Milkesa Mengesha on his way to victory at the 50th Berlin Marathon (© AFP / Getty Images)
Milkesa Mengesha and Tigist Ketema achieved an Ethiopian double at the BMW Berlin Marathon, a World Athletics Platinum Label road race, on Sunday (29).
Racing at the 50th edition of the event, held on a sunny morning in Germany’s capital, Mengesha kicked away from Cybrian Kotut in the closing stages to win the men’s title in a PB of 2:03:17, while Ketema solo ran her way to a 2:16:42 triumph in the women’s race.
Kenya’s Kotut finished five seconds behind Mengesha, securing second place in 2:03:22, with Ethiopia’s Haymanot Alew third in 2:03:31. Ketema led an Ethiopian top four in the women’s race, winning by more than two minutes ahead of her compatriots Mestawut Fikir (2:18:48), Bosena Mulatie (2:19:00) and Aberu Ayana (2:20:20).
After a fast start Mengesha, who finished sixth in the World Championships marathon last year, was part of a lead group of 11 that followed the pacemakers through the halfway mark still on sub-2:02 pace, in 1:00:57.
Kenya’s former world half marathon record-holder Kibiwott Kandie was to the fore as the pacemakers stepped aside just after 25km. The group had reduced to eight and was bunched together by the time 30km was reached in 1:27:21, and seven were still in contention – including Ethiopia’s Tadese Takele, the fastest man in the field – as they passed the 35km mark in 1:42:14.
Kandie, Takele and Ethiopia’s Dejene Megersa couldn’t hold on and the race was down to Mengesha, Kotut, Kenya’s Stephen Kiprop and Alew with around 5km to go. They reached the 40km mark in 1:56:59 before Mengesha and Kotut strode ahead.
Mengesha dropped his rival with the Brandenburg Gate finish line in sight, crossing it to win in 2:03:17, the third fastest time in the world so far this year and a PB that improves the previous best he set in Valencia in 2022 by more than two minutes.
He dropped to his knees and was followed over the finish line by Kotut in 2:03:22, also a PB by more than a minute.
Alew, Kiprop and Ethiopia's Hailemariyam Kiros followed them, and Yohei Ikeda finished sixth in a PB of 2:05:12, moving him to second on the Japanese all-time list.
Ketema was a dominant winner of the women’s race. The 26-year-old, who ran 2:16:07 when making her marathon debut in Dubai in January, is a training partner of Tigist Assefa, who set a world record of 2:11:53 when winning in Berlin last year.
Berlin Marathon winner Tigist Ketema (© AFP / Getty Images)
This time Ketema was in control and she was joined by her compatriot Azmera Gebru and a group of men’s race runners as 5km was reached in 16:06 and 10km in 32:14.
Ketema was 12 seconds ahead at halfway, which she hit in 1:07:53, and she only increased her advantage from there. She reached 30km in 1:36:59, by which point Gebru had been overtaken, with Ketema’s closest challengers being Mulatie, Fikir and Ayana who were running together 1 minute and 53 seconds back.
Ketema continued to forge ahead and she reached 40km in 2:09:24, with a gap of 2 minutes and 20 seconds. While Fikir closed slightly, Ketema was well clear and she won in 2:16:42, the third fastest time in the women’s race at the Berlin Marathon.
Fikir was second in 2:18:48, a PB by almost two minutes, while Mulatie was third in 2:19:00, taking almost eight minutes off her previous best set on her debut in Houston in January.
Ayana was fourth, while Japan's Ai Hosoda and Mizuki Matsuda finished fifth and sixth respectively, also in PB times.
The race featured a total of 54,280 finishers.
Leading results
Women
1 Tigist Ketema (ETH) 2:16:42
2 Mestawut Fikir (ETH) 2:18:48
3 Bosena Mulatie (ETH) 2:19:00
4 Aberu Ayana (ETH) 2:20:20
5 Ai Hosoda (JPN) 2:20:31
6 Mizuki Matsuda (JPN) 2:20:42
7 Calli Hauger-Thackery (GBR) 2:21:24
8 Yebregual Melese (ETH) 2:21:39
Men
1 Milkesa Mengesha (ETH) 2:03:17
2 Cybrian Kotut (KEN) 2:03:22
3 Haymanot Alew (ETH) 2:03:31
4 Stephen Kiprop (KEN) 2:03:37
5 Hailemariyam Kiros (ETH) 2:04:35
6 Yohei Ikeda (JPN) 2:05:12
7 Tadese Takele (ETH) 2:05:13
8 Oqbe Kibrom Ruesom (ERI) 2:05:37