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Zersenay Tadese: IAAF Press Conference – World Half Marathon Championships

IAAF Press Conference – World Half Marathon Championships

From left: UK Athletics Chairman Ed Warner, Zersenay Tadese, IAAF Ambassador Wilson Kipketer, and IAAF General Secretary Pierre Weiss at the pre-champs press conference in Birmingham  (Getty Images)

From left: UK Athletics Chairman Ed Warner, Zersenay Tadese, IAAF Ambassador Wilson Kipketer, and IAAF General Secretary Pierre Weiss at the pre-champs press conference in Birmingham (Getty Images)

 

Birmingham, UK – There was pre-race drama ahead of tomorrow’s IAAF / EDF Energy World Half Marathon Championships in Birmingham, when three of the main medal contenders, Mary Keitany, Sammy Kitwara and Dathan Ritzenhein, were stuck for nearly an hour in the lift of the REP Theatre, which is being used as the press centre for the event, so preventing them appearing at the official IAAF Press Conference.

Thankfully all were eventually freed but after their exhausting ordeal they returned immediately to the athletes hotel.

Reigning World champion Zersenay Tadese of Eritrea was more fortunate because arriving a few minutes late missed being caught in the incident and speaking at the conference was very upbeat about winning a fourth successive title.

Tadese the World 10,000m silver medallist behind Kenenisa Bekele in August, said: "I am going  to run hard to win.”
 
"I have won for the last three years. After Berlin I started preparing for this race because it is important for me and tomorrow I will try to win again."

The Eritrean adamant he will not underestimate the opposition and contesting his first half marathon this year, added: "I was really happy with my performance in Berlin but I think for tomorrow I’m going to have to work hard to win."

Tadese who has a Spanish coach and manager, revealed: "I have prepared in Eritrea because it is high altitude and sometimes in Spain."
 
He insisted despite dropping out of the London Marathon in April on his debut over the distance, it has not affected his future career plans.

"Yes, I will still run on the track and in road races. (But) for the future I am going to run the marathon."
 
Tadese explained: "For the London Marathon (in April) I had problems after the World Cross Country (in March). One week before London I was sick.”

"Now tomorrow is important, the half marathon is a way forward."

Tadese who will spearhead his country’s challenge for a team medal, added: "Yes it’s possible but every country will be ready for this competition. But we’ll see if the team is ready.”
 
Earlier IAAF General Secretary Pierre Weiss announced there would be a review of the future of the World Half Marathon Championships by the IAAF Road Running Commission at a meeting which will be held after tomorrow’s race.

"We are not pleased with the participation and number of athletes and our federations in this competition," Weiss said with less than 50 countries taking part.

"We must open our eyes and speak with the experts and listen…. The debate is open and the matter will be discussed at our next IAAF Council meeting in November."

Although the championships offer US$245,000 dollars in prize money, “we do not offer what the top athletes receive for competing in world top marathons."

IAAF Ambassador Wilson Kipketer, the retired holder of the World 800 metres record discussing the massive divide in standards between African athletes and other global areas, provided an enlightened opinion.

The Kenyan now a Danish citizen, said:  "What ought we to do in Europe? We have the facilities but what we are missing is the right attitude.”

"The thing is how to use the things we have. So maybe that’s the problem – we’re (Europe) using them the wrong way.”

"Many argue we have to go train in high mountains – but that’s not what we need.”
 
"Most European athletes train hard but they need to compete more in head-to-heads so they can get confident running against someone who is faster than them. They will become more confident by racing and winning."

"I think it is more a psychological problem about training at altitude. They (Europeans) are running the mileage but they want to train at altitude and go to Kenya and train for one week."

Kipketer suggesting this could be wrong insisted: "But they are not training properly or timing and planning their seasons properly."

Ed Warner UK Athletics chairman whose federation hosted a highly successful endurance conference on Friday, expanded on the debate.

Warner stressing current trends can be reversed said: "I’m shaking my head. Ian Stewart’s (UKA’s endurance coach) philosophy would be that hard work has to be at the core of any athlete wanting to succeed against the African runners and that’s something that needs bringing to the party.”
 
"If you look at the women’s side, we have in Great Britain two of the world’s greatest marathon runners (Paula Radcliffe and Mara Yamauchi).”

"If you look at middle distance in Berlin (World championships) we won two medals (Jenny Meadows 800m bronze, Lisa Dobriskey 1500m silver).”

"So we’re certainly not defeatist. If you look at the common theme across those four athletes they’re all incredibly hard workers. There is no substitute for the hard work.”
 
"What Ian is bringing to the table is hard work. There arre some other things we should be doing such as collective training at altitude not just British training groups but multi national training groups.”

