Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Powell - I'm working hard to get myself back on top


Sydney, Australia - Asafa Powell's urgent mission to remake himself into the world's fastest man and cut down fellow Jamaican Usain Bolt will make a flying start in the Sydney Track Classic at Homebush on Saturday (28).

The Sydney Track Classic is one of a select group of Area meetings at which points can be acquired by athletes to qualify for the IAAF / VTB Bank World Athletics Final, to be held on 12-13 September in Thessaloniki, Greece.

A trimmed-down Powell has arrived in Australia and did his first training session yesterday morning in Melbourne in readiness for what he expects will be a painful experience in the Sydney 400m race.

Caribbean sprinters traditionally start their competition season with a 400m, although the science behind the practice doesn't necessarily match up to the logic of the theory that it helps the athlete recruit muscle fibres which may lay inactive if not for the extreme fatigue induced when racing over 400m.

So Bolt raced 400m over the past two weekends in Kingston, running a solid 45.54sec last Saturday which may be the standard by which Powell can judge himself in Sydney.

Powell’s best is by comparison a sorry 47.17, although he is more of a 100m specialist than Bolt who won the 100m and 200m in World record times at last year's Olympic Games.

Powell was almost written off after placing ‘only’ fifth in his second Olympic 100m final, but he came back with an astonishing run to anchor the Jamaican 4x100m relay to a World record in Beijing and then on September 2 in Lausanne he ran his fastest 100m ever of 9.72sec, just 0.03sec slower than Bolt's record.

What has been generally forgotten is that Powell missed more than two months' training with a gashed knee and then a shoulder operation after ripping the muscle from his shoulder while bench pressing in the gym.

He then strained a groin muscle at the Rome Golden League on 5 July and did not race again for 20 days, competing only then in London (9.94) and Monte Carlo (9.82) before lining up in Beijing.

Coach Stephen Francis has examined every aspect of his training to try to help Powell avoid injury and peak when it counts.

“What happened at the Olympics proved a lot because it was a big contrast between how Asafa did versus other members of his training group,” Francis said.

“We were able to zero in on what his problems were and I think we have taken steps to hopefully give him a better opportunity to reveal his true abilities. A lot of it has to do with expectation, a lot of it has to do with his approach to being under pressure.”

“We have been working to change... and we are hoping that when the time comes he will be better than he has ever been.”

And after setting the 100m World record in 2005 at 9.77, equalling that twice in 2006, lowering it to 9.74 in 2007 and clocking a personal best 9.72 last year only a fool would dare write him off.

“It's a lot easier now being in second place,” Powell admitted yesterday (22). “It gives you something to work for. I'm working hard to get myself back on top. I'm working on everything. I've been working with a psychologist and others, just so I'm ready to win when the times comes.”

Part of that process involves committing to a 400m race in Sydney where he will line up against top Australians including Olympic semi-finalist Joel Milburn from the Blue Mountains, fellow Olympian Sean Wroe, Commonwealth champion John Steffensen, the phenomenally talented American Xavier ‘X-Man’ Carter and another Jamaican, Sanja Ayre and Japan's Yoshihiro Horigome.

Milburn is excited about racing Powell: “We all know he's one of the fastest people ever to walk on the Earth. I'd hate to race him in 100m... I'd just look stupid.”

“I've run at a few meets where he has competed but I've never talked to him. I'll try to talk to him before the 400m, before he loses his breath.”

From the IAAF

Monday, February 23, 2009

Boston Marathon Completes Elite Field

Organizers of the Boston Marathon announced today that they have completed their elite fields for the 113th edition of the race scheduled for Monday, April 20.

In addition to defending champions, Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot of Kenya and Dire Tune of Ethiopia, and key USA challengers, Ryan Hall and Kara Goucher, who had been previously announced, elite athlete coordinator Pat Lynch has signed an additional group of strong challengers.

On the men's side, 2008 Bank of America Chicago Marathon champion Evans Cheruiyot of Kenya (2:06:25 PB), has been added along with Beijing Olympics fourth-placer and 2009 Chevron Houston Marathon champion Deribe Merga of Ethiopia (2:06:38). Other men who will toe the race's famous starting line in Hopkinton include Kenyans Daniel Rono (2:06:58), Robert Kiprono Cheruiyot (2:07:21), Timothy Cherigat (2:09:34), and Stephen Kiogora (2:08:24).
Ethiopians Gashaw Melese Asfaw (2:08:03), Solomon Molla (2:08:46) and Abebe Dinkesa (debut) are also in the field.

