Monday, April 18, 2011

Tiny Kebede is Big Man at London Marathon


LONDON (15-Apr) -- He only stands 158cm (5'-2") tall and weighs just 50kg (110 lbs), but Ethiopia's Tsegaye Kebede is the Big Man at Sunday's Virgin London Marathon.

Just 24 years-old, he already has a marathon résumé worthy of a man with ten years of racing under his belt: world championships and Olympic bronze medals; a personal best time of 2:05:18; and victories at the Paris, Fukuoka, and London Marathons.

At yesterday's press conference here, a confident Kebede proclaimed that he was capable of running at world record pace, if necessary. One athlete manager said today that Kebede had asked the organizers for a blistering 62-minute first half (the race hit halfway in 63:06 last year).

"Yes, it's possible," he said of taking a run at Haile Gebrselassie's 2:03:59 world record. "If the weather is nice you can run 2:04 or 2:03." He then seemed to hedge a bit, adding: "Yeah, I think some day I will run the world record."

Kebede's rise in marathon running has been astonishing. He won the little-watched Addis Ababa Marathon at high altitude in 2007 in 2:15:53, before making his international debut in Amsterdam later that year where he finished 8th in 2:08:16.

He didn't gain wide notice until 2008 when he won Paris in 2:06:40, then backed that up with a bronze medal at the Beijing Olympics, and a victory at Fukuoka in 2:06:10, then the fastest time ever run in Japan.

His 2009 season was just as good, taking second at London, the bronze medal at the IAAF World Championships, and yet another victory at Fukuoka, lowering his Japanese all-comer record to 2:05:18, which still stands as his personal best. More reading on universalsports

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