FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Getu Feleke: A Major Step for Him and for Vienna
When Kenya's Abel Kirui won the Vienna City Marathon in 2008 with a course
record time of 2:07:38 this was a big step forward for the biggest and best
quality road race in Austria. But at that time noone dared to think that
the Vienna record could go sub 2:06 one day. Kirui's time stood for four
years until Henry Sugut brought the mark down to just under 2:07, when the
Kenyan won in 2:06:58 in 2012. However this Sunday Getu Feleke smashed the
course record with a time of 2:05:41.
This is a new dimension for the Vienna City Marathon, which is an IAAF Gold
Label Road Race. As statistician Ken Nakamura points out the race is now
the 15th fastest in the world. In the year when the motto of the race was
"Everybody waltz" Vienna really waltzed forward.
For 27 year-old Getu Feleke Vienna was a major step back into world-class.
Running the second fastest time of his career it was the third time he
registered a sub 2:06 result. But the most important thing for Feleke was
that he succeeded after stomach problems stopped him last year. He is not
fully over it yet, but hopes this will be the case soon. "My big problem
really is my stomach," said Feleke, who clocked his personal best of
2:04:50 when he was second in Rotterdam in 2012. There was a scare in
Vienna two days before the race, when he got problems after lunch. "Then I
ate more bread yesterday and it was getting better. However during the
final two kilometres the problems came back." But Feleke held on to a
brilliant course record.
"It was a very good race for me, although in some parts it was windy. If
some of my rivals would have hold on longer I could have run sub 2:05
today," said the winner, who grew up 55 kilometres north of Addis Abeba in
Aleltu. Nowadays he lives in the capital and is coached by Getaneh Tessema.
Tsegaye Kebede and Ayele Abshero are among his training partners. Although
he does not train with Haile Gebrselassie he said that he learnt from the
Ethiopian superstar. "I saw that he always follows the pacemakers and that
he drinks every five kilometres."
"I would very much like to come back to Vienna," said Feleke, who will now
target an autumn marathon first. "I want to run the Berlin Marathon in
September." Asked about a possible world record pace in that race he
replied: "My dream is to break the world record. I train very hard for
this." In the pre-race press conference Feleke had explained that on some
days he trains three times and that he covers up to 280 kilometres in a
week during marathon training. "I would also like to run for Ethiopia in
the World Championships and in the Olympic Games one day."
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