Kenyan duo Bernard Koech and Rebecca Tanui want to make the jubilee edition of the Haspa Marathon Hamburg a very fast one this Sunday. The two runners are leading the start list of the 40th edition of Germany’s biggest and fastest spring marathon with personal bests of 2:04:09 and 2:21:06, respectively. While Koech hopes to break 2:04 and win the race for a third time Tanui intends to run sub 2:20:00 on the fast course. Germany’s Samuel Fitwi carries national hopes in Hamburg and aims to achieve a rare podium finish.

“It was a real challenge this time to put together the elite fields – mainly because of visa problems. Unfortunately, we lost some top women recently. It looked like we would have a world-class field some weeks ago, but we still have a superb line-up,” said Chief Organizer Frank Thaleiser. “I expect another thrilling race with fast times.” 

Men’s Race: Koech wants to make it three out of three

In contrast to the women’s field, the men’s line-up was not affected by major withdrawals. Twelve runners feature personal bests of sub 2:07:00, which shows the strong depth of the field. “I am very much looking forward to competing in Hamburg again,” said Bernard Koech, who has run the Haspa Marathon Hamburg twice and won on both occasions. In 2023, he triumphed with a course record and tied his personal record of 2:04:09. This remains his PB until today. A year later, Bernard Koech defended his title. “I have trained well and have been running up to 200 kilometres per week. My goal is to win in Hamburg for the third time,” said the 38-year-old, who still feels in top form even after many years as an elite athlete: “Marathon is very much about experience. I may be 38, but that is just a number,” said Bernard Koech, who will try to break his PB in Hamburg. The pacemakers are expected to run the first half in 62:00.

 Kennedy Kimutai, Marion Kibor, Rebecca Tanui and Bernard Koech. Photo credit: Haspa Marathon Humburg

Kennedy Kimutai, a training partner and friend of Bernard Koech, was a late addition to Hamburg’s elite field. This may well be helpful for Koech with regard to achieving a fast time. The 26-year-old, who holds a personal best of 2:05:27 and has already clocked a world-class time of 58:28 in the half-marathon, was actually due to run the Boston Marathon last Monday. However, due to visa issues, he could not travel to the US and will now be competing in Hamburg. “Bernard has won here twice, which is why I was interested to run in Hamburg too. We will certainly support each other,” said Kennedy Kimutai, who has recently been in good form. In early March, he won the Paris Half Marathon.

Former German marathon record holder Samuel Fitwi has a PB of 2:04:56 and is number three on the start list. “I have been training well in Addis Ababa since the beginning of January,” said Samuel Fitwi, who will go with the leading group on Sunday. „My goal is to run a PB or at least a 2:05 time. I hope to achieve a podium finish as well.” The last time a German runner finished among the top three men in Hamburg was back in 1999, when Carsten Eich was runner-up. Former German record holder Jörg Peter won the race in 1990 and 1991. 

Besides Koech and Kimutai, there are at least three more athletes who will compete for podium places with Samuel Fitwi: Israel’s Gashau Ayale (PB: 2:04:53), Othmane El Goumri of Morocco (2:05:12) and Ethiopia’s Abdisa Tola (2:05:42), the brother of Olympic Champion Tamirat Tola. 

Women’s Race: Six athletes have PBs of sub 2:24:00

While no woman on the start list has a personal best of sub 2:20:00, such a time will be the target on Sunday. Six athletes have personal bests of sub 2:24:00. Rebecca Tanui heads the list with a PB of 2:21:08. The Kenyan made no secret about what she wants to achieve on Sunday: “I want to win and run a personal best,” said the 33-year-old during the press conference in Hamburg. Rebecca Tanui has recently shown exceptional consistency in the marathon. She won three of her five races – Venice in 2023, Košice in 2024 and Mersin, Turkey, last December – and also finished third (2024) and second (2025) in Vienna. “I intend to break 2:20:00 for the first time, and I am optimistic that I can do it,” said Rebecca Tanui.

Marion Kibor returns to Hamburg with fond memories. It was here three years ago where the Kenyan ran her current PB: She was fifth with 2:22:35. “I hope I can run another personal best in Hamburg on Sunday,” said the 31-year-old. “I plan to run with the leading group and will try to achieve a time under 2:20:00. I know that the course is fast.” Ethiopians Kasanesh Baze and Muluhabt Tsega, who have PBs of 2:22:06 and 2:22:21, respectively, are likely to challenge the Kenyans

Organizers of the Haspa Marathon Hamburg have registered record numbers for their jubilee race. 20,000 runners have entered the race over the classic distance. Adding athletes who compete in shorter events during the weekend, the entry total is around 45,000. 

Elite athletes

Men

Name Country Personal Best
Bernard KoechKEN2:04:09
Gashau AyaleISR2:04:53
Samuel FitwiGER2:04:56
Othmane El GoumriMAR2:05:12
Kennedy KimutaiKEN2:05:25
Abdisa TolaETH2:05:42
Tsedat AyanaETH2:06:18
Balew YihunleETH2:06:22
Felix KibitokKEN2:06:28
Shumi DechasaBRN2:06:43
Mohamed El AarabyMAR2:06:45
Belay BezabehETH2:06:58
Taresa TolosaETH2:07:01
Vincent NyageoKENDebut
Aaron BienenfeldGERDebut

Women

Name Country Personal Best
Rebecca TanuiKEN2:21:08
Kasanesh BazeETH2:22:06
Muluhabt TsegaETH2:22:21
Marion KiborKEN2:22:35
Brillian KipkoechKEN2:23:56
Mercy KwambaiKEN2:23:58
Manon CosteFRA2:32:46
Vibeke JensenNOR2:34:22
Aselef AmareETHDebut
Selamawit TeferiETHDebut
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