Tirfi Tsegaye
Tsegaye at the 2016 Olympics | |
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | 25 November 1984 (1984-11-25) (age 39) |
Height | 162 cm (5 ft 4 in)[1] |
Weight | 52 kg (115 lb) |
Sport | |
Sport | Athletics |
Event(s) | 10,000 m, marathon |
Achievements and titles | |
Personal best(s) | 10,000 m – 31:57 (2012) marathon – 2:19:41 (2016)[2] |
Tirfi Tsegaye Beyene (born 25 November 1984) is an Ethiopian long-distance runner who competes in marathon races. She has won the Berlin Marathon, the Paris Marathon (in a course record), the Tokyo Marathon (also in course-record time), and the Dubai Marathon. Her personal best of 2:20:18 hours came as winner of the 2014 Berlin Marathon.
Career
Born in Bekoji in Ethiopia's Oromia Region, she comes from a town renowned for producing world class runners such as Kenenisa Bekele and Tirunesh Dibaba.[3] In one of her first major races, Tirfi won the Porto Marathon in 2008 with a time of 2:35:31 hours.[4] She improved her best to 2:29:04 hours with a runner-up finish at the 2009 Turin Marathon and then bettered that with a run of 2:28:16 hours for second at the Shanghai Marathon.[5][6] She also made her debut over the half marathon at the 2009 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships, where her run of 1:09:24 brought her sixth place and a team silver medal with Ethiopia.[7]
Tirfi was runner-up to Atsede Baysa at the 2010 Paris Half Marathon,[8] then finished behind her again at the Paris Marathon a month later, although Tirfi's time of 2:24:51 hours for third place was a significant personal best.[9] She again made the podium at the Toronto Waterfront Marathon, setting another best of 2:22:44 hours and finishing second behind Sharon Cherop.[10] She was also runner-up at the Shanghai Marathon for the second year running, beaten to the title by Nailiya Yulamanova.[11]
She was invited to compete at the 2011 Boston Marathon and she finished in eleventh in the high-profile race.[12] She came fifth at that year's Lille Half Marathon then was three seconds behind Shanghai Marathon winner Haile Lema Kebebush in December with her time of 2:24:11 hours (her third straight second-place finish at the race).[13] At the Roma-Ostia Half Marathon in February 2012 she ran a personal best of 1:07:42 hours for third place.[14] She was the pre-race favourite for the Paris Marathon and delivered on the status by winning the race in a course record and personal best time of 2:21:39 hours, over three minutes ahead of runner-up Sultan Haydar.[15] Running alongside her training partner, Aberu Kebede, she was runner-up at the 2012 Berlin Marathon with a personal best time of 2:21:19 hours.[16]
In January 2013, she won the Dubai Marathon despite the heavy fog during the race, with a time of 2:23:23, 16 seconds ahead of runner-up Ehitu Kiros.[17] She performed less well in her second race of the year, coming seventh at the Frankfurt Marathon in 2:26:57 hours.[18]
She won the 2014 Berlin Marathon, held on 28 September 2014, in a personal best time of 2:20:18.[19]
References
- ^ Tirfi Tsegaye. rio2016.com
- ^ Tirfi Tsegaye. IAAF
- ^ Tirfi Tsegaye. Boston Marathon. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Fernandes, Antonio Manuel (2008-10-28). Mugo takes Porto Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-03-22.
- ^ April 2009 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ November 2009 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ 2009 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships results Archived 7 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF (2009-10-11). Retrieved on 2009-10-11.
- ^ March 2010 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Vazel, Pierre-Jean (2010-04-11). 2:22:04 World lead for Baysa, Tola improves to 2:06:41 – Paris Marathon report. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Gains, Paul (2010-09-26). Mungara and Cherop take Toronto Marathon titles as Canadian All-Comers records tumble. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Marathon 2010. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Marathon 2011. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ December 2011 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Sampaolo, Diego (2012-02-26). Kiplagat sizzles sub-1:07 at Roma-Ostia Half. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
- ^ Vazel, Pierre-Jean (2012-04-15). Biwott 2:05 and Tsegaye 2:21 defy windy conditions to set race records at Paris Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-21.
- ^ Butcher, Pat (2012-09-30). Close victory for Mutai but more straightforward for Kebede in Berlin – REPORT. IAAF. Retrieved on 2013-01-31.
- ^ Butcher, Pat (2013-01-25). Debutant Desisa wins Dubai Marathon in 2:04:45, five men under 2:05. IAAF. Retrieved on 2013-01-25.
- ^ Wenig, Jörg (2013-10-27). Kipruto and Kilel make it a Kenyan double at Frankfurt Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 2013-11-02.
- ^ Mulkeen, Jon & Minshull, Phil (2014-09-28). Kimetto breaks marathon world record in Berlin with 2:02:57. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-10-03.
External links
- Tirfi Tsegaye at World Athletics
- Marathon Info profile
- v
- t
- e
- 1974: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1975: Kristin Bochröder (FRG)
- 1976: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1977: Christa Vahlensieck (FRG)
- 1978: Ursula Blaschke (FRG)
- 1979: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1980: Gerlinde Püttmann (FRG)
- 1981: Angelika Stephan (FRG)
- 1982: Jean Lochhead (GBR)
- 1983: Karen Holdsworth (GBR)
- 1984: Ágnes Sipka (HUN)
- 1985: Magda Ilands (BEL)
- 1986: Charlotte Teske (FRG)
- 1987: Kerstin Preßler (FRG)
- 1988: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1989: Päivi Tikkanen (FIN)
- 1990: Uta Pippig (GDR)
- 1991: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1992: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1993: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1994: Katrin Dörre-Heinig (GER)
- 1995: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1996: Colleen De Reuck (RSA)
- 1997: Catherina McKiernan (IRL)
- 1998: Marleen Renders (BEL)
- 1999: Tegla Loroupe (KEN)
- 2000: Kazumi Matsuo (JPN)
- 2001: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2002: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2003: Yasuko Hashimoto (JPN)
- 2004: Yoko Shibui (JPN)
- 2005: Mizuki Noguchi (JPN)
- 2006: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2007: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2008: Irina Mikitenko (GER)
- 2009: Atsede Habtamu (ETH)
- 2010: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2011: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2012: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2013: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2014: Tirfi Tsegaye (ETH)
- 2015: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2016: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2017: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2018: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2019: Ashete Bekere (ETH)
- 2020: Not held
- 2021: Gotytom Gebreslase (ETH)
- 2022: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- 2023: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- World Marathon Majors
- Berlin Marathon – List (M/W)
- Boston Marathon – List (M/W)
- Chicago Marathon – List (M/W)
- London Marathon – List (M/W)
- New York City Marathon – List (M/W)
- Tokyo Marathon – List (M/W)