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Ethiopia’s Buze Diriba could be the next major star in women’s marathon running, judging by her performance at the Mainova Frankfurt Marathon. On Sunday, the 31-year-old captured the biggest win of her road-running career, dominating the race from start to finish and clocking a personal best of 2:19:34 — making her the fifth-fastest woman in Frankfurt’s history.
Despite strong headwinds and the loss of her pacemaker with 10 kilometers to go, Diriba maintained control. “If that hadn’t happened and the wind hadn’t been so strong, I would have run 2:16 today,” she said after earning the €30,000 winner’s prize. “Next time I’ll aim to run around 2:16.”
Ambitions Beyond Frankfurt
Diriba’s breakthrough in Frankfurt could mark the beginning of a new chapter. “I want to run in the World Championships and Olympic Games and win titles,” she said. Her goal is clear — to join the elite ranks of Ethiopia’s greatest distance runners.
She trains under Gedemu Dedefo in Addis Ababa, one of the most powerful marathon training groups in the world. The camp includes Olympic and World Championship silver medalist Tigst Assefa, Chicago Marathon champion Hawi Feysa, and Olympic marathon champion Tamirat Tola.
A year ago, Feysa used Frankfurt as her own launchpad to stardom, setting a course record of 2:17:25. Diriba came to this year’s edition determined to challenge that mark. “It helps me to have such strong training partners — it makes me stronger,” she explained. “I know I’ll need to run under 2:15 in the future to reach world-class level.”
From Arsi to the World Stage
Diriba hails from Asela, in Ethiopia’s famed Arsi region — the same area that produced legends such as Haile Gebrselassie. Her parents are farmers, and as a child she helped with chores before running to school each morning, “only about 20 minutes away.”
She began running competitively at 16, inspired by Ethiopian Olympic champions Meseret Defar and Tirunesh Dibaba. At 18, she captured the World Junior 5,000m title (2012), signaling her potential as a future great.
“Since then, Gemedu Dedefo has been my coach,” Diriba said. Now a mother of two young daughters, she credits her husband Guta Wami for keeping the household running while she trains and competes.
A Family of Runners
Athletic talent runs deep in the Diriba family. Her younger brother Boki Diriba, 21, is already making his mark, finishing 10th at the 2023 World Cross Country Championships and running 2:07:13 for sixth in Hamburg this April.
With Buze and Boki both rising fast, the Diriba name could soon become one of the most recognized in international road running — a new family dynasty emerging from Ethiopia’s storied highlands.
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