In addition to Hall, another American Olympian, Brian Sell, has decided to run Boston again. Sell, who has a 2:10:47 personal best, was fourth at Boston in 2006, clocking 2:10:55. He was third at the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon in New York City in 2007, and finished 22nd in the Olympic Games in 2:16:07. Jason Lehmkuhle, fifth at those same Olympic Trials in a personal best 2:12:54, also plans to run.

On the women's side, two Russian stars, Lidia Grigoryeva and Galina Bogomolova, should offer Tune a strong challenge. Grigoryeva won Chicago in
2008 and Boston in 2007, and has a personal best time of 2:25:10. The tiny Bogomolova is the Russian record holder with a 2:20:47 to her credit.

The 2009 Standard Chartered Dubai Marathon champion, Bezunesh Bekele of Ethiopia (2:23:09 PB) is definitely a contender for victory, and so is veteran Salina Kosgei of Kenya (2:23:22) who finished 10th in the Beijing Olympics. Helena Loshanyang Kirop of Kenya (2:25:01 PB), Atsede Habtamu of Ethiopia (2:25:17) and Alice Timbilili of Kenya (2:26:45) are also in the field.

Two-time American Olympian Elva Dryer, 37, has also been contracted for the race. Her marathon personal best is 2:31:48 from Chicago in 2006.

John Hancock Financial, the principal sponsor of the race, provides the funding for Boston's elite fields.

Round 2, Borneo International Marathon 2009

Dear Marathoners,

It’s been a while since I’ve dropped you guys an email. I do however, hope that this finds you all happy, healthy and well in 2009. We would like to take this opportunity to inform you that we are opening for registrations on Monday, March 2nd 2009. The same procedures apply as per last year, i.e. online registrations will be available on our website www.borneomarathon.com as well as manual registrations at our office and all Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf outlets in Sabah and Sarawak.

I’d also like to let everyone know that for those of you who haven’t requested for certificates via email or for those who have yet to collect from our office, we have begun the (admittedly somewhat slow) process of mailing them out via snail mail.

Please do let your running mates, family and friends know about our updates – in case I may have left some runners out of this email. Look forward to hearing back from you soon and we thank you again for all your support for our first BIM 2008 and hope to welcome you back to Kota Kinabalu in 2009.

With best wishes,

Shan Sandhu

Coordinator

Borneo International Marathon

B625, 6th Floor, Phase 2

Wisma Merdeka

Jalan Tun Razak

Kota Kinabalu 88000

Sabah, Malaysia

Early Bird Registration Available from 6th March 2009

Online Early Bird registration for Penang Bridge International Marathon 2009 will open to public on the 6th of March 2009!

1) Register and pay early to enjoy 10% discount on the entry fees.

2) Secure a limited quantities timing system, Championchip, that we are using for all competitive categories.


3) Your running number will be allocate to you once your payment has been made. Payment via credit card will get the running number almost instantly.

Kiplagat, Kibet win Glo-Lagos International Half Marathon 2009

Lagos, Nigeria - World marathon champion Luke Kibet of Kenya and four-time world champion Lornah Kiplagat, a Kenyan-born Dutch runner, Saturday won the men's and women's events of this year's Glo-Lagos International Half Marathon in Nigeria's economic capital city.

Kibet clocked 1 hour, 7 minutes and 49 seconds to win the men's race, for which he got the top cash prize of US$50,000.

He was followed by Tsegaye Kebede of Ethiopia in 1:08.52 and Kip Kiprono of Kenya (1:09.17). Kebede received US$25,000 while Kiprono got US$15,000.

In the women's race, Kiplagat won in 1:16.23 to take the top prize of US$50,000, followed by Hilda Kibet (Kenya), her cousin, in 1:19.27 and Jane Gakunyi also of Kenya (1:20.06). Kibet got US$25,000 and Gakunyi received US$15,000.

