FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Andrea Mayr – from the Steeplechase to mountains and up the Empire State
Building to the ultimate destination: Marathon in Vienna
There could hardly be a more complete elite runner than her: Andrea Mayr
ran middle and long distances on the track, she is the national record
holder in the Steeple Chase, she did cross country races, she is Austria's
fastest half marathon runner ever, one of the strongest mountain runners
worldwide and on top of that she is the holder of the course record of the
Empire States Buidling run-up in New York. Now the 29 year-old goes for the
one obvious challenge left: the marathon. On 19th April Andrea Mayr will
run the Vienna City Marathon, competing in a unique debutants only race.
"A year ago I would never have imagined that I would run a marathon this
April," says Andrea Mayr, who had too much respect of the heavy training
loads in the built-up to a marathon. "But meanwhile this has changed and it
actually appeals to me." Grown-up in Linz she moved to Vienna to study
medicine. She finished her studies in 2004 and continued living in the
city. With the Vienna City Marathon more or less at her doorstep she has
watched the event as a spectator at the roadside in the past, enjoying the
great atmosphere. "I am really looking forward to this race because people
will cheer me on in my hometown. It will be something special." Andrea Mayr
does not care much about her rivals and about possible chances concerning
places. "I will not study my opponents beforehand. I simply want to run a
good time and a fine debut marathon." Also she does not want to give
predictions regarding times since the marathon will be something new for
her.
Originally Andrea Mayr had planned to end her career in August 2008 – after
running the steeple chase at the Olympic Games. But she never made it to
Beijing. The Austrian record holder in the steeple (9:47.61 minutes) missed
the qualifying time by 1.61 seconds and was not picked for the team. "Then
I thought that this would not really be a suitable end to my career, having
missed the Olympics and running nowhere again. So I decided to add some
mountain races." Andrea Mayr then won the World Road Running Trophy for the
second time after 2006. "But even after winning this one I did not want to
retire. That was when I thought I should go for the Vienna City Marathon.
In December I started training for the marathon and from January onwards I
trained very seriously for Vienna."
Already as a child Andrea Mayr was a good runner. Her parents had taken her
with them when they went mountain climbing. And when they took her to
children's races she was always winning. "It was great fun and I never was
doing any training." She continued winning cross country races at primary
school, but it was gymnastics that was her first sport at that time. "But
then I became too tall for gymnastics and finally stopped it at the age of
15. I had done well at regional level, but there would have been no way of
competing internationally." After that she started training and first was a
middle distance runner. Later she ran the steeple chase, where she
qualified for the World Championships in 2005 and 2007. On both occassions
she did not make the final.
When she was about 20 she had entered her first mountain race. "It was a
coincidence, because the regional championships took place in Linz. So I
thought I should just go and run since Linz is my hometown. But I finished
so far down the field that I felt really embarresed. I thought I should do
much better. So I came back to the same race one year later and won –
though it was no championship race this time," Andrea Mayr recalls. That
was the start of her successful mountain running career, during which she
also won the famous ,Obudu Ranch' race in Nigeria. Here she beat a number
of prominent African athletes in autumn 2008. "That was a great success,
because often people had said: you are only winning in the moutains because
the African runners are not competing. But this time I had beaten a number
of them."
It was this year, when Andrea Mayr improved the Austrian half marathon
record to 1:12:14. Back in 2006 she had another remarkable success at yet
another discipline: The Austrian took the Empire State Building run-up in
New York. She covered the 1,576 steps (102 floors) in 11:23 minutes. This
course record still stands today.
More information and online entry for the Vienna City Marathon is available
at: www.vienna-marathon.com
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