“I will run as fast as I can, but I cannot say what time is
possible,” said Haile Gebrselassie during a press conference for the
real,- BERLIN MARATHON, where he will be competing on September 24
alongside 40,000 other runners. The 33-year-old exceptional runner from
Ethiopia consciously avoided the words “world record” – he has missed
that goal at his three previous attempts at the 42.195 km classic
distance.
His Kenyan rival Paul Tergat holds the current world
record, which he set winning the real,- BERLIN MARATHON in 2003 with a
time of 2:04:55. It is no accident, however, that Haile Gebrselassie
has chosen to compete in the race in Berlin. “I know, of course, that
Berlin has a flat course upon which very fast times are possible,” the
two-time (1996 and 2000) 10,000m Olympic gold medallist stated. He has
set 21 world records in his career, the last of which was at the
beginning of March with a time of 1:11:37 for the 25 km distance,
which, however, has not been officially recognised.
The
journey to Berlin was adventurous for Haile Gebrselassie. He had
planned on participating in a 10 km race in Sicily on Saturday evening
on his way to the German capital, but the 4-time 10,000 m world
champion never arrived there. “The problem was that shortly before
take-off a rabbit got caught in the engine. After already flying for an
hour and forty minutes, the captain decided that we had to turn back
and prepared for an emergency landing,” Haile Gebrselassie said, who as
a result missed his connecting flight to Italy.
“It is too
bad that I was not able to run the 10 km, but it was not decisive for
my marathon preparation. And the only really important race for me is
the real,- BERLIN MARATHON,” Haile Gebrselassie, said, who travelled to
Germany specifically for the press conference. The Ethiopian’s current
best time for the marathon is 2:06:20, which he achieved a year ago
winning the Amsterdam Marathon. Not including one race as a 15-year-old
with a time of 2:48, his other two marathons were run in London: in
2002 he came in third in 2:06:35, and this year he was ninth with a
time of 2:09:05. “That was simply not my day in London this year,“
Haile Gebrselassie said, who also stated a year ago in Amsterdam: “I
know that I can break the marathon world record – I just don’t know
when it will happen.”
“After three races, I now have a
better feeling for the marathon,” Haile Gebrselassie said. He will be
facing the second-fastest marathon runner of all time in Berlin --
Sammy Korir (Kenya/2:04:56). “That is good for the spectators, for it
will be an exciting race—that is less good for me. I hope that Sammy
has trained hard, as I will be in top form.”
When
questioned about the current doping cases in athletics, Haile
Gebrselassie stated: “It is important that the perpetrators are caught
so that the clean athletes are protected.” This kind of news is not
pretty for the sport, he said, but at the same time it is important to
convict those who are cheating.
Haile Gebrselassie, who
won his first big title in the 10,000m at the World Championships in
Stuttgart in 1993, is giving no thought to ending his career. “As long
as I am still the fastest during training, there is no reason to think
about quitting. I have not set any date for myself. The 2008 Olympics
are definitely part of my plan, however.”