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The 37th Berlin Marathon took place on Sunday 26 September 2010 on the streets of Berlin, Germany. The competition was sponsored by German retailer ''real,-'' and it was the third World Marathon Major of the year, as well as being an IAAF Gold Label Road Race. A total of 35,227 runners started the race and 34,225 of those managed to complete the 42.195 km marathon distance (comprising 26,726 men and 7,499 women).〔(Patrick Makau: Regen verhinderte Weltrekord. Berlin wieder der schnellste Marathon der Welt ) . Berlin Marathon. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 Patrick Makau was the winner of men's marathon while Aberu Kebede took the women's title. Severin Widmer and Giovanna Turchiarelli were the respective winners of the men's and women's in-line skating races.〔(Berlin-Marathon 2010 - Inlineskating - Giovanna Turchiarelli and Severin Widmer braved the rain ). German Road Races. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 ==Elite marathon race== Headlining the elite men's race were three Kenyan runners: Patrick Makau, Geoffrey Mutai and Eliud Kiptanui. Makau and Mutai had recorded the fifth and eighth fastest times ever, respectively, at the Rotterdam Marathon earlier that year. Kiptanui had impressed with a sub-2:06 clocking to win the Prague Marathon that May, in only his second outing over the distance.〔Butcher, Pat (2010-09-24). (Kenyan cooperation should lead to fast men's marathon "sprint" in Berlin ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 Germany's own Sabrina Mockenhaupt was among the contenders for the women's elite race, as were Ethiopian runners Bezunesh Bekele and Aberu Kebede, and Tomo Morimoto of Japan.〔Butcher, Pat (2010-09-23). (‘Mocki’, bored no longer, sets out to emulate Pippig in Berlin ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 Heavy rain throughout the race put an end to any hopes that Haile Gebrselassie's world record mark from the 2008 edition would be improved. Makau and Mutai were neck-and-neck in the final stretch towards the Brandenburg Gate, which served as the race finishing point. Makau pulled away to win the race by a margin of two seconds over Mutai. Ethiopian Bazu Worku was fifteen seconds behind Mutai and took third place with a personal best time. Aberu Kebede and Bezunesh Bekele were dominant in the women's race and had built up a sizeable lead over the rest of the field by the half-way point. Aberu surged ahead further and won the race with a minute to spare over second-placed Bezunesh. Over a minute behind her, Morimoto was the third to cross the line while Mockenhaupt took a second off her previous personal best for fourth position.〔Butcher, Pat (2010-09-26). (Makau and Kebede triumph in rainy Berlin ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 Although it was the first time in 20 years that the Berlin Marathon was affected by rain, the men's race saw the top three finishers run under two hours and six minutes – a first for the competition renowned for its fast, flat course. The top three runners of each race received points for the World Marathon Majors, with first taking 25 points, second earning 15 points and third gaining 10 points. The points earned at the Berlin Marathon had little overall effect on the series rankings as all points-scorers remained outside of the top four and had little chance of earning further points before the close of the 2009–10 competition at the 2010 New York City Marathon two months later.〔(real,- BERLIN-MARATHON: Makau and Kebede battle the rain to take World Marathon Majors race ). Berlin Marathon (2010-09-26). Retrieved on 2010-11-14.〕 The podium finishers each earned a portion of the race prize pot: €40,000 for first, €20,000 for second, and prizes of €17,500 and €15,000 for the men's and women's third placers, respectively. The top three men also earned a significant time bonus of €30,000 for completing the distance in under two hours and six minutes, while women's winner Aberu Kebede received a bonus of €15,000 for her finishing time.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「2010 Berlin Marathon」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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