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Sifan Hassan’s 2023 London Marathon challenge: “I’m going to finish the distance or the distance is going to finish me” the Netherlands’ Sifan Hassan said in February when announcing she would race in 23 April’s London Marathon.
While the words were delivered with a customary laugh, there’s a real element of the unknown about Hassan’s jump from the 10,000m on track to a distance of over four times that where many runners' dreams have been scuppered.
Heck, even the marathon race itself is based on the legend of an ancient Greek messenger who drops stone cold dead after running it.
But if there’s one thing Hassan is known for above anything else, it’s her love of a challenge.
“Many people say I’m crazy,” she said of her previous big challenge of racing in three distances at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics that took place in 2021. “Believe me, I think I’m crazy too.”
Sifan Hassan: From refugee to the elite athletics star with energy to burn
In many ways, Hassan’s decision to run the London Marathon is reminiscent of her first big distance race in Eindhoven in 2011.
Just three years after arriving in the Netherlands as a refugee from Ethiopia, she told her coach, Ton van Hoesel, that she wanted to run a half marathon - even though she hadn’t trained for the race.
“I told her OK but do not start too fanatically because you might get injured. Well, she won the race!” recalled Van Hoesel in an interview with thenationalnews.com.
With the London Marathon, Hassan will once again be stepping into the unknown. However, this is an athlete who has faced and overcome fierce challenges both in running and in life.
While Hassan doesn’t talk about the reasons she left Ethiopia as a teenager, her experience after arriving in the Netherlands, which included being housed in a centre for minors for eight months in Zuidlaren where she “cried every day”, was one of the hardest challenges of her life.
Soon after, her introduction to the world of athletics gave her a new focus. After borrowing used spikes and kits from her local club, she began a journey that would take her to even more challenges - one of which is among the most breathtaking in Olympic history.
The London Marathon 2023: Hassan steps into the unknown
Hassan’s attitude to life so often mirrors her success in running - and she’ll need to draw upon her own mantras more than ever when she takes on her first-ever marathon in London.
“I tell people, when life is hard you will see yourself like you never imagined,” she said after her history-making showing in Tokyo. “Never give up.”
There is a playful curiosity about Hassan, who seems to peek over at new challenges and ask herself the question, “why not?” when so many others would get stuck on the “why”.
“I just want to see what I can do in the marathon,” Hassan said when announcing she would race in London, as if ticking off another item on a whimsical bucket list.
While the London Marathon doesn’t mark a permanent transition to the longer distance for the 29-year-old, who has said she plans to return to the track in time for Paris 2024, it does open up yet more possibilities for someone who is once again pushing the boundaries of track & field.
This is an athlete whose satisfaction comes from achieving the extraordinary. Even when some, including herself, think that borders on the preposterous.
As she herself said in Tokyo: “The last two weeks, sometimes I woke up from a nightmare and I asked: ‘Why do I have to make myself so stressed? But something inside me said to keep on going. I think I was kind of crazy, but now I am really happy."
(04/20/2023) Views: 719 ⚡AMPThe London Marathon was first run on March 29, 1981 and has been held in the spring of every year since 2010. It is sponsored by Virgin Money and was founded by the former Olympic champion and journalist Chris Brasher and Welsh athlete John Disley. It is organized by Hugh Brasher (son of Chris) as Race Director and Nick Bitel...
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