just three kilometres left to run. But that effort had put paid to the record chances, and interest switched to Kimetto’s challenge.
Kimetto, 28, had won both the Berlin half-marathon and the Berlin 25k (in a world best) earlier this year, with second half surges; and looked so comfortable loping alongside Mutai that a third Berlin victory this year seemed a distinct possibility. Even when Mutai took a couple of metres lead after 35k, he could not drop the younger man. But Kimetto’s challenge evaporated in the final stages when he failed to pressure Mutai, and seemed content to follow his colleague home a stride or two down.
The finish recalled the circumstances of Paul Tergat’s 2.04.55 world record run here in 2003, when it looked as if Sammy Korir, who had kept going after his pace making duties, to finish just one second behind, was reluctant to challenge his celebrated colleague.
Nevertheless, he pronounced himself well satisfied with his speedy debut, and Mutai immediately said he thought his younger colleague was a potential world record holder. As for himself, Mutai said, “We had a chance to break the world record, but the first half was a little slow. I tried to push it afterwards, but I was having a problem with my left legs, so I just tried to maintain the pace ’til the finish. But I’m happy with that”.
Mutai’s time is the fastest of the year, and victory secures him the overall men’s prize in the World Marathon Majors 2011-12. Mutai and Kimetto ran the fourth and fifth fastest times in history (discounting Boston), and nine runners have now broken 2.05 this year, also a best.
RESULTS
MEN
Place Name Nation Time
1 Geoffrey MUTAI KEN 2.04.15
2 Dennis KIMETTO KEN 2.04.16
3 Geoffrey KISANG KEN 2.06.12
4 Nicholas KAMAKYA KEN 2.08.28
5 Josphat KEIYO KEN 2.08.41
6 Josphat JEPKOPOL KEN 2.08.44
7 Jonathan MAIYO KEN 2.09.19
8 Eliud KIPTANUI KEN 2.09.59
9 Felix KENY KEN 2.10.22
10 Masakazu FUJIWARA JAP 2.11.31
WOMEN
1 Aberu KEBEDE
2 Tirfi TSEGAYE
3 Olena SHURHNO UKR 2.23.32
4 Flomena CHEPCHIRCHIR KEN 2.24.56
5 Fate TOLA ETH 2.25.14
6 Alevtina BIKTIMIROVA RUS 2.28.45
7 Caroline CHEPKWONY KEN 2.30.34
8 Anna HAHNER GER
9 Sonia SAMUELS GBR 2.30.56
10 Degefa BIRUKTAYIT ETH 2.33.27
ends
Author
Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys. Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."
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