Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa smashes world marathon record in Berlin
24th September 2023
The Ethiopian successfully defended her title in the process of breaking the four year record.
![Tigst Assefa. PHOTO| AFP](https://www.sportpesanews.com/images/large/tigst_assefa__photo__afp_3069988524.jpg)
- Assefa clocked 2:11.53 and took more than two minutes off the previous women's record of 2:14:04, which had been set by Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei at the 2019 Chicago Marathon.
- Chepkirui held on to second place in 2:17:49, while Tanzania’s Magdalena Shauri made a remarkable breakthrough to take third place in 2:18:41, a huge national record.
- A record eight women finished inside 2:20.
Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa successfully defended her Berlin Marathon title
in style as she smashed the world record with 2:11:53* at the German capital on
Sunday afternoon.
Assefa took more than two minutes off the women’s world record of
2:14:04, which had been set by Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei at the 2019 Chicago
Marathon.
A large pack of the leading contenders ran together through the early
stages of the women’s race, passing through 5km in 15:58. 13 women were still
in contact with the lead as they passed through 10km in 31:45.
By the time 15km was reached in 47:26, Assefa and compatriot Workenesh
Edesa had managed to open up a slight gap on Kenya’s Sheila Chepkirui and
Ethiopia’s 2015 world 5000m silver medallist Senbere Teferi and Zeineba Yimer.
The first 12 women were strung out, but still within 15 seconds of one
another – and all were running inside world record pace.
Sensing that most of her rivals were already starting to fade, Assefa
took greater command of the race by throwing in a 2:59 split for the 16th
kilometre. By the time she reached 17km, Assefa had dropped Edesa, the last of
her opponents, and had just a few male pacemakers for company.
Assefa seemed to grow in confidence – and pace – once she knew she was
alone at the front of the pack, and she went on to reach the half-way point in
1:06:20, putting her on track to smash the world record by more than a minute.
And then she sped up. The next kilometre was covered in 2:48, the
fastest of the race up to that point, extending her advantage over Edesa and
Chepkirui. Assefa’s 25km split of
1:18:40 was still well inside world record schedule; Chepkirui and Edesa, now almost
a minute behind the leader, had dropped off the pace, but were still on course
for huge PBs.
Assefa, still looking incredibly relaxed and composed, covered the next
10km segments in a remarkable 31:02, bringing her to 35km in 1:49:41. Her 30km
split was 1:34:12, the second-fastest mark in history for that checkpoint
(behind Ruth Chepngetich’s 1:34:01 from the 2022 Chicago Marathon).
But while Chepngetich faded badly in that race last year, Assefa went
from strength to strength in the closing stages in Berlin.
She got to 40km in 2:05:13, following another 15:32 5km split, putting
her on course for a finishing time in the 2:12 range. Spurred on by the
knowledge that the world record was in the bag, Assefa picked up her pace in
the closing kilometres and charged through the finish line in 2:11:53.
Chepkirui held on to second place in 2:17:49, while Tanzania’s Magdalena
Shauri made a remarkable breakthrough to take third place in 2:18:41, a huge
national record.
A record eight women finished inside 2:20.
Results
1 Tigst Assefa (ETH) 2:11:53
2 Sheila Chepkirui (KEN) 2:17:49
3 Magdalena Shauri (TAN) 2:18:41
4 Zeineba Yimer (ETH) 2:19:07
5 Senbere Teferi (ETH) 2:19:21
6 Dera Dida (ETH) 2:19:24
7 Workenesh Edesa (ETH) 2:19:40
8 Helen Bekele (ETH) 2:19:44
9 Charlotte Purdue (GBR) 2:22:17
Reporting by World Athletics