Athletics New Zealand - News - Rotorua Marathon Field Shaping Up Four Weeks Out ©Lion Foundation Rotorua Marathon
Athletics New Zealand – News – Rotorua Marathon Field Shaping Up Four Weeks Out
Sam Wreford is the owner of the fastest marathon time in New Zealand on a certified course for the past 20 years and will be starting in the Lion Foundation Rotorua Marathon on Saturday 4 May hoping that kind of form will translate to victory in his first attempt at Rotorua.
The Timaru 30 year old ran 2 hours 16 minutes 35 seconds winning the Southland Marathon in November last year, the fastest time for a marathon in New Zealand since Paul Herlihy won the same event in 1993, recording 2:15:50.
Wreford also ran 2:17:30 winning the Christchurch Marathon in June last year and took out the New Zealand Cross Country title in Hamilton in August. He is coached by Barry Magee, Rome Olympic marathon bronze medallist.
After Rotorua Wreford is aiming to run another one or two marathons in 2013, and may look at an overseas marathon.
Wreford’s stiffest challenge is likely to come from defending champion Phil Costley, winner of over 30 New Zealand titles from 3000 metres to the Marathon.
At 43, Costley, a Nelson teacher is still reeling off some handy race victories and if Wreford falters, Costley could make it Rotorua Marathon title number four, sixteen years after his first.
Wellington’s Stefan Smith is making his debut over the marathon distance and could surprise.
The record for the Rotorua Marathon is 2:16:05 set by Paul Ballinger in 1988. Ballinger had a best of 2:10.15 set at the famous Fukuoka Marathon in Japan, the second best ever by a New Zealander. Although Wreford has run within a minute of that time, he is not expecting the record to be broken this year.
The New Zealand marathon champion, Tony Payne, from Auckland is the leading entry in the Half Marathon and will be using the race as a lead-up to the Gold Coast Marathon in early July. Payne has this week been named in the New Zealand team for the Oceania Marathon championship, to be run in conjunction with the Gold Coast event.
The women’s races at Rotorua are wide open with no clear favourites entered yet.
The iconic Rotorua event, in its 49th year, is New Zealand’s longest running and best known Marathon. The 42.195 km course wraps nicely around Lake Rotorua, allowing participants to start and finish at the Energy Events Centre in Rotorua’s Government Gardens.
Just four weeks out from the Rotorua Marathon, Half and Quarter Marathon and 5km, entries are streaming in and organisers are confident that last year’s total of just under 4,000 entrants will be passed.
Early bird entry fees apply until 13 April so organiser Murray Fleming is expecting the usual surge of registrations before the entry fee goes up on 14 April.
Brett Addison
Athletics NZ Communications Manager
021 849 099
Athletics New Zealand – News
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