World Marathon Majors Update: After real-Berlin Marathon
September 29, 2008 from press release - Irina Mikitenko has gone into the lead in the second season of the World Marathon Majors (WMM) 2007-2008 with her victory in the real, - BERLIN MARATHON. The German now has 65 points after a fantastic race in the German capital where she won in 2:19:19, making her the fourth fastest female marathoner of all time and taking her into equal first place alongside Gete Wami (Ethiopia) for the season. Mikitenko has also taken the lead for the third WMM Series in 2008-2009 with 50 points from two races. The 36-year-old had a surprise win in the Flora London Marathon in April and was second in Berlin a year ago.
In the men’s rankings Haile Gebrselassie, who improved his own world record with 2:03:59 in Berlin, has moved up to third with 50 points for the 2007-2008 season. But the Ethiopian has no chance of winning the overall WMM title. The Kenyan Martin Lel leads with 76 points and the only man who could overtake him is his compatriot Robert K. Cheruiyot, depending on whether the latter wins in Chicago or New York. But so far he has made no announcement about running either of those races on 12 October or 2 November. Haile Gebrselassie certainly has excellent prospects for the 2008-2009 season. He has 25 points, the same as Robert K. Cheruiyot, behind the Kenyan pair of Sammy Wanjiru (40 points) and Martin Lel (26).
The World Marathon Majors (WMM) brings together the best big city marathon races in the world (Flora London, Boston, real, - Berlin, Bank of America Chicago and ING New York City-Marathon) which have put up price money of one million dollars (US) for each of the WMM Series to be shared by the winning man and woman. A win in a WMM race is worth 25 points while fifth place earns one point. The marathon races at the World Championships and Olympic Games are also included in the series.
A really exciting contest is developing in the women’s competition for the second season of 2007-2008. Gete Wami must finish second or better in New York to improve her points’ total for the season. The Ethiopian has already taken maximum points from four races so finishing third, fourth or fifth would not benefit her. She was second in London in 2007, first in Berlin in 2007, second in New York in 2007 and third in London 2008.
There still remain the Chinese Chunxiu Zhou and Catherine Ndereba of Kenya who, if they win in Chicago or New York, could overhaul the rest and take the lead. However, after winning medals in the Olympic Marathon (silver for Ndereba, bronze for Zhou), neither has made any announcement about entering either of these races.
If the women’s competition should finish with Mikitenko and Wami level on points, then the win-loss ratio would be taken into account: even this would not produce a result since the Ethiopian finished ahead of the German in Berlin a year ago and the positions were reversed in London. At present, factors such as how many races runners have done to achieve their points’ total, how far in front of one another they’ve finished in terms of places or time in the relevant WMM races are not in the WMM rules. It would be up to the race directors' vote to decide the winner.
Men's 2007-2008 WMM Series Leaderboard
1. Martin Lel (KEN) 76 pts.
1st London 2007 2:07:41
1st New York 2007 2:09:04
1st London 2008 2:05:15
5th Olympic Games 2008 2:10:24
2. Robert K. Cheruiyot (KEN) 55 pts.
1st Boston 2007 2:14:13
4th Chicago 2007 2:16:13
1st Boston 2008 2:07:46
3. Haile Gebrselassie (ETH) 50 pts.
1st Berlin 2007 2:04:26
1st Berlin 2008 2:03:59
4. Abderrahim Goumri (MAR) 40 pts.
2nd London 2007 2:07:44
2nd New York 2007 2:09:16
3rd London 2008 2:05:30
5. Samuel Wanjiru (KEN) 40 pts.
2nd London 2008 2:05:24
1st Olympic Games 2008 2:06:32
Women's 2007-2008 WMM Series Leaderboard
1. Gete Wami (ETH) 65 pts.
2nd London 2007 2:21:45
1st Berlin 2007 2:23:17
2nd New York 2007 2:23:32
3rd London 2008 2:25:37
1. Irina Mikitenko (GER) 65 pts.
2nd Berlin 2007 2:24:51
1st London 2008 2:24:14
1st Berlin 2008 2:19:19
3. Zhou Chunxiu (CHN) 50 pts.
1st London 2007 2:20:38
2nd IAAF World Championships 2007 2:30:45
3rd Olympic Games 2008 2:27:07
4. Catherine Ndereba (KEN) 41 pts.
1st IAAF World Championships 2007 2:30:37
5th New York 2007 2:29:08
2nd Olympic Games 2008 2:27:06
5. Constantina Tomescu-Dita (ROU) 35 pts.
3rd London 2007 2:23:55
1st Olympic Games 2008 2:26:44
Athletes are awarded points for a top-5 finish, with 25 points for 1st, 15 for 2nd, 10 for 3rd, 5 for 4th and 1 for 5th. A maximum of four events can be counted in a two-year period.
Complete WMM Series leaderboards can be found at worldmarathonmajors.com.


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