Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Distance running star Bekele now targets Olympic high in marathon

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@htlive.com

Circumstan­ces forced him into the marathon and it has led to Kenenisa Bekele recalibrat­ing goals and setting sights on Tokyo. The world record holder in the 5,000 and 10,000m and winner of three Olympic and five world championsh­ip gold medals is keen on doing the marathon in the 2020 Games.

“I really want to participat­e in the marathon in Tokyo. I have done many track races at Olympics and world championsh­ips and now I want to complete the circle, so to speak, by taking part in an Olympic marathon. That is my target,” said the Ethiopian long distance runner here on Friday.

At 35, Bekele, soft-spoken and media-shy, knows the odds are high. “Staying fit to qualify and competing with a young generation won’t be easy but I am looking forward to that challenge.”

Bekele is here for the Tata Steel Kolkata 25k run on Sunday, his second in the shorter distance. “You stay more relaxed and it (the 25k run) is closer to the 5,000 and 10,000m,” he said.

A ruptured calf muscle followed by a dodgy knee forced him off the track and that is when Bekele decided to shift focus. “It (running marathons) compensate­s for the years I lost. I missed racing for 5-6 years. Injuries made it difficult to do high speed running and speed workouts four times a week. So, I didn’t really have many options.”

But having shifted to the road, the man, once hailed as the “greatest distance runner we will ever see”, isn’t just going to make up the numbers. Bekele’s marathon career started with a win in Paris in 2014, a race where he also bettered debut times of Haile Gebrselass­ie, Paul Tergat and Samuel Wanjiru by clocking 2:05:04. Bekele said he planned to break the marathon world record of 2:02:57 set in 2014 by Kenyan Dennis Kimetto in Berlin before retiring. Despite a stop-start career hit by injuries, Bekele already has the second fastest mark of all time, 2:03:03 to win in Berlin.

“I am sure the record will be broken, not once maybe twice before Tokyo,” he said. Breaking the two-hour barrier would need ideal conditions but a timing of “2:01 and something” is possible, he said.

With Mo Farah switching to marathon, Bekele said he is looking forward to the kind of competitio­n they couldn’t have on track. “I was injured when Mo came up. I am happy that he has taken to road racing. Hope, we will run each other regularly.”

KOLKATA:

 ?? NYT ?? Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia after the 5000m gold at Beijing Olympics.
NYT Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia after the 5000m gold at Beijing Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India