"Maybe we’ve been so insular. I think you’ll see the benefits over time.  The Americans are paving the way. There isn’t a defeatist spirit.”

Dave Martin for the IAAF


 

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Zersenay Tadese – to run marathon in future.


TADESE PLANS STEP UP TO MARATHONS

By David Martin, Press Association Sport

Zersenay Tadese, who dropped out of this year’s London Marathon, still intends moving up to the distance.

Tadese is a world class performer on the track, where his latest achievement was a World 10000 metres silver medal in August, and is also a former World Cross Country champion.

But after the Eritrean stopped aborted his marathon debut in London in April questions were asked as to whether he could follow in the footsteps of other track stars such as Haile Gebrselassie and Paul Tergat.

Tadese, who will chase a fourth successive World Half Marathon title in Birmingham on Sunday, believes his success in that event makes him a natural candidate to step up.

The 27-year-old said: "I will still run on the track and in road races but for the future I am going to run the marathon."

Reflecting on his London setback, he added: "For the London Marathon I had problems when one week before I was sick."

Tadese, who ran the fastest ever half marathon time of 59 minutes 5 seconds in the United Kingdom on the Great North Run course four years ago, insisted: "Tomorrow is important, the half marathon is a way forward. I have won for the last three years. After Berlin I started preparing for this race because it is important for me and tomorrow I will try to win again."

Whether two of his main rivals Sammy Kitwara and Dathan Ritzenhein will be at their bests is questionable after being stuck in a lift for around an hour and, along with women’s favourite Mary Keitany, missing today’s press conference.

Organisers sensibly cancelled their participation. Now all three athletes have to try to put the incident to the back of their minds before their competitions.

Great Britain’s hopes of success rest primarily with its women’s side who are without Paula Radcliffe, who is recovering from tonsilitis, and the injured Mara Yamauchi.

Team manager Liz McColgan believes her squad could snatch bronze if Japan, Russia and the United States underperform. Kenya and Ethiopia are tipped for gold and silver.



2 Comments

  1. Michael Amare says:

    The hero of Eritrean Spirit Zersenay Tadese.i am prud of you. Keep up the good work.i Thankyou Very Much .For the ferist Eritrea runer in history

  2. Anonymous says:

    iam sure tomorow zeresenay is to win i pray to GOD!!!!!!!!!!!!

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State of Eritrea ሃገረ ኤርትራ Hagere Ertra دولة إرتريا Dawlat Iritrīya

Anthem: Ertra, Ertra, Ertra Eritrea, Eritrea, Eritrea

Capital (and largest city) Asmara 15°20′N 38°55′E / 15.333°N 38.917°E / 15.333; 38.917

Official language(s) Tigrinya, Arabic, English Other languages Tigre, Saho, Bilen, Afar, Kunama, Nara, Hedareb,.

Ethnic groups 60% Tigrinya, 30% Tigre, 4% Afar, 3% Saho, 3% Kunama

Demonym Eritrean Government Provisional government - President Isaias Afewerki

Independence - From Italy November 1941 - From United Kingdom under UN Mandate 1951 - from Ethiopia de facto 24 May 1991 - From Ethiopia de jure 24 May 1993

Area - Total 117,600 km2 (100th) 45,405 sq mi - Water (%) 0.14%

Population - 2009 estimate 5,224,000[4] (109th) - 2008 census 5,291,370 - Density 43.1/km2 (165th) 111.7/sq mi

GDP (PPP) 2010 estimate - Total $3.625 billion[5] - Per capita $681[5] GDP (nominal) 2010 estimate - Total $2.117 billion[5] - Per capita $397[5] HDI (2007) steady 0.472 (low) (165th) Currency Nakfa (ERN)

Time zone EAT (UTC+3) - Summer (DST) not observed (UTC+3) Drives on the right ISO 3166 code ER Internet TLD .er Calling code 291 1 ,. National TV: Eritrea Television (ERI-TV)

Eritrea (play /ˌɛrɨˈtreɪ.ə/ or /ˌɛrɨˈtriːə/;[6] Ge'ez: ኤርትራ ʾErtrā, Arabic: إرتريا Iritrīyā), officially the State of Eritrea, is a country in the Horn of Africa. The capital is Asmara. It is bordered by Sudan in the west, Ethiopia in the south, and Djibouti in the southeast. The northeast and east of the country has an extensive coastline on the Red Sea, directly across from Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The Dahlak Archipelago and several of the Hanish Islands are part of Eritrea. Eritrea's size is approximately 117,600 km2 (45,406 sq mi) with an estimated population of 6 million...

Source: Wikipedia


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