Haile Gebrselassie

Haile Gebrselassie (Amharic: ኃይሌ ገብረ ሥላሴ?, haylē gebre silassē; born 18 April 1973) is a retired Ethiopian long-distance track and road running athlete. He won two Olympic gold medals over 10,000 metres and four World Championship titles in the event. He won the Berlin Marathon four times consecutively and also had three straight wins at the Dubai Marathon. Further to this, he won four world titles indoors and was the 2001 World Half Marathon Champion.

Haile had major competition wins at distances between 1500 metres and the marathon, moving from outdoor, indoor and cross country running to road running in the latter part of his career. He broke 61 Ethiopian national records ranging from 800 metres to the marathon, set 27 world records, and is widely considered the greatest distance runner in history.[2][3][4][5][6]

In September 2008, at the age of 35, he won the Berlin Marathon with a world record time of 2:03:59, breaking his own world record by 27 seconds. The record stood for three years. Since he was over the age of 35, that mark still stands as the Masters Age group world record.

Haile Gebrselassie

Biography

Early career

Haile was born as one of ten children in Asella, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. As a child growing up on a farm he used to run ten kilometres to school every morning, and the same back every evening. This led to a distinctive running posture, with his left arm crooked as if still holding his school books.[7]

Haile gained international recognition in 1992 when he won the 5000 -metre and 10,000-metre races at the 1992 Junior World Championships in Seoul,[8] and a silver medal in the junior race at the World Cross Country Championships.

The next year, in 1993, Haile won the first of what would eventually be four consecutive world championships titles in the men's 10,000 metres at the 1993, 1995, 1997, and 1999 World Championships. His win at the 1993 was however his most infamous as he accidentally stepped on the heel of Moses Tanui's shoe, causing it to fly off his foot. The contact causes Tanui to finish second behind Gebresalassie. Also at the 1993 World Championships he ran in the 5,000-metre race to finish a close second behind Ismael Kirui of Kenya. In 1994 he won a bronze medal at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships. Later that year he set his first world record by running a 12:56.96 in the 5,000-metres, breaking Saïd Aouita's record by two seconds.

 
Haile competing on the track in Hengelo, the Netherlands

In 1995, Haile ran the 10,000-metres in 26:43.53 in Hengelo, Netherlands, lowering the world record by nine seconds. That same summer, in Zürich, Switzerland, Haile ran the 5000 metres in 12:44.39, taking 10.91 seconds off the world record 12:55.30 (established by Kenya's Moses Kiptanui earlier in the year). This world record at the Weltklasse meet in Zürich was voted "Performance of the Year" for 1995 by Track & Field News magazine. At the same Weltklasse meet in Zürich in 1996, an exhausted Haile, suffering from blisters obtained on the hard track in Atlanta (where he had won the Olympic 10,000 metres gold), had no answer to the 58-second lap of Daniel Komen with five laps to go as Komen went on to win and just miss Haile's record, finishing in 12:45.09. In 1997, Haile turned the tables on Komen at the same meet. Coming off his third 10K world championship gold medal, Haile beat Komen in another Zürich classic on 13 August 1997, covering the final 200 metres in 26.8 seconds to break his 5000 metres world record with a time of 12:41.86.[9] Komen, in turn, took Haile's record only nine days later when Komen ran a 12:39.74 performance in Belgium.[10]

 

Achievements

International competitions

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing  Ethiopia
1991 World Cross Country Championships Antwerp, Belgium 8th Junior race (8.415 km) 24:23
1992 World Cross Country Championships Boston, United States 2nd Junior race (7.8 km) 23:35
World Junior Championships Seoul, South Korea 1st 5000m 13:36.06
1st 10,000m 28:03.99
1993 World Cross Country Championships Amorebieta, Spain 7th Senior race (11.75 km) 33:23
African Championships Durban, South Africa 2nd 5000 metres 13:10.41
3rd 10,000 metres 27:30.17
World Championships Stuttgart, Germany 2nd 5000 metres 13:03.17
1st 10,000 metres 27:46.02
1994 World Cross Country Championships Budapest, Hungary 3rd Senior race (12.02 km) 34:32
World Road Relay Championships Litochoro, Greece 2nd Marathon relay 1:58:51
1995 World Cross Country Championships Durham, England 4th Senior race 34:26
World Championships Gothenburg, Sweden 5000 metres DNS
1st 10,000 metres 27:12.95
1996 World Cross Country Championships Stellenbosch, South Africa 5th Senior race (12.15 km) 34:28
Olympic Games Atlanta, United States 5000 metres DNS
1st 10,000 metres 27:07.34
1997 World Indoor Championships Paris, France 1st 3000 metres 7:34.71
World Championships Athens, Greece 1st 10,000 metres 27:24.58
1999 World Indoor Championships Maebashi, Japan 1st 1500 metres 3:33.77
1st 3000 metres 7:53.57
World Championships Seville, Spain 1st 10,000 metres 27:57.27
2000 Olympic Games Sydney, Australia 1st 10,000 metres 27:18.20
2001 World Championships Edmonton, Canada 3rd 10,000 metres 27:54.41
World Half Marathon Championships Bristol, England 1st Half marathon 1:00:03
2003 World Indoor Championships Birmingham, England 1st 3000 metres 7:40.97
World Championships Paris, France 2nd 10,000 metres 26:50.77
2004 Olympic Games Athens, Greece 5th 10,000 metres 27:27.70
2008 Olympic Games Beijing, China 6th 10,000 metres 27:06.68

