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Kenenisa Bekele time in Berlin last year was just two seconds slower than Eliud Kipchoge's world record and their showdown in London was highly anticipated

Athletics

Covid safety before world records as 25,000 run the Berlin Marathon

BERLIN, Germany, Sep 24Mark Milde, the race director of the Berlin Marathon, says the priority is on safety — rather than world records — for this Sunday’s race to ensure the expected field of 25,000 elite athletes and hobby runners make it to the finish line free of Covid-19.

After a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic, this year’s race over 42.195 kilometres, will be the first of the world’s six major marathons to take place with a mass start since the coronavirus forced the cancellation of many large-scale sports events in 2020.

The Berlin Marathon’s flat course has a deserved reputation for being fast as it twists through the German capital.

The current official men’s world marathon record was set in Berlin three years ago when Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge ran a jaw-dropping two hours, one minute and 39 seconds.

It was the eleventh time a men’s or women’s world marathon record had fallen in Berlin.

This year’s elite men’s field is led by Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele, who came within just two seconds of Kipchoge’s world record when the Berlin Marathon last took place in 2019.

However, with Germany currently in the fourth wave of the coronavirus, for Milde and his team, the emphasis on this year’s race is less about speed and more about keeping the runners Covid-free.

– Safety first –

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“The focus remains on the sport, we have someone who will start who can run fast, in Kenenisa Bekele, but our main concern is delivering a safe marathon and we believe we are very well prepared,” Milde tells AFP.

The 48-year-old has been the Berlin Marathon’s race director since 2004, when he inherited the role form his father, having first helped out as a child.

“The event is in our DNA,” Milde says.

The former long-distance runner admits this year’s race — the 47th Berlin Marathon — was “probably the most complicated to organise in more than 20 years since I have been doing this job”.

Milde and his team had to come up with a hygiene concept to meet the approval of city officials and ensure the safety of the 25,000-strong field.

When they pick up their race numbers, all runners must prove they are fully vaccinated or take a PCR test on site, with the results stored in a QR code on an armband, “so we can check the morning of the race if they are safe or not,” explains Milde.

Milde says 90 percent of the 15,000 runners who took part in last month’s Berlin half marathon — a test event for the marathon — were fully vaccinated and he hopes for another “really good quota” on Sunday.

– Sleepless nights –

In the coming months, the world’s other top marathons — London, New York, Boston, Chicago and Tokyo — all plan to hold races with hobby runners pounding the pavement alongside elite athletes, so the pressure is on Berlin to show it can be done safely.

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“There were a lot of sleepless nights. The previous year took its toll and cost us a lot of energy and strength,” Milde says.

“We are pleased to able to pave the way and we realise that other events in various countries can say ‘look, it’s worked there’, which makes us a bit proud.”

This year’s marathon field of 25,000 will be the smallest for nearly 20 years and among the elite athletes, men’s Olympic marathon champion Kipchoge has declined to race.

Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge set the current men’s world marathon record in Berlin three years ago © AFP/File / John MACDOUGALL

Milde admits it was harder than usual to attract the world’s top runners, but after the pandemic decimated last year’s marathon calendar, he expects a carnival atmosphere.

“I think it will be a festival, 25,000 runners is something no event has had for two years,” he says.

“We saw at the half marathon, that once all the checks were done, the starting gun went and the masks were taken off, it was almost like the times before (the pandemic) with tremendous joy” on the runners’ faces.

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