Ethiopian Asimarech Naga to Race TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon  

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By Paul Gains 

Up until two years ago Asimarech Naga was a promising track athlete favouring the 3,000m steeplechase event. Now, the 26-year-old Ethiopian expects to contend for the $25,000 CDN first place prize money at the 2025 TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon on October 19. 

“If it is God’s will I want to win as I am preparing well for it,” she declares. “I know the Toronto Waterfront Marathon is the biggest marathon in Canada and the course is flat. I am so excited to be there for the first time and do something great.” 

Plagued by injuries she believes were caused by wearing track spikes for her chosen event she made the decision to join legendary coach Haji Adillo’s marathon training group in 2023. The decision has paid off handsomely.  

Last year she won the Dublin Marathon in a time of 2:24:13 setting a new course record in the process. And in March of this year, she finished second in the Wuxi Marathon in China running a solid 2:24:21 and firming up her status as an Ethiopian marathon runner to keep an eye on. Having successfully immersed herself in coach Haji’s training program the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, a World Athletics Elite Label race, is a challenge she welcomes. 

“I have so many strong athletes (to train with) and as the coaching program is great it is really helping me,” Asimarech says adding she has drawn inspiration from a variety of influences during her ascent in the world of marathoning. 

“My first inspiration, and the one who built up my morale, was my sport teacher back in my elementary school. And from athletes I am inspired by the athlete Derartu Tulu.” 

Derartu Tulu became the first black African woman to win an Olympic gold medal when she won the 1992 Barcelona 10,000m. Like many of the country’s Olympic champions she is a national hero. 

On her first visit to this continent Asimarech will be accompanied by the aforementioned Haji Adillo a sure sign he has high expectations for his latest charge. Considering he has trained several Olympic and world champions plus numerous winners of World Marathon Majors during his coaching career his interest in seeing Asimarech succeed is noteworthy. 

“I have coached her two years,” he says. “If everything goes as planned and also if there will be a good pacer she will run 2:22, 2:23.” 

His training groups can number over one hundred athletes on any given day and have included some of the world’s best including the three-time Olympic track champions Tirunesh Dibaba who is the cousin of Derartu Tutu and Kenenisa Bekele.  

After unequalled track careers Tirunesh was the 2017 Chicago Marathon champion while Kenenisa won the Berlin Marathon twice. Other standouts have included Lelisa Desisa, the 2019 World Champion and two-time Boston Marathon champion. 

“There are many successes I can mention,” Haji responds when asked which performance is most treasured. “But if I have to mention one, it was and will always remain in my heart, Mare Dibaba’s 2017 World Championships win. This was the first women’s World Championships marathon win for me and also for my country, Ethiopia. And being able to deliver this win for Ethiopia is the biggest success of all. 

“I am so proud of all my athletes’ achievements and what these great athletes have reached. All were able to earn great results which make me proud but, as I mentioned earlier, the greatest moment for me is Mare’s first World Championship win.” 

It should be noted that Mare Dibaba, no relation to Tirunesh, finished second in the 2011 Toronto Waterfront Marathon. 

Haji himself was an international marathon runner during his younger days and ran 2:12:25 for the distance in the 1999 Graz Marathon in Austria. A former classmate of Haile Gebrselassie – the two-time Olympic champion and former world record holder at distances from 5,000m to the marathon – the pair traveled by bus from their town of Arsi to the Ethiopian capital of Addis as young men.  But Haji suffered serious health issues while at the height of his running prowess.  

“I think it was around 2000, and it was something related to what I ate which led me to having surgery,” he offers. The surgery did not go well, and he underwent another surgery a week later. The compounded effects put an end to his running career. 

While Haile continued his progress setting 27 world records and winning multiple World Championship and Olympic gold medals Haji began to think about coaching. He laughs when asked how many medals his athletes have won at major championships from African to World and Olympics. 

“Too many to count as my athletes are still getting medals,” he responds. “Maybe over a thousand? But I think I can say there might not be a personal coach to get as many as I have so far.” 

Clearly, he has an extraordinary ability to recognize extremely talented athletes and develop them into world beaters. Could it be that Asimarech Naga is his latest rising star?  

Noah Kipkemboi Has Victory in Mind at TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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By Paul Gains

Noah Kipkemboi returns to the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon October 19 intent on victory in this World Athletics Elite Label race

A year ago the Kenyan recorded a personal best time in Toronto (2:07:31) to finish 3rd and now looks forward to another dual with the man who finished just eight seconds ahead of him in second place, his countryman Dominic Ngeno.

“I hope to win,” he says with a smile. “Because he (Ngeno) challenged me last year with two kilometres [to go]. I think this time I will be able to catch up with him.

“For sure we are training good. Last week I ran in the Klagenfurt (Austria) Half Marathon, I was third (62:09). Last year I went to that race (and ran 62:23) and then had a good race in Toronto. I think will run my best in Toronto.”

Kipkemboi, 32, is represented by Global Sports Communications, the Netherlands-based management company that also represents marathon superstar, Eliud Kipchoge a two-time Olympic champion at the distance. Besides training at the Global Sports camp in Kaptagat, they travelled the world together. Kipkemboi has been a faithful pacemaker for Kipchoge. Indeed, he helped him to a then world record of 2:01:09 in the 2022 Berlin Marathon.

“I am in the same camp as Eliud, we train together and we race together,” Kipkemboi reveals. “Most of the races I have been pacing have been for Eliud.

“Always I have been pacing him because he is a good guy, and you cannot push to a time he doesn’t like. I have been training with him at camp, so I always know how to run with Eliud in races when I pace him. When you are a pacemaker, you have to be ready to help push.”

The group trains under Coach Patrick Sang, himself an Olympic silver medalist in the 3,000m steeplechase. From Monday to Friday, they live at the camp, going home only on weekends.  The commitment is even more impressive considering that Kipkemboi has a wife and three young children at home in Eldoret. He has a plot of land there on which he farms, and he also owns a shop. Both ventures he sees as preparation for life after running.

“Things I sell in the shop are things human beings use like soap, flour, sweets, many things, perfumes,” he explains. “That is what I have in the small shop.”

Like many Kenyan runners he has a strong commitment to his community and to helping others.

“I am supporting some people who are in need. Like right now I’m supporting some students at my village,” he reveals. “It is opportunity to help whoever needs help in my village. I have some kids in my village who need support now and after five years.”

That support includes paying school fees and providing food. It is by competing at races such as Toronto Waterfront that allows him to help his family and the community in which they live. But Toronto, he says, has also provided cherished memories.

“We went to see Kenyan people while there last year,” he says smiling again. “In Toronto we were like at home because there were Kenyan people living there who came to say hi to us. We were as happy as if we were at home.”

Returning to Toronto to face a strong field once again is foremost on his mind as he puts in the training volume necessary to be competitive. And it is with confidence that he fine tunes the preparation in the coming weeks.

“I am now preparing for a win. It is my hope to win the race this time,” he declares. “My objective is just to win and improve my time. I ran my personal best in Toronto (2:07:31) but I want to improve upon that.”

The Toronto Waterfront course record is 2:05:00 held by another of KIpkemboi’s training partners, Philemon Rono. Should the conditions and the designated pacemakers be ideal that could well be a target on race day.

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Thomas Broatch Chasing a Second Canadian Title at TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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By Paul Gains

Two years ago, Thomas Broatch was crowned Canadian marathon champion at the 2023 TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon. It was a remarkable achievement considering it was the Vancouver native’s debut at the distance.

Now, he returns to this year’s edition a different athlete, a more seasoned competitor, with the dream of joining an exclusive group of five Canadian men who have broken the 2 hours 10 minutes barrier.

It’s an achievable goal, certainly. The University of British Columbia graduate raced to a personal best of 2:10:35 at the Houston Marathon in January of this year.  That marked an almost six-minute improvement over his first Toronto performance (2:16:25).

“It is a pretty iconic barrier, and I definitely feel I am able to shave off a second per kilometre,” Broatch, 26, says with conviction. “It seems doable.  I am planning to do a 10K one month out. If I run a time like what I ran in Ottawa, then it would give me a good indication I am ready to take a crack at sub-62:10.”

In May he finished 5th at the Canadian 10km championships in Ottawa running a new personal best of 28:56.

“I am doing some shorter 5k pace intervals once a week,” he reveals. “I haven’t found the (high) milage taking too much away from my 10k speed. I think it will be a good indicator of what I can do in the marathon.”

The lure of a Canadian championship medal also tipped the scales when it came to choosing a fall marathon. Once again, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon is the official Canadian marathon championships in addition to being a World Athletics Elite Label race.

Broatch realizes the competition for the podium is stronger than two years ago and includes two Canadian Olympians:  Ben Flanagan, and his former training partner at the University of British Columbia, John Gay.

Besides running 5,000m in 13:04.62 to qualify for the Paris Olympics Flanagan is a three-time winner of the Falmouth Road Race and has a best half marathon time of 61:00. Meanwhile, John Gay ran the 2021 Olympics earning a place in the 3,000m steeplechase final.

“What they have done over the shorter distances is really impressive; much faster than I have run,” Broatch admits. “So, in some ways it’s a bit intimidating.

“It is kind of interesting two years later.  Not that I am old and experienced, having a few marathons under my belt, it will kind of balance out a bit – me being slower over the shorter distances.”

Broatch passed another milestone recently, the third-year anniversary of his work with Clir Renewables, a Vancouver based renewable energy software company. Although he is racing men who are pretty much full-time athletes he isn’t complaining. And he works mostly from his Vancouver apartment.

“Not having the commute defining helps,” he says. “I almost never run in the middle of the day I still always run before and after work. I don’t find it that hard. It’s definitely a big commitment but I think I have a pretty efficient schedule. I don’t do weights or any of that other stuff. I just run.”

Now he reckons his training is going well as his training volume rises to 200 kilometres a week. In July he flew to Australia to run the Gold Coast Marathon and after running quickly over the first half of the race he had ‘a pretty big blowup’. The positive outcome is that he took some time to recover and build back gradually for Toronto.

An avid reader he says he has recently enjoyed another book ‘The Wandering Earth’ by the Chinese author Liu Cixin who also wrote ‘The Three Body Problem’. And he’s found another pastime – going to his local library.

“They have a good collection of magazines that they refresh every month and that has been a nice change from reading a lot of books,” he explains. “Depending on the mood I am in National Geographic is good. I am still reading a bit and playing golf regularly.”

“I had a good round a few weeks ago with some people from my club and my coach.”

In a two on two he and his friend Evan Elder ‘suffered’ defeat at the hands of coach Chris Johnson.

“I guess technically we lost but we felt we won because we were considerable underdogs and we both had our best round ever,” he says to rationalize the loss. “We lost but in the same way as running you can lose and still run a good time and feel good.”

With two clear objectives for this year’s Toronto Waterfront Marathon – a podium finish and a sub two-hour ten-minute clocking – Broatch is highly motivated. And the fact he will face a strong international and domestic field bodes well.

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Rachel Hannah Chasing Best Performance at TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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By Paul Gains

Shoe technology, better nutrition and modernized training methods are allowing distance runners to continue their careers far beyond what was once considered retirement age. Rachel Hannah is a prime example.

At 39 years of age the Port Elgin, Ontario resident is running as well as ever and is now aiming for a personal best at the 2025 TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon, October 19.

Hannah ran 2:32:09 at the 2016 Houston Marathon six months after claiming the 2015 Pan Am Games marathon bronze medal in Toronto.

“That is definitely my goal for Toronto –  to get a personal best,” she says between appointments for the nutrition counselling business she owns. “I tried to get one last fall. My race times have improved slightly so I feel in a better spot going into this race. I am going to go for it. To get under 2:32 would be awesome.”

Earlier this year, just four weeks after running 2:34:42 on the hilly and point-to-point Boston Marathon course, she finished 5th in the Canadian 10km championships in 33:38. Those championships were held in Ottawa. Her personal best at the latter distance is 33:08 set a decade ago. The Ottawa result surprised her. Needless to say, she is encouraged.

“I find I recover really well. I have learned to make sleep more of a priority,” Hannah admits. “Definitely I credit my nutrition, keeping my protein high, focusing a lot on recovery nutrition.  Over the years I have been consistent, I havent had to take time off with injury for five or six years. I take time off after a marathon but that part of it helps.”

Twice a week now she is also doing weight training at home. Besides her home-based nutrition counselling business – she has a degree in human nutrition from Georgia State University – she is a nutritionist for the University of Guelph. Six years ago she also earned the International Olympic Committee’s Sport Nutrition Diploma.

Recently she has focused on remote interviews with Guelph students rather than making the two-hour (each way) commute.  That has helped find the time to put in the 160km to 180km a week she has been doing in preparation for what will be her fourth Toronto Waterfront.

“I am pretty consistent, I will block off my mornings to train,” she reveals. “I find people want mid-day to later day appointments in nutrition counselling. Most people don’t want to talk first thing in the morning.

“I do weight training in the morning and I have to get back. If I do it in the morning. Three days a week I run doubles with a second run around appointments. I work 95% from home now.”

Coached by her husband Joe Chappell she reveals she has been doing ‘double threshold’ workouts.

In addition to being a World Athletics Elite Label race, again, the event will be the official Athletics Canada National Marathon Championship. A year ago Hannah claimed the Canadian Championship bronze medal in 2:34:33 here. She jokes, having run around 2:34 a few times now, she must find another two minutes to get that personal best.

Amongst a growing list of world class athletes from across the globe Hannah will join 2019 Canadian Champion and 2021 Olympian, Dayna Pidhoresky plus Ottawa resident Salome Nyirarukundo on the start line. The latter, a 2016 Olympian for Rwanda, won the Under Armour Toronto 10k finishing just ahead of Hannah. The pair have spoken many times over the years at races and have developed a friendship.

On a recent Saturday morning in August Hannah met up with Nyirarukundo and her coach, Ray Dupuis, for a 30km run in Plantagenet, Ontario a site located midway between Ottawa and Cornwall, Ontario.  Hannah was visiting family in the region.

“It was awesome,” Hannah says of the experience. “We got to know each other over the years and we stayed at the same hotel during the 2025 Under Armour Toronto 10k. We were saying we should get together for training.

“We talked over text a few weeks and her coach was there and brought out some other athletes. So we had a really long run together. It was the first time to train with each other. It was really great. It was probably one of the best long runs I have done.”

Besides knowing the Toronto Waterfront course intimately Hannah credits the organization especially knowing that pacers will be provided for each group with a target pace. There is another factor that keeps her coming back.

“I think the cheer groups are really nice because you know the (people in the) cheer groups a lot of the time,” she says with a laugh. “Whereas at bigger races Chicago or Berlin I am not going to know who is cheering for me. When you put a name to the face its a lot nicer getting home. That’s why I like Toronto a lot.”

Like all runners Hannah will be paying attention to weather forecasts leading up to race day. Toronto generally received cooler temperatures in October and that is just fine with the elites. Whatever the conditions she knows she will have prepared to the best of her ability with a personal best and, perhaps, a Canadian championship medal in mind.

“I feel confident and I will go for it,” she declares.

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Kenya’s Dominic Ngeno Returning to TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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By Paul Gains

It says a lot about a marathon when its podium finishers are eager to return. A year ago Dominic Ngeno crossed the finish line second at the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon. Now, from his home in Iten, Kenya, he announces he will return for this year’s edition set for October 19.

“It was an amazing race last year and I learned a lot,” he says with a grin. “The race was good. I am coming now to combat.

“I was so happy that the fans were cheering us all the way in the streets. It was so amazing.”

There have been lots of positive developments in Ngeno’s career in the past few months. He left the training camp he had been at in Kaptagat to return to his home in Iten, 2,400m above sea level. He says that Iten, the ‘Home of Champions’, is better suited to him. He is happier there.

As evidence he can point to April’s Paris Marathon where he finished 5th in a new personal best of 2:06:37.

“I ran 2:06:37 in Paris and it is a hard course,” he explains. “It is not like Toronto. When I came to Toronto (last year) I was fearing it was a hard course because for two or three years the guys were running 2:09, 210. So, I was fearing it was not like going to be fast. But when I finished the race, I saw it was good. Paris compared to Toronto? Toronto is a nice course.”

As he speaks via WhatsApp video he excitedly details how well his training is going and credits his ‘team’ of six fellow athletes with pushing him.

The night before this conversation he had run 20 kilometres and, this morning, another 10km. An evening track session, in which he will run a kilometre hard on the track fifteen times with a short rest, is to follow his interview. He has also put in some 40km runs every couple of weeks. It’s an exhausting schedule which leaves little time for anything else.

“When I am not training, I am resting in the compound – just sleeping,” he reveals with a smile. “Sleeping is part of the training part of the program. After lunch I sleep for a period of time then go for training. When I come back, I take tea and wait for dinner.”

Like many Kenyan runners he does, however, find time to watch English Premier League football.

“Yeah, I am a big fan of English Premier League. I am a big fan of Chelsea. The blues,” Ngeno says smiling. “I have a favourite Chelsea player, before it was [Ivory Coast’s] Didier Drogba for now my favourite is [English international] Cole Palmer.”

Ngeno turns 28 on September 3rd but he is still relatively new to the marathon. After high school where he enjoyed soccer, he went to college in Eldoret, Kenya for two years where he met some of the leading Kenyan runners. But it was a chance meeting with 2022 London Marathon champion – and 2019 world championship bronze medalist – Amos Kipruto at a 2021 cross country meet that opened his eyes.

“We had some small interactions,” Ngeno remembers. “He really inspired me because he didn’t run so many half marathons, and his dream came through after he started running marathons. That kept me inspired. I ran only two half marathons. I decided to be a marathoner full time.”

Ngeno recognizes that earning money as a professional runner can pave the way to a bright future. He has a contract with Asics which helps a great deal. And, he has his sight on the TCS Toronto Waterfront marathon first place prize of $25,000CDN. That sum goes a long way in Kenya.

“There is life after running so you need to invest whatever you get,” he says. “You need to do some business. Like now I have a small business – I have electronics stores also I am doing farming – and after running I will work with my family and work on that.

“I have shops and there are some guys who are working for me in the shops. Whenever somebody needs something like a television, anything, they can go to buy there.”

Some of the greatest marathoners have run well at ages once considered beyond prime. Haile Gebrselassie, Kenenisa Bekele and Eliud Kipchoge all come to mind. So Ngeno could have another decade in front of him. It is something he has pondered.

“First I love running and because I love running, I want to run my best and so my life will not remain the same,” he declares. “I want to be the best. I have that dream (running for Kenya).

“This year when they were selecting the team I was not far from selection. I believe soon I will run for Team Kenya. I have love for my country, and I believe I will represent my country in years to come, maybe at the World Championships or Olympic Games.”

Now his focus is on the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon where he intends to combat a world class field.

Young Ethiopian Duo Set Sights on TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

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By Paul Gains

Ethiopian runners from the UK based Moyo Sports management group emerged victorious in both the men’s and women’s races at last year’s TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon with Mulugeta Uma winning the men’s division and Waganesh Makesha taking the women’s.

Now, the group has high hopes for two more of their athletes who have committed to the 2025 edition of the race set for October 19. They are Almaz Kebebe and Adane Anmaw.

Neither would garner much attention under normal circumstances, but the raw potential of these two young women is compelling.

“Toronto is a race that is known in my training group.,” says Adane, 21, who is making her marathon debut at Toronto Waterfront. “We had the winners last year and podiums in previous years. Toronto is a race I have seen on TV.  But more importantly I have chatted to my teammates about it.”

Adane turns 22 on October 21, two days after the race. A year ago, she established her credentials as a world class distance runner with her performance at the 2024 Cardiff Half Marathon where she was 4th in 67:47. To put that in perspective that is two minutes faster than Canadian marathon record holder, Natasha Wodak, has run for the distance.

“I would like to be in the pace for the first group which will mean I can be together with other women, especially my training partner Almaz,” she adds.

Depending upon weather conditions, that group could be targeting the course record Waganesh Makesha set last year (2:20:44). Asked if she is nervous about lining up for her first marathon, she shrugs it off.

“Who doesn’t have nerves sometimes? It is a good thing if managed well,” she responds. “So I am sure I will be a bit nervous. But when the gun goes, I will be focused only on doing a good race.”

Earlier this year she traveled alone to the United States where Moyo Sports had arranged two races for her. She crossed the line second in the Cherry Blossom/US Ten Mile Championships running 51:00.  Adane also took second in the famed Lilac Bloomsday 12km.

“This was great. It was good overall to get some short races in,” Adane explains. “My management has had athletes win in the Lilac Bloomsday and Cherry Blossom 10-mile race before. So, we always have athletes from our team in these races.”

Almaz Kebebe, meanwhile, is the more experienced marathoner of the pair having run a total of two marathons already – both in 2025. Yet, she is still a teenager – turning 20 on September 15th. She was 8th in Dubai in 2:23:30 and also 8th in Rotterdam (2:24:03).

“Dubai was my debut, yes. I was so pleased to run a good first marathon and, even though I was only 8th, for me, this was just the start,” she declares.

“I learnt that patience is important as I was only new to this distance. And that trusting your coach and training is important.”

Almaz was born in Bekoji, the legendary ‘Town of Runners’ known for many of Ethiopia’s Olympic champions such as Kenenisa Bekele, TIrunesh Dibaba and Derartu Tulu. She moved to Addis five years ago. It is where most leading coaches are based. Now she and Adane train together with Waganesh Mekasha and also with Mestawut Fikir, (2nd in 2024 Berlin with a time of 2:18: 48) and Kumeshi Sichala, winner of the 2025 Houston Marathon (2:20:42).  Keeping up with such impressive training partners has given her much confidence.

“I am aiming to run a personal best (at Toronto Waterfront),” she offers. “This is an important next step for me. But I believe I can be on the podium, if not win this race.”

Clearly, this group has developed an affinity for the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon. Now it’s a case of seeing if whether they can produce more winners of this World Athletics Elite Label Race. Almaz Kebebe and Adane Anmaw are brimming with confidence.

TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon Women’s Race Preview

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Three years ago, on the last occasion, when thousands lined up in person for the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, Magdalyne Masai stopped the clock at 2:22:16.  

Not only was this a new personal best for the affable Kenyan but she had also shaved one second off the Canadian All-comers’ record.  

The former mark (2:22:17) had been set by Ethiopia’s Gelete Burka in Ottawa a year earlier and, in an exciting match-up which the organizers have arranged, both athletes will be on the starting line fit and ready to battle for the $25,000 first place prize money, October 16th. 

The global pandemic put most racing on hold. But Gelete squeezed in two marathons before everything shut down winning the 2019 Paris Marathon and finishing 3rd in Chicago six months later.  

The 36-year-old, who has a best time of 2:20:45 from the 2018 Dubai Marathon, was scheduled to return to Ottawa this past spring but her passport was not returned to her in time to travel. The disappointment of completing an extended marathon buildup and then being robbed of a competitive opportunity has left this three-time Olympian desperately starved for a race. Organizers hope her appetite is satiated in Toronto. 

Masai herself has not raced since winning the 2019 Toronto Waterfront. She and her husband, New Zealand international Jake Robertson, became parents of a baby boy, Jake Jr., in July 2021. Prior to his birth they spent several months in Mount Maunganui just outside Auckland. She has maintained fitness throughout but is anxious to test herself once more on the roads. 

While the focus has understandably been on these two record-setters it is easy to forget that both Ruth Chebitok of Kenya (2:21:03) and Ethiopia’s Bedatu Hirpa (2:21:32) have also run faster than the Toronto course record and come prepared to challenge for the top rung of the podium.  

This will not be Chebitok’s first time in Toronto. In 2018 she finished 3rd in 2:23:29 and was 6th in 2019 (2:24:13).  That experience could come in handy as she navigates her way along the streets of Toronto. Her personal best came in finishing 2nd in Vienna on April 24th of this year –  one place ahead of Gelete Burka. 

Hirpa, just 23 years old, was 3rd in the 2020 Dubai Marathon (2:21:55) while her personal best of 2:21:32 came in 2018 when she was 3rd in Frankfurt.  Not bad for the former world youth 1,500m champion. 

Canadian fortunes rest on the shoulders of 42-year-old Malindi Elmore whose 9th place finish in the 2021 Olympics was the best by a Canadian woman since Sylvia Ruegger’s 8th in the inaugural women’s Olympic marathon. That was all the way back in 1984. 

 After seeing her Canadian record (2:24:50) obliterated recently, Elmore will no doubt see Toronto Waterfront as the chance to regain the standard. Indeed, Natasha Wodak’s 2:23:12 in Berlin must be a prime motivator for a woman enjoying a second running career. Elmore, after all, ran the 1,500m for Canada at the 2004 Olympics.  