Marathon performances

YearCompetitionVenuePositionNotes
Representing  Ethiopia
2002 London Marathon   3rd 2:06:35
2005 Amsterdam Marathon   1st 2:06:20
2006 London Marathon   9th 2:09:31
2006 Berlin Marathon   1st 2:05:56
2006 Fukuoka Marathon   1st 2:06:52
2007 London Marathon   DNF
2007 Berlin Marathon   1st 2:04:26 WR
2008 Dubai Marathon   1st 2:04:53
2008 Berlin Marathon   1st 2:03:59 WR
2009 Dubai Marathon   1st 2:05:29
2009 Berlin Marathon   1st 2:06:08
2010 Dubai Marathon   1st 2:06:09
2010 New York City Marathon   DNF
2011 Berlin Marathon   DNF
2012 Tokyo Marathon   4th 2:08:17
2012 Fukuoka Marathon   DNF

Track and field circuit

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
1995 Grand Prix Final Monte Carlo, Monaco 1st 3000 metres  
1998 Golden League Europe 1st Jackpot winner Shared with Hicham El Guerrouj and Marion Jones
1998 Grand Prix Final Moscow, Russia 1st 3000 metres  

World record and best performances

DistanceMarkDateLocationNotes
5000 metres 12:56.96 4 June 1994 Hengelo, Netherlands  
Two miles 8:07.46 28 May 1995 Kerkrade, Netherlands Third fastest time ever
10,000 metres 26:43.53 5 June 1995 Hengelo, Netherlands  
5000 metres 12:44.39 16 August 1995 Zurich, Switzerland  
5000 metres 13:10.98 27 January 1996 Sindelfingen, Germany, indoors
3000 metres 7:30.72 4 February 1996 Stuttgart, Germany, indoors
5000 metres 12:59.04 20 February 1997 Stockholm, Sweden indoors
Two miles 8:01.08 31 May 1997 Hengelo, Netherlands Second fastest time ever
10,000 metres 26:31.32 4 July 1997 Oslo, Norway  
5000 metres 12:41.86 13 August 1997 Zurich, Switzerland  
3000 metres 7:26.15 25 January 1998 Karlsruhe, Germany indoors
2000 metres 4:52.86 15 February 1998 Birmingham, UK indoors
10,000 metres 26:22.75 1 June 1998 Hengelo, Netherlands  
5000 metres 12:39.36 13 June 1998 Helsinki, Finland  
5000 metres 12:50.38 14 February 1999 Birmingham, UK indoors
10 kilometres 27:02 11 December 2002 Doha, Qatar road race
Two miles 8:04.69 21 February 2003 Birmingham, UK indoors
15 kilometres 41:22 + 4 September 2005 Tilburg, Netherlands road race, not IAAF-ratified
10 miles 44:24 4 September 2005 Tilburg, Netherlands road race, world best
20 kilometres 55:48 + 15 January 2006 Tempe, Arizona, US  
Half marathon 58:55 15 January 2006 Tempe, Arizona, US  
25 kilometres 1:11:37 12 March 2006 Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands road race, not IAAF-ratified – no post-race EPO test
One hour run 21,285 m 27 June 2007 Ostrava, Czech Republic  
20,000 metres 56:25.98 + 27 June 2007 Ostrava, Czech Republic  
Marathon 2:04:26 30 September 2007 Berlin, Germany  
Marathon 2:03:59 28 September 2008 Berlin, Germany  
30 kilometres 1:27:49 + 20 September 2009 Berlin, Germany  

Personal bests

Outdoor track

DistanceTimeDateLocation
1500 metres 3:33.73 6 June 1999 Stuttgart, Germany
Mile run 3:52.39 27 June 1999 Gateshead, England
3000 metres 7:25.09 28 August 1998 Brussels, Belgium
Two miles 8:01.08 31 May 1997 Hengelo, Netherlands
5000 metres 12:39.36 13 June 1998 Helsinki, Finland
10,000 metres 26:22.75 1 June 1998 Hengelo, Netherlands
20,000 metres 56:26.0 27 June 2007 Ostrava, Czech Republic
One hour run 21,285 m 27 June 2007 Ostrava, Czech Republic

Road

DistanceTimeDateLocation
10K run 27:02 11 December 2002 Doha, Qatar
15 km 41:38 11 November 2001 Nijmegen, Netherlands
Ten miles 44:24 4 September 2005 Tilburg, Netherlands
20 km 55:48+ 15 January 2006 Phoenix, United States
Half marathon 58:55 15 January 2006 Phoenix, United States
25 km 1:11:37 12 March 2006 Alphen aan den Rijn, Netherlands
Marathon 2:03:59 28 September 2008 Berlin, Germany

Indoor track

DistanceTime (min)DateLocation
800 metres 1:49.35 9 February 1997 Dortmund, Germany
1000 metres 2:20.30 1 February 1998 Stuttgart, Germany
1500 metres 3:31.76 1 February 1998 Stuttgart, Germany
2000 metres 4:52.86 15 February 1998 Birmingham, England
3000 metres 7:26.15 25 January 1998 Karlsruhe, Germany
Two miles 8:04.69 21 February 2003 Birmingham, England
5000 metres 12:50.38 14 February 1999 Birmingham, England