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Million Dollar Man?-Gebselassie in Dubai
July 3, 2007
From press release
They have the world's only seven-star hotel; now they've got
the
world's only 24 world-record runner. Fresh from his two
most recent
world bests, last week, Haile Gebselassie of Ethiopia
announced this
morning in Dubai that he will compete in the next Standard
Chartered
Dubai Marathon, scheduled for January 18, 2008. That, said
Haile will
be his final marathon before the Olympic Games in Beijing
next summer.The event was recently upgraded, with the injection of a one
million
US dollars prize pot, with both men's and women's winners
taking away
$250,000 (double the biggest prize elsewhere). There is an
additional
one million dollars on offer from Dubai Holding to anyone
(man, woman
or both) breaking the marathon world record. Haile's old
rival, Paul
Tergat of Kenya holds the men's record, with 2.04.55, while
Britain's
Paula Radcliffe has the women's record of 2.15.25. "I still have ambition," said Haile, after a morning trot along
the
sand near the Dubai landmark, the Burj Al-Arab hotel. "My
aims are to
break the marathon world record, and win the Olympic
Games marathon.
I'd like to break the world record here in Dubai, and my
training
towards that begins tomorrow. Because if you ask which is
the most
important, I would say my priority is to break the world
record". Asked if Beijing would be his swansong, his reply was
emphatically
negative, referencing famous Ethiopian predecessors. "I'm
still only
34. If you look at Miruts (Yifter), he won the Olympics at 39,
and
Mamo (Wolde) was 40 years of age. I'll only be 38 in London
2012, so
why not?" Haile didn't do so well in London recently, having to drop out
of the
marathon in April, with what turned out to be a pollen allergy
he
didn't know he had. "The doctor told me years ago that I had
some
allergies, but I didn't remember what, and I think global
warming made
London full of pollen for this year's race". But he stormed back in inimitable fashion. Having virtually
given up
the track three years ago, to concentrate on marathons,
Haile got back
onto the tartan after London, with a 10,000 metres in
Hengelo, near
his training base in the Netherlands, and ran 26min
52.81sec. "That
was extraordinary," said his long-time manager, Dutchman
Jos Hermens,
"he only had three sessions on the track, and ran sub-27
minutes. If
he did some proper speed work, I think he could still run
26.30". That performance persuaded Haile that he should have a
crack at the
one-hour and 20,000 metres world records, a rare failure for
him a
half dozen years ago. He succeeded this time, in Ostrava,
Czech
Republic last Wednesday, when he ran 21,285 metres in
the hour, having
recorded 56.25.98 for 20,000 metres en route. They were
his 23rd and
24th world records or bests. Added, of course, to his two
Olympic and
four world 10,000 metres titles, and almost innumerable
victories and
achievements elsewhere, since he broke into the big-time,
with a
double victory, at 5000 & 10,000 metres, in the World Junior
Championships in 1992. Haile's marathon best is 2.05.56, which he recorded in
winning in
Berlin 2006, making one of only five men under 2.06. He
returns to
Berlin in September for another run in the German capital.
"Ideally,
I'd like him to break the world record a little in Berlin," said
manager Hermens, "then a lot in Dubai". "This is undoubtedly a monumental day for athletics in the
UAE (United
Arab Emirates)," said Dubai race director, Peter Connerton.
"Having
Haile agree to run in Dubai takes the event to a completely
new
level". further info: +44 7900 243460
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