By John Kwoba NAIROBI (Xinhua) --
A hip problem prevented former World Half Marathon champion
Gladys Cherono of Kenya from defending her crown in Berlin last year, but the
Kenyan now feels ready to battle for the title on Sept. 24.
Cherono, 34,
however will face a reality test when she comes up against five other runners on
the start list who have already broken two hours and 24 minutes mark this season
at the Berlin marathon.
“It really
feels nice to have recovered. It had been hard for me last season. There were no
marathon races for me owing to the injury and am happy it has healed
completely,” she said on Wednesday in Eldoret.
Cherono, who
won in Berlin with her lifetime best of 2:19:25 back in 2015, will face
competition in the shape of her rivals who include defending champion Aberu
Kebede, a triple Berlin winner (2010, 2012, 2016), and her Ethiopian compatriots
Amane Beriso, runner-up in Dubai 2016, Gulume Tollesa, the 2015 Frankfurt
winner, and Meseret Mengistu, the 2015 Paris champion.
Another
contender to be reckoned with is the Prague champion this year, Valary Aiyabei
of Kenya, with a best of 2:21:57. Every one of them has shown they have the
ability to win marathons on the big stage.
“The big
marathons always have tough athletes and it has never been easy winning. I guess
it comes down to fitness and strategy and hopefully it will play to my
advantage,” she added.
Last year a
hip injury has forced Cherono to withdraw from the New York City Marathon.
The nagging
injury also saw her miss her debut at London Marathon in April. But with that
over her, she can focus on redeeming her career on September 24 on the streets
of Berlin.
Meanwhile,
Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele will join Kenyans Eliud Kipchoge and Wilson Kipsang
in the quest for the Berlin Marathon title, organizers have confirmed.
The addition
of Bekele, the second fastest marathoner of all-time, adds even more power to an
already high calibre field which now includes three of the distance’s five
fastest men.
Kipchoge’s
avowed intention is to break the 2:02:57 world marathon record set by his
compatriot Dennis Kimetto in Berlin in 2014. Kipchoge had a kind of “lab test”
at the beginning of May when he ran an unratifiable 2:00:25, the fastest time
ever for the marathon distance, on the Formula One circuit of Monza in Italy.
But this feat
was achieved with the help of a team of substitute pacemakers who also formed a
wind shield from start to finish.