The pace in Toronto is likely to be more comfortable and more conducive for a 2:22 finish than what the Berlin front runners demanded. She proved in Sapporo that she can run with the world’s best. Now is her chance to go for broke. 

While Elmore would have to suffer an ‘off day’ to miss the top spot in the Canadian Championships which are held concurrently, Dayna Pidhoresky, the 2019 Canadian champion, will be watching her closely in case of signs of weakness.  

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About the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 

One of only two World Athletics Elite Label races in Canada, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon is Canada’s premier running event and the grand finale of the Canada Running Series (CRS). Since 2017, the race has served as the Athletics Canada Canadian Marathon Championship and has doubled as the Olympic trials. During the 2021 event, participants raised over $3.08 million for 151 community charities. Using innovation and organization as guiding principles, Canada Running Series stages great experiences for runners of all levels, from Canadian Olympians to recreational and charity runners. With a mission of “building community through the sport of running,” CRS is committed to making sport part of sustainable communities and the city-building process. 

To learn more about the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon, please visit www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com. 

Media Contact  

Kate Van Buskirk, Marketing and Communications Coordinator  
kate@canadarunningseries.com 
905-867-1117 

TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon Men’s Race Preview

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By: Paul Gains 

 Once again, the 2022 TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon will come down to an East African bust-up with Ethiopians Yihunilign Adane and Kebede Wami tackling a strong Kenyan squad led by Barselius Kipyego, Felix Kandie and Felix Kibitok. 

The Kenyan presence would have been even stronger were it not for the late withdrawal through injury of the man who set the Canadian All-comers record of 2:05:00 here in 2019, Philemon Rono. 

As it is, Kipyego’s focus is acutely set on that record, especially since his personal best is 2:04:48, a performance recorded at the 2021 Paris Marathon. Like many of his Kenyan compatriots, he has sacrificed time with his family by living in his ‘2Running Club’ training camp seven days a week in preparation for Toronto. While most athletes return home on weekends, Kipyego has gone that extra step. 

With a personal best of 2:06:03, Felix Kandie returns to Toronto after a 3rd place finish in the 2018 edition of the race. A seasoned veteran (now 35) he has proved his mettle by finishing 4th in Boston and 5th in Berlin in 2019 – both ‘Abbott World Marathon Majors’. Watching the 2019 Toronto livestream inspired him to think about breaking the course record if his fellow elite are up for the challenge. 

Earlier this year Kibitok finished 5th in the Barcelona Marathon running a personal best of 2:06:28. Having run under one hour for the half marathon on three occasions, including 59:33 in January this year, he is starting to realize his marathon potential.  

The Ethiopian pair, both 26 years of age, will line up hoping to end the Kenyan dominance of this race. The last time an Ethiopian emerged the victor was in 2013 when Derissa Chimsa ran 2:07:05. At the time, this was a Canadian All-comers’ record. 

Yihunilign Adane will be encouraged that his training partner, Leul Gebrsilase, finished 2nd in the recent London Marathon. With his personal best of 2:05:53 – a new Barcelona course record – he knows he can mix it up with the mighty Kenyans on the quick Toronto Waterfront course. He is hungry to explore his massive potential at the distance. 

The other Ethiopian who bears watching, Kebede Wami, was 3rd in Barcelona this past May – just ten seconds behind Yihunilign, recording a personal best of 2:06:03, and also appears on an upward trajectory. In 2021 he was 6th in Rotterdam (2:06:27) and 5th in Sienna, Italy (2:06:32) displaying great consistency in his last three marathon starts. A member of the Dutch based NN Running Team, he trains with coach Tessema Abshero making remarkable progress since taking up marathon running in 2020. 

Word spread across both Ethiopia and Kenya in 2019 when four men finished within 13 seconds of each other led by Philemon Rono’s Canadian All-comers’ record (2:05:00). The crew of world-class athletes are aware of what the streets of Toronto offer. 

The Athletics Canada National Championships are held concurrently with the World Athletics Elite Label race and the field is led by defending champion Trevor Hofbauer (2:09:51 in 2019) and Rory Linkletter who set a personal best of 2:10:24 while finishing a solid 20th place in the 2022 World Championships.  

Linkletter, born in Calgary but residing in Flagstaff, Arizona, will be looking for another personal best which could see him pick off any of the frontrunners who falter in the latter stages of the race. Meanwhile, Hofbauer who was so magnificent while finishing 7th in the 2019 edition of this race, becoming only the second Canadian to get under 2:10, struggled home in the Olympic Games. A good performance in Toronto will wipe the slate clean. 

Canadians will also be keen to see what result running veterinarian Lee Wesselius can muster on the day. He ran a personal best (2:16:41) to finish 2nd at the 2021 Indianapolis Marathon. Earlier this year he claimed the bronze medal at the NACAC Half Marathon Championships.  His day-to-day duties working with large animals in a rural county can sometimes be an obstacle most of his peers do not encounter. Nonetheless, he continues to improve. 