The first Nigerian in the men's race is Stephen Jambe, a private in the Nigerian Army. He went away with a brand new Kia Picanto car worth over US$7,000. Jambe was followed by Harris Ismalia, who got 750,000 naira, and Danjuman Jyang, who was rewarded with 500,000 naira.

The top Nigerian woman is US-based Mary Akor, who also got a brand new Kia Picanto car, followed by Genevive Njoku (750,000 naira) and Ladi Henry Jah (500,00 naira).

It was the second running of the half marathon since Nigerian telecommunications company Globacom took over the sponsorship from rival telecommunications company MTN.

The organisers said the event is one of the richest, with a total prize money of US$210,000.

World men's marathon record holder Gabrselassie of Ethiopia watched the event, a day after he organised a clinic for 800 Nigerian school children in Lagos.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

20 FEBUARY 2009: RAK HALF MARATHON, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES




For the third consecutive year in its short life the Ras Al Khaimah Half Marathon produced some astoundingly fast performances which leap straight to the top of the world half marathon rankings. A world record and world bests en route were only denied by unseasonably strong winds. Packed elite fields on this pancake flat course promised great things, but the wind refused to abate and while brave running in both men's and women's races produced breathtakingly quick times, world records remained just out of reach. Deriba Merga passed 5km in 13:41 and 10km in 27:42 but the headwind worsened the effects of a slightly over-ambitious opening 5km, for which Merga paid in the final quarter of the race. He had continually surged ahead of Patrick Makau after 10km but the Kenyan had repeatedly pegged him back. Into the headwind betweem 16-18km, Makau closed the gap and eased past, piling on the pressure over the last 3km to such effect that Wilson Kipsang Kiprotich, never far adrift, passed Merga as well to grab second. Storming home in 58:52, the crowds around the finish were left wondering what might have been had the wind eased. Kipsang was seven seconds down in 58:59 and a tired looking Merga, only five weeks past his debut Marathon, loped home in 59:18. He is overdue for a rest, but plans to run Boston in just eight weeks' time. Merga missed Haile Gebrselassie's 2005 world best for 15km by just seven seconds (41:29 to 41:22) while Patrick Makau roared past 20km in 55:38, against Wanjiru's 55:31 during his world record for the half marathon


The women's race looked like following the tactical pattern of the last two years with a slow opening 5km of 16:12 holding a pack of fifteen athletes together. At 10km (32:14) the pack was down to ten, but a quartet comprising Dire Tune, Asefelech Mergia Abebu Gelan and last year's world leader Philes Ongori flew through the next 5km in 15:39 (15km: 47:53).
Dire Tune ran the next 5km in 15:49 to go clear and held on to win in a new personal best by almost four minutes. Mergia took second a full 30 seconds behind, although she too was 29 seconds faster than ever before, while Ongori in third also broached new territory with 1:07:50, another personal best, this time by 7 seconds. Five men broke the one hour barrier, and ten women broke 70 minutes.

MEN:
1 Patrick MAKAU ------------------KEN 0:58:52
2 Wilson K KIPROTICH -----------KEN 0:58:59
3 Deriba MERGA-------------------ETH 0:59:18
4 Wilson CHEBET------------------KEN 0:59:32
5 Matthew KOECH-----------------KEN 0:59:54
6 Joseph MAREGU-----------------KEN 1:00:02
7 Charles MUNYEKI---------------KEN 1:00:11
8 Tujuba MEGERSA--------------- ETH 1:00:16
9 Chele DECHASA----------------- ETH 1:00:19
10 Abel KIRUI---------------------KEN 1:00:27

WOMEN:
1 Dire TUNE ----------------------ETH 1:07:18
2 Aselefech MERGIA--------------ETH 1:07:48
3 Philes ONGORI -----------------KEN 1:07:50
4 Abebu GELAN ------------------ETH 1:07:57
5 Lydia CHEROMEI---------------KEN 1:08:14
6 Amane GOBENA ----------------ETH 1:08:16
7 Salina KOSGEI-------------------KEN 1:09:06
8 Rose KOSGEI--------------------KEN 1:09:14
9 Teyiba ERKESSO----------------ETH 1:09:37
10 Julia M MURAGA---------------KEN 1:09:40

Friday, February 6, 2009

Starting New 2009

This blog is for posting mostly Athletics and sporting events around the World.All will be brought to you by SuRich Athletics & Sports.