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Press Release - Berlin Marathon - 11/8/23


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
	
                     WORLD ATHLETICS HERITAGE PLAQUE:

       Berlin and its annual marathon jointly awarded Heritage Plaque

Governing Mayor of Berlin, Kai Wegner, received a World Athletics Heritage 
Plaque honouring the city of Berlin and the annual Berlin Marathon at a 
ceremony in Berlin's City Hall on Wednesday. The mayor was joined at 
the ceremony by the marathon's founder, Horst Milde, and a host of runners 
including Uta Pippig, the 1993 New York City Marathon winner and a 
three-time marathon champion in Berlin and Boston. The plaque, which has 
been awarded in the joint categories of 'City' and 'Competition', 
celebrates the city's rich athletics history, including the first organised 
running events in the 1890s and the foundation of the Berlin Marathon in 
1974.

"World Athletics is delighted to recognise the outstanding contribution 
that the city of Berlin and the Berlin Marathon have made to the history 
and development of international athletics, with the award of the World 
Athletics Heritage Plaque," said World Athletics President Sebastian Coe in 
a video message. "The plaque honours more than 130 years of organised track 
& field athletics and running events in Berlin. Notably, in 1913, Berlin 
staged the second Congress in our federation's history and the city is one 
of only nine to have hosted the summer Olympic Games and the World 
Athletics Championships. On those two occasions, Berlin's Olympic Stadium 
provided the dramatic stage for the legendary triumphs of Jesse Owens and 
Usain Bolt. At the epicentre of the city's running history is the annual 
Berlin Marathon, founded by running enthusiast Horst Milde. The race 
director for the first three decades, Horst established the Berlin 
Marathon's international reputation for organisational excellence. With 
more than 40,000 finishers annually, the Berlin Marathon is one of the 
world's largest mass road races. The city's flat, fast course attracts the 
world's best elite runners. Twenty years since Paul Tergat ran the first 
sub-2:05 marathon, Berlin's streets have seen the men's world record broken 
another seven times. Berlin has also welcomed the first women to run a 
sub-2:20 and, only a few weeks ago, break the 2:12:00 barrier. In total, 13 
world records have been set there since 1974. With today's award of the 
World Athletics Heritage Plaque, we salute Berlin's historic place in our 
sport's history."

The World Athletics Heritage Plaque is a location-based recognition, 
awarded for an outstanding contribution to the worldwide history and 
development of the sport of track and field athletics and of out-of-stadia 
athletics disciplines such as cross country, mountain, road, trail and 
ultra-running, and race walking.

The plaque was presented to Mayor Wegner and Milde in the Rotes Rathaus, 
the red city hall of Berlin, by World Athletics Heritage Director Chris 
Turner in the presence of guests from the city, and representatives of the 
Berlin Marathon and the German Athletics Federation (DLV). The plaque will 
be placed on permanent public display in the Rotes Rathaus.

A distinguished line-up of runners attended the ceremony, including the 
inaugural Berlin Marathon winners from 1974, Gunter Hallas and Jutta von 
Haase. The latter won three times and she was joined by another two runners 
with triple Berlin victories, Pippig and Ingo Sensburg, plus Bodo Tummler, 
the 1968 Olympic 1500m bronze medallist and 1966 European champion.

Kai Wegner, Governing Mayor of Berlin, commented: "World Athletics, the 
world governing body for the sport of athletics, has awarded Berlin and the 
Berlin Marathon the World Athletics Heritage Plaque. This is a great honour 
for Berlin, which is such a sports-loving city. "Above all, it is 
recognition of the great enthusiasm of many Berlin citizens who, through 
their voluntary involvement, have for decades contributed to the success 
story of this internationally renowned sports event. Berlin says thank you 
to World Athletics and Sebastian Coe, its chair, for this very special 
expression of appreciation."

Horst Milde, founder of the Berlin Marathon, said: "The awarding of the 
Heritage Plaque by World Athletics to the Berlin Marathon, which has now 
been running for almost 50 years, is a great and significant honour for the 
organisational team, the SCC Berlin club, the many volunteers and for 
myself. It is great praise and at the same time motivation for the future. 
We are happy about this high award, recognition and appreciation and thank 
you for the Heritage Plaque, which will be given a worthy place of 
remembrance in the city hall of the city. History obliges - the tradition 
and the great running history in this city are both the present and the 
future. Only through the further development of sports, athletics, and the 
preservation of the health of the population can we do this justice."

Berlin - 130 years of organised running

"Berlin is especially a city of running with the first races introduced by 
members of the English FC in Berlin in the winter of 1891/92, and the 
Chaussee runs from Potsdam to Berlin over 25.6km organised by Berlin track 
and field athletes since 1894, long-distance running found its home in 
Berlin," wrote Gerd Steins in the Sporthistorische Blatter of the Berlin 
Sports Museum.

Since then, numerous other road running initiatives have been born in 
Berlin, including the Berlin Marathon, the Berlin Half Marathon, the 25km 
of Berlin, the Avon Women's Run and the Team Relay.

Cross country running and track & field have a long tradition in the city. 
The first documented cross country race in Germany was held on 26 May 1900 
on the Grunau-Eichwalde course organised by the Berlin Sports Club 
Marcomannia, whereas on 16 September 1900 the first German championship at 
100m was held in the city.

The most famous of all German track and field meetings, 'Internationales 
Stadionfest' or 'ISTAF', was founded on 3 July 1921 by the Berliner 
Sport-Club (BSC), the Sport-Club Charlottenburg (SCC) and the Schwimmclub 
Poseidon.

ISTAF, which is the world's oldest invitational one-day track and field 
meeting, was awarded a World Athletics Heritage Plaque in 2019. The plaque 
was presented to the meeting organisers at the start of the 80th edition on 
12 September 2021, marking the centenary of the meeting's foundation.

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