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For Immediate Release
1 April 2008
CONTACTS: (Please do not
publish these numbers or emails. Race information is available on the web at www.cherryblossom.org, by email at
info@cherryblossom.org, or on the race hotline,
301-320-3350)
Frank McNally
Media Coordinator
703-801-2566 (cell); 703 572-4040 (d); 540-338-5648 (e)
Phil Stewart
Event Director
301-320-6865
pstewart@cherryblossom.org
Contact Frank McNally for race-day media credentials. Space on media trucks (one for the men’s race and one for the women’s race) is limited, so call to ensure seating. TV crews should call in advance to secure positioning for trucks on race morning.
Click
Here for Bios and Information on the Men's Elite Field
Click
Here for Bios and Information on the Women's Elite Field
Olympic Silver
Medallist Catherine Ndereba Seeks First Title; John Korir Goes for Fourth Win
Elite Athletes
Compete for $35,500 in Prize Money
WASHINGTON, DC – Few
women have compiled as impressive a road running resume as Kenyan Catherine
Ndereba. Simply known as “Catherine the Great,” the 35-year-old Kenyan
athlete owns an Olympic silver medal from the 2004 Athens Games marathon, two
world marathon titles, and 4 Boston Marathon wins. She once held the world
record in the marathon (2:18:47) and still ranks as the #2 performer of all
time. However she has never won the Credit Union Cherry Blossom 10 mile, placing
second to Isabella Ochichi in her only appearance here back in 2004.
Ndereba will wear the
mantle of the favorite when she lines up at 7:40 a.m. on Sunday, April 6th for
the 36th running of the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten Mile Run. The new course
starts and finishes on the Washington Monument Grounds in Washington, DC.
[Note: Last year’s
winner Teyba Erkesso was detained in Ethiopia by the Ethiopian Federation
and had to scratch, according to her agent.]
Ndereba and a cadre of
elite female athletes from around the world will lead all 12,000 runners over
the redesigned course, by virtue of the fact that the elite women will receive a
10-minute head start over the elite men. This format qualifies the elite
women’s competition as a “women’s only” competition.
Lineth Chepkurui
of Kenya and fellow Olympic silver medallist Lidia Simon of Romania
should offer Ndereba her toughest tests. Chepkurui finished 12th last weekend at
the IAAF World Cross Country Meet in Edinburgh, Scotland, generally considered
to be the deepest field of distance runners of any single race of the year.
Simon, who finished second in the 2000 Olympic Marathon, enjoyed a solid year in
2007, highlighted by an unexpected win at the Boilermaker 15K in Utica, NY.
Colleen DeReuck
returns to the Credit Union Cherry Blossom, where she set the mixed-race world
10-mile record of 51:16 ten years ago. Now age 43 and having given birth to her
second child last year, DeReuck is using the event as a final tune-up for the
Women’s Olympic Trials Marathon, which will be held in Boston on April 20th.
She is the defending Women’s Olympic Trials champion. DeReuck is eyeing the
U.S. women’s only record of 55:42 set here two years ago by Turena Johnson
Lane. Based on her recent times, DeReuck should seriously challenge the record
if the weather cooperates.
Last year John Korir,
32, who has won the race three times, ran his fastest time ever (46:11) in six
previous appearances but wound up third. Korir’s three victories came in 2001
(46:12), 2003 (46:56), and 2005 (46:55). One more victory will tie him with Bill
Rodgers, who won the race in four consecutive years between 1978 and 1981. Korir
will have his hands full with Kenyan countrymen including Sammy Kipketer,
who owns a blistering 5000-meter time of 12:52.33 and who finished third at the
Crescent City Classic 10K in New Orleans two weeks ago in a quick 27:46; Reuben
Chebii, who has one second-place and two third-place finishes here; and Nicholas
Manza Kamakya, who finished just a stride behind Korir last year, to name a
few.
