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BMW BERLIN-MARATHON

Sabastian Sawe runs world lead at the BMW BERLIN-MARATHON

Sabastian Sawe celebrates as he runs across the finishing line.

© SCC EVENTS / Petko Beier

Sabastian Sawe won the BMW BERLIN MARATHON with a world leading time of 2:02:16. Despite very warm conditions with temperatures up to 25 Celsius during the final part of the race the Kenyan clocked the ninth fastest time ever and a „Warm weather world record“ which is of course not an official mark. No-one has run such a fast time in so warm conditions. Sabastian Sawe was almost five minutes ahead of second placed Akira Akasaki of Japan who clocked 2:06:15. Ethiopia’s Chimdessa Debele took third in 2:06:57.

There was a close finish in the women’s race. Kenyan Rosemary Wanjiru crossed the line in 2:21:05. She was just three seconds ahead of Ethiopia’s Dera Dida. Azmera Gebru of Ethiopia followed in third with 2:21:29.

The Men’s Race

Sabastian Sawe wanted to find out how fast he could run in Berlin. The 30-year-old ran at a breathtaking marathon pace in the first half of the race. