Andrea Kiptoo and Likina Amebaw won the 45th Generali Berlin Half Marathon on Sunday, March 29.

Men’s race

Kiptoo, clearly enjoying the most important win of his career to date, celebrated vociferously after clocking 59:11 against a strong field of competitors. It helped to have Kenyan Dennis Kipkemoi, running as a pacemaker, step aside near the end. They were credited with the same time.

Third place went to Amanal Petros, who broke his own German record by nine seconds, stopping the clock at 59:22 to finish just ahead of Switzerland’s Dominic Lobalu, just one second back.

Petros went into the race eyeing the European record currently held by Andreas Almgren of 58:41, set on October 26, 2025, at the Valencia Half Marathon.

“It was cold and windy so I slowed down until my body warmed up. I am very happy with the German record,” Petros told European Athletics.

Temoi took them through the 5km mark in 14:02.

Kiptoo passed through 5km in 13:53 and then ran a 13:47 to record a 27:50 first 10km, leading four or five others in a pack which included Kiptoo, Lobalu a fading Temoi.

Petros did rally to put in an impressive late surge. He was thrilled to have bettered his own national record as he prepares for the 2026 London Marathon.

Seven men ran sub-60.

Women’s race

It was a deep field.

Ethiopian Likina Amebaw won in a time of 1:05:07. She was followed in by Daidilah Jerono of Kenya, who recorded a 1:05:21 time and Veronica Loleo in 1:05:35. They finished in second and third, respectively.

Amebaw led for most of the 21.1 kilometre (13.1-mile) race.

Esther Pfeiffer was the leading German and European finisher, placing fifth. This performance represented a new personal best of 67:25. “I have had two tough weeks because I had a cold. But now I am thrilled about the personal best,” she said.

Interestingly, Canadian Natasha Wodak, who holds the national marathon record at 2:23:12 and was the first Canadian to go sub-70 (69:41), wanted to better her PB at age 45. She ran well, despite recent training setbacks, but was off the mark a little, but ran well to finish in 1:10:56. Wodak finished 24th.

She wrote on social media, “Ok, we will take that! I wanted a bit more (don’t we always!), but this is just where I’m at right now! and it’s actually a pretty good place to be 8 weeks out from the Ottawa Marathon:) excited to build on this!”

Three women finished sub-1:06, while 17 women finished sub-70.

Results

Pos.NameCountryResult
1Andrea KiptooKEN59:11
2Dennis KipkemoiKEN59:11
3Amanal PetrosGER59:22
4Dominic LobaluSSD59:23
5Etienne DaguinosFRA59:27
6Bereket NegaETH59:43
7Robert Kiprop KoechKEN59:51
8Bastien AugustoFRA1:00:09
9Célestin NdikumanaBDI1:00:23
10Said MechaalESP1:00:24
11Hikaru TsujiharaJPN1:00:33
12Ayensa AlemuETH1:00:33
13Gideon Kiprotich RopKEN1:01:06
14Yuta AsanoJPN1:01:12
15Weldon LangatKEN1:01:13
16Philip SesemannGBR1:01:21
17Alberto Gonzalez MindezGUA1:01:24
18Andrew AlexanderCAN1:01:29
19Matthias KyburzSUI1:01:29
20Hikaru OgawaraJPN1:01:30

Women

Pos.NameCountryResult
1Likina AmebawETH1:05:07
2Daisilah JeronoKEN1:05:21
3Veronica LoleoKEN1:05:35
4Florence NiyonkuruRWA1:07:22
5Esther PfeifferGER1:07:25
6Chloé HerbietBEL1:07:32
7Eva DieterichGER1:07:56
8Carla GallardoESP1:08:30
9Domenika MayerGER1:08:35
10Elvanie NimbonaITA1:08:38
11Samantha HarrisonGBR1:08:38
12Lisa RoomsBEL1:08:40
13Gesa KrauseGER1:08:59
14Leonie PeriaultFRA1:09:25
15Meritxell SolerESP1:09:30
16Christine KomenKEN1:09:52
17Lara KieneGER1:09:56
18Sheyla Eulogio PaucarPER1:10:03
19Heloise LaigleFRA1:10:21
20Ester NavarreteESP1:10:22

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