Wanjiru targeting world record

Eurosport - Wed, 22 Apr 17:45:00 2009

Olympic champion Sammy Wanjiru has targeted the men's world record in the London Marathon on Sunday if conditions are favourable and the pace fast.

Samuel Kamau Wanjiru of Kenya, ATHLETICS - 0

"My target is to break the world record," Wanjiru said "Maybe on Sunday if the conditions and the pacemakers are right."

Kenyans Elijah Kitani and John Kales are the designated pacemakers in the men's elite race and they have been asked to keep the field on two hours four minutes pace for 32 km of the 42.195 km race through the streets of London.

The current world record of 2:03:59 was set by Ethiopian Haile Gebrselassie in Berlin last year.

Wanjiru, 22, became the first Kenyan athlete to win the Olympic marathon when he clocked a Games record 2:06:32 in oppressively hot weather in Beijing last year.

He tuned up for this year's race by setting a Spanish all-comers record of 59:26 to win the Granollers half-marathon on February 4, breaking Gebrselassie's previous mark.

Wanjiru, who attended high school in Japan after winning a scholarship, said he thought the world record could eventually be reduced to two hours.

Race director Dave Bedford has assembled a superb men's field with Kenyan Martin Lel aiming to become the first man to win the world's premier marathon for the fourth time in a row.

Early last year Lel was forced to relocate to Namibia to train following the political violence which erupted in Kenya. After winning the London race he caught malaria and was able to train for a month only before Beijing, where he helped Wanjiru set the pace before fading to fifth.

"What makes London unique is that you are racing against champions, champions of the world, Olympic champions," Lel said.

He is scheduled to have a scan on his hip later after suffering a slight strain in training.

Sunday's race will mark a first marathon for Eritrean Zersenay Tadese, described by the news conference co-ordinator Tim Hutchings as "the most exciting debut in London, perhaps in the world".

Tadese, 27, won Eritrea's first Olympic medal with his third place in the 2004 Athens Games 10,000 metres. He defeated Ethiopia's Kenenisa Bekele in the 2007 World Cross Country Championships and won the World Half-Marathon Championship later in the same year.

A former national cycling champion before turning to athletics after problems with his national federation, Tadese would not predict a likely time on Sunday.

"I am happy with my preparations," he said. "I want 2:05, 2:06. We will see."

Reuters

Comment 1 - 4 of 4

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  1. This is the man that can do it. Mark my words.

    From kipketer1411, on Fri 29 May 3:48AM
  2. Ain't gonna happen.

    From Bryan, on Thu 23 Apr 6:09PM
  3. We have his consitency on record, 61:13 is not bad­ compare to couple of 59ns he has, so not bad, the­ thing is can he do that?, what he says?

    From s.too, on Wed 22 Apr 10:07PM
  4. Mr. Wanijiru ran 59:26 at Grannollers last year on­ February 4, 2008. Earlier this year he posted a solid­ but unremarkable 61:13 at the 2009 Grannollers Half­ Marathon.

    From JEFF, on Wed 22 Apr 7:17PM
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