Leading the American
men is 27-year-old Nate Jenkins of Lowell, MA. Jenkins is a 2007 Road
Runners Club of America Roads Scholar who burst on to the U.S. scene with a 7th
place finish last fall at the U.S. Men’s Olympic Trials Marathon in New York
City, and Chris Graff, who was the 2001 USATF 10,000-meter champion, the 2003
USATF 10 mile champion and a RRCA Roads Scholar in 2002 and 2003.
In keeping with the
spirit of the National Cherry Blossom Festival, the event has a sister race
relationship with the Himeji Castle 10 mile held in Himeji, Japan on
Japan’s Independence Day, Feb. 11th each year. This year, two elite Japanese
runners from the Himeji race, Toyoda Takashi and Souhei Wada, have
traveled to Washington, DC to take part in the Credit Union Cherry Blossom Ten
Mile..
The elite runners will
be racing for a total prize purse of $35,500, the largest ever. With $6,000
checks going to the first place male and female finishers, the event is the only
world-class competition in the Washington Metropolitan area each year. “We
take great pride in our tradition of bringing the world’s finest athletes to
the streets of Washington, DC each year,” said Event Director Phil Stewart.
“Washington, DC is a world-class city and it merits a world-class running
event.”
In order to ensure a
clean sport, the organizers pay the United States Anti-Doping Agency to conduct
drug testing of the elite athletes.
Widely known as “The
Runner’s Rite of Spring,” the event is hugely popular among the more-gentle
running population as well. Registration filled to the 12,000-runner limit in
just four hours last December. Runners in this year’s field come from 49
states and 9 foreign countries. Among them will be Bethesda runner Ben Beach,
who will be participating in his 36th consecutive Cherry Blossom race. Beach, an
editor at The Wilderness Society, is the only runner to have finished every year
since the race started in 1973. He will also start his 41st consecutive Boston
Marathon on April 21st. Ten-mile entrants span 75 years between 85-year-old Walt
Washburn of Vienna, VA and 10-year-old James Blackwood of Annapolis,
MD.
Washington, DC
politicians entered include DC Mayor Adrian Fenty and Ward 3 City Council
Member Mary Cheh.
The sponsoring Credit
Union Miracle Day, Inc., takes great pride in this year’s contribution,
currently at $850,000 and rising, to the Children’s Miracle Network. The funds
are raised from over 70 participating Credit Unions, Credit Union partners, and
event participants. From the total, approximately $400,000 goes to Washington,
DC’s own Children’s Hospital. More than 600 Credit Union members serve as
volunteers and over 4,800 entrants are Credit Union members.
Entries for the 10-mile
and the 5K Run Walk are closed. Spectators are encouraged to view the event in
the vicinity of the Washington Monument Grounds. The staging area is ¼ mile
from the Smithsonian Metro stop (Orange and Blue lines). Metro opens at 5 a.m.
on race day.
Parents can still sign
up their children ages 12-and-under for a free 1K Kids Run at 8:15 a.m. on the
Washington Monument Grounds. Kids Run registration opens at 7:15 a.m. on Sunday.
The race will be
televised on Comcast Mid-Atlantic SportsNet in a half-hour special at 11:30 a.m.
on Saturday, April 12th, with rebroadcasts set for Tuesday, April 15 at 11:30
a.m., Thursday, April 17 at 11:30 a.m. and Sunday, April 27 at 5:30 p.m.
Supporting sponsors
include Gatorade Endurance Formula, Saucony, Navy Federal Credit Union, and
Metro Run & Walk. The event is part of the Professional Road Running
Association (PRRO) Circuit and the 2008 National Cherry Blossom Festival held
from March 29 to April 13. This year’s festival celebrates the 96th
anniversary of the gift of the cherry blossom trees and the enduring friendship
between the citizens of the United States and Japan. The event also serves as
the Road Runners Club of America’s National 10 Mile Championship.
For additional
information, visit www.cherryblossom.org,
send an e-mail to racedirector@cherryblossom.org,
or contact the race hotline at 301-320-3350.
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