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About the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 

One of only two World Athletics Elite Label races in Canada, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon is Canada’s premier running event and the grand finale of the Canada Running Series (CRS). Since 2017, the race has served as the Athletics Canada Canadian Marathon Championship and has doubled as the Olympic trials. During the 2021 event, participants raised over $3.08 million for 151 community charities. Using innovation and organization as guiding principles, Canada Running Series stages great experiences for runners of all levels, from Canadian Olympians to recreational and charity runners. With a mission of “building community through the sport of running,” CRS is committed to making sport part of sustainable communities and the city-building process. 

To learn more about the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon, please visit www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com. 

Media Contact  

Kate Van Buskirk, Marketing and Communications Coordinator    
kate@canadarunningseries.com   
905-867-1117   

A Confident Felix Kandie Returns to TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

By | Athletes, Canadian Athlete Announcements | No Comments

By: Paul Gains

A podium finish on his last visit to Toronto left such an impression on Felix Kandie that he eagerly accepted an invitation to return to the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon on October 16th. 

The Kenyan star finished third at the 2018 Toronto Waterfront Marathon in a time of 2:08:30, though he can point to a personal best of 2:06:03. Toronto Tourism would do well to hire the now 35-year-old to promote Canada’s biggest city as his review is simply glowing. 

“Back then when I was in Toronto I felt like I was at home,” he says during a video call from his home in Iten, Kenya.  

“It was nice for me. The city is so beautiful; the people are very friendly and the organization of the Toronto (Waterfront) Marathon is awesome. The town is indeed very good for competition. All the athletes love it and the course is very good. 

“I just walked about the place we were staying. I walked to the (Eaton Centre) mall and even when I was going for morning runs, evening runs, before the race, I used the opportunity to view Toronto and see how it is. It was amazing. Along the park down towards the lake it was very nice. I am looking forward to having another experience in Toronto.” 

Most athletes prefer to limit their excursions when they travel in order to preserve valuable energy for their competition. But the well-traveled Kandie knows his limits. And his wanderlust has not affected his racing by any means.  This past April he ran 2:07:18 to finish 7th in the Seoul Marathon.  

Following his initial Toronto appearance, he went on to finish 4th in the 2019 Boston Marathon and then 5th in Berlin – two of the Abbott Marathon Majors – and so missed the remarkable 2019 Toronto Waterfront Marathon. That’s where his compatriot, Philemon Rono, set a Canadian All-comers record of 2:05:00 with three more men coming home in the next thirteen seconds. News of the exceptional times that day reverberated around the running world. 

“When they ran the race in that time it was really good news for me because it proved Toronto is a fast course,” he declares, “and secondly it assured it’s possible for everybody to run good. When they run personal bests it is something good and this inspired me to realize I have the chance to improve my personal best in Toronto because they have proven it’s a fast course.” 

Rono returns to Toronto joining fellow Kenyan Barselius Kipyego and Ethiopia’s Yihunilign Adane as favourites, so the field is worthy of the World Athletics Elite Label designation it has earned. While the other Kenyans belong to groups that train together Monday to Friday at special training camps, Kandie stays at home in Iten. He and his wife Millicent have started a family. 

“Yeah I have a family,” he says with a smile. “After the Toronto [Waterfront] Marathon in 2018 that’s when I got married to my lovely wife and we have a son. His name is Adrian, he is around 5 months old now. 

“Right now I am staying at my home in Iten. It’s a training centre for many athletes in Kenya and even those who come from abroad. We usually meet for training sessions with all the other athletes. Currently I am training with Gilbert Kirwa and Albert Kangogo. Gilbert Kirwa I think ran there [Toronto] in 2015 and was in the second position.” 

Kandie reports his training is going according to plan and his hopes for a personal best remain intact. 

“I think I started my training early enough that I will be able do all the necessary sessions in order for me to perform well in Toronto,” he concludes. “I have completed about 95% of my training and now am finalizing the last part. I am looking for a fantastic result in Toronto.” 

Like many professional runners, Kandie is intent on earning money for his post athletics career. He has a farm and has made inroads into real estate, building rental properties. 

“Actually, in the future I am looking forward to [really] getting into the real estate business,” he reveals. “It is a nice investment in Kenya. Also our company does farming. You cannot put all your eggs in one basket. You have to diversify; at least two or three investments would be nice. We have to balance.” 

Once again, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon has the potential to see records broken as the elites compete for prize money. The winner will receive CAD $25,000 with a new course record worth a bonus of CAD $15,000. Kandie of course could put some of that money to good use for his family’s future but he also has more tangible objectives for the race. 

“I am looking forward to running a fantastic race and improving my personal best,” he says.  “This is my aim.  Also, to get in a good position. This will help me to improve. I want to win or, if that is not possible, to get on the podium. Above that I want to run a personal best.” 

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About the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 

One of only two World Athletics Elite Label races in Canada, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon is Canada’s premier running event and the grand finale of the Canada Running Series (CRS). Since 2017, the race has served as the Athletics Canada Canadian Marathon Championship and has doubled as the Olympic trials. During the 2021 event, participants raised over $3.08 million for 151 community charities. Using innovation and organization as guiding  

principles, Canada Running Series stages great experiences for runners of all levels, from Canadian Olympians to recreational and charity runners. With a mission of “building community through the sport of running,” CRS is committed to making sport part of sustainable communities and the city-building process. 

To learn more about the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon, please visit www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com. 

Media Contact  

Kate Van Buskirk, Marketing and Communications Coordinator 

kate@canadarunningseries.com 

905-867-1117

 

Yihunilign Adane Carrying Ethiopian Hopes at TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon

By | Athletes, Canadian Athlete Announcements | One Comment

By: Paul Gains

When Yihunilign Adane lines up against some of the world’s best marathoners at the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon on October 16th, it will be with all the confidence of a man on a mission. He will also be carrying his country’s hopes on his shoulders. 

Taking top honours in the 2022 Barcelona Marathon in a personal best 2:05:53 has that effect on a runner. The 26-year-old Ethiopian is experienced at the distance despite his relatively young age, having turned to marathons shortly before he celebrated his 20th birthday.  

“Winning Barcelona gave me huge confidence and motivation that I can compete against world-class athletes,” he says from his home in Addis Ababa. 

“I watched the 2019 Toronto Waterfront Marathon when (fellow Ethiopian) Lemi Berhanu was second (in 2:05:09).  I found out that Toronto is a fast course and, when my management raised it and asked if I wanted to run the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, I did not think twice.” 

The Toronto Waterfront Marathon course record (2:05:00) was set by Philemon Rono of Kenya – who returns to defend his title and attempt his fourth Toronto victory. That is also the fastest time ever run on Canadian soil. Yihunilign has obviously been studying past results and feels he belongs at the front. 

“I know in 2019 four men ran sub 2:05:14. I ran sub 2:06 in Barcelona,” he declares. “If we push together we can run sub 2:05 and my goal is to win the race and break that course record.” 

Until his Barcelona victory he was known simply as another good athlete with untapped marathon potential.  He was 3rd in Lisbon a year ago (2:07:54) and in 2020 he placed 6th in the Dubai Marathon in what was then a personal best of 2:06:22. Before that, he succumbed to the lure of the money on offer running as many as four marathons in a year. Barcelona signalled a new level. 

That he turned to the marathon in the first place was unusual. Having been a member of Ethiopia’s gold medal winning Under 20 team at the 2013 World Cross Country Championships, he originally aimed to become a 5,000m runner like his friend, Muktar Edris. The latter went on to become a two-time world champion at the distance.  

“Once upon a time while we were running a cross country race at Jan Meda (site of the 2013 Ethiopian cross-country championships) I was running 5th and Muktar was 6th approaching the finish line,” Yihunilign remembers. “Then he suddenly fell down and another athlete was approaching to take over. I helped Muktar up then I let him finish ahead of me. Edris was 5th and I was 6th. Since then we have been really good friends.” 

Ironically, it was an injury that saw him give up on his dreams of racing shorter distances like his hero Kenenisa Bekele, the former world 5000m and 10,000m record holder and three-time Olympic champion.  

Finishing 7th in the 2015 World under-20 Cross Country Championships was a pivotal moment, and when he was informed he beat Joshua Cheptegei (Olympic 10,000m champion and world 5000m and 10,000m record holder) in that race, he was astonished. 

“Honestly speaking I do not remember I had finished ahead of Joshua Cheptegei as he was not famous then,” he laughs. “Unbelievable!  If I focused on track I would beat him even now. Thanks to the achilles injury which forced me to run marathon.” 

Confidence is surely not lacking here. A perusal of his personal best times reveals nothing extraordinary until one takes into account the limited competitive opportunities available to young African athletes.  

“I know I would do better in short distances and I had the potential to do so,” he offers. “But I was suffering from an achilles tendon injury whenever I trained in spikes. I was comfortable training in road racing shoes.  That was the time I decided to switch to the marathon as a result of the injury.”  

Now he is thriving in a marathon training group. 

“I was injured before,” he says, “but in the past few years my training has changed especially since I joined Moyo Sport and began training under coach Getamesay Molla. I train with world-class athletes like (2:04:02 marathoner) Leul Gebresilase and Jemal Yimer (Ethiopian Half Marathon record holder).” 

A personal best seems tangible and if he is going to win the race he might well need an extraordinary leap because the field includes Kenyans Philemon Rono and Barselius Kipyego (holder of a 2:04:48 personal best) amongst others. Somehow, that might be just the motivation he needs.

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About the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon 

One of only two World Athletics Elite Label races in Canada, the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon is Canada’s premier running event and the grand finale of the Canada Running Series (CRS). Since 2017, the race has served as the Athletics Canada Canadian Marathon Championship and has doubled as the Olympic trials. During the 2021 event, participants raised over $3.08 million for 151 community charities. Using innovation and organization as guiding  

principles, Canada Running Series stages great experiences for runners of all levels, from Canadian Olympians to recreational and charity runners. With a mission of “building community through the sport of running,” CRS is committed to making sport part of sustainable communities and the city-building process. 

To learn more about the TCS Toronto Waterfront Marathon, please visit www.torontowaterfrontmarathon.com. 

Media Contact  

Kate Van Buskirk, Marketing and Communications Coordinator 

kate@canadarunningseries.com 

905-867-1117