2008 Tokyo Marathon Tokyo, Japan Febuary 17, 2008 Photo: Kazu Eguchi@Photo Run Victah1111@aol.com 631-741-1865 www.photorun.NET
Preview: Tokyo Marathon 2016
Four of the world’s elite distance runners will line up for the start of the Feb. 28, 2016 Tokyo Marathon with realistic hopes of winning half a million dollars as the 2016 Abbott World Marathon Majors Series IX champions.
The Tokyo Marathon marks the conclusion of Series IX of the 10-year-old ‘grand slam’ of marathon running, in which male and female athletes score points for their finishing positions at six of the best-known big city marathons in the world as well as at established global track and field competitions like the IAAF World Championships.
The revised format contest began at Tokyo Marathon 2015 and, after eight races, will come to a thrilling finale in the Japanese capital this weekend where one man and three women go all out for victory in pursuit of the winner-takes-all prize.
“It's been an amazing year,” said Tim Hadzima, Abbott World Marathon Majors general manager. “Series IX of the Abbott World Marathon Majors has seen it all: thrilling sprint races right up to the finish line, runaway victories, breakthrough performances and more. We look forward to another great race on the streets of Tokyo on Sunday, and to crowning our champions.”
The Contenders
Dickson Chumba, Birhane Dibaba, Helah Kiprop and Aberu Kebede can all leap to the top of their respective standings if they take the maximum 25 points on offer for victory.
Chumba, the Tokyo Marathon’s very own course record holder, is just 16 points behind fellow Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge, who earned 50 points for back-to-back victories at the London and Berlin marathons in 2015.
Chumba earned his spot on the leaderboard when he won the Bank of America Chicago Marathon last October, and placed third in Tokyo a year ago. If he can regain the Tokyo title he won in 2014, he will join Kipchoge on 50 points, an athlete’s top two scores counting towards their series total.
But it won’t be easy for Chumba, as the 29-year-old faces a formidable field that includes the hugely experienced Emmanuel Mutai, a former Virgin Money London Marathon champion who lies second on the world all-time list with his best of 2:03:13 and is one of only three men to have run quicker than 2 hours 4 minutes on two occasions.
Then there’s the former two-times world champion Abel Kirui and another Kenyan, Eliud Kiptanui, who was second at the BMW Berlin Marathon last September behind Kipchoge.
The Olympic and former world champion, Stephen Kiprotich, also has much to race for. The Ugandan lowered his personal best when finishing second in Tokyo last year just ahead of Chumba, and could move up from joint ninth to second in the standings with victory this year.
If Chumba’s task is tough, the women’s is even harder. Reigning TCS New York City Marathon champion Mary Keitany and world champion Mare Dibaba currently lead the standings together on 41 points after one win and one second place apiece in 2015.
But Birhane Dibaba can gallop past them both if she retains the Tokyo title she won last year. Another victory for the Ethiopian and another 25 points would take the 22-year-old clear to the top with 50 points; second place, worth 16 points, would put her level with the leaders.
Kiprop and Kebede can also reach 41 points if they break the tape first on Sunday. Kiprop was second behind Dibaba in Tokyo last year and picked up a silver medal at the World Championships in Beijing where she missed gold by one second after a four-woman fight to the finish. Currently holding 32 points on the leaderboard, the Kenyan needs to win to reach the summit.
As does Kebede, who has 16 points from her runner-up performance at the 2015 Berlin Marathon, where she was just outside her best. Kebede certainly knows how to get to the finish line first—she was the 2010 and 2012 Berlin champion, and took the 2013 Tokyo title. She has also earned big victories in Frankfurt, Shanghai and Rotterdam in the past.
The chief threat to this trio’s ambition lies with Edna Kiplagat, the experienced Kenyan who has won two World Championships titles as well as the London and New York City Marathons in the last six years. Kiplagat is out of the running for the big check, with only one point from this series, but she could certainly play her part in the outcome of the Series IX contest.
Notes:
For runners across the globe, competing in an Abbott World Marathon Majors race is a significant accomplishment. Six of the largest and most renowned road races in the world – the Tokyo, Boston, Virgin Money London, BMW Berlin, Bank of America Chicago and TCS New York City Marathons – make up AbbottWMM. The organization delivers several unique benefits to runners:
· Unparalleled experiences – operational excellence at each race ensures a premium race-day journey for runners
· Championship Series – Professional runners competing in AbbottWMM qualifying events compete for a prize purse every year
· Advancement of marathoning – AbbottWMM organizers aggressively champion anti-doping protocols and other efforts to move the sport forward
Abbott World Marathon Majors Series IX Championship
AbbottWMM determines the world’s best male and female marathoners, awarding a $1 million prize purse split evenly by the men’s and women’s champions.
The male and female winner of the Abbott World Marathon Majors Series IX Championship will be announced immediately following the conclusion of the 2016 Tokyo Marathon.
How it Works
Athletes earn the following points by placing among the top five in qualifying races during the 12-month period:
1st place – 25 points
2nd place – 16 points
3rd place – 9 points
4th place – 4 points
5th place – 1 point
The champions will be the male and female athletes who score the most points during the one-year scoring period. Points from a maximum of two races will be scored. An athlete must start in at least two races over the cycle to be eligible. If an athlete earns points in more than two events, the athlete’s highest two finishes will be scored.
If there’s a tie, the athlete finishing first in any head-to-head competition will be declared the winner. If their head-to-head record is level, the winner is the athlete who won more qualifying races during the period. If they are still level, the six AbbottWMM race directors determine the champion. They may decide to award the title jointly.
If its needed for the race directors to determine the champion, they will meet as a group immediately after the conclusion of the Tokyo Marathon, and participate in a vote to determine a winner of the AbbottWMM Series IX title, considering various criteria, including:
· Weather conditions at each race
· Course records for each race
· The competitive levels of runners whom the potential champions have overtaken in competition
· Swings in elevation for each course and the impact of winds to the competition
The following races make up the Abbott World Marathon Majors Series IX:
February 22, 2015 Tokyo Marathon
April 20, 2015 BAA Boston Marathon
April 26, 2015 Virgin Money London Marathon
August 22, 2015 IAAF World Championships Men’s Marathon (Beijing)
August 30, 2015 IAAF World Championships Women’s Marathon (Beijing)
September 27, 2015 BMW Berlin Marathon
October 11, 2015 Bank of America Chicago Marathon
November 1, 2015 TCS New York City Marathon
February 28, 2016 Tokyo Marathon
Source: Abbott World Marathon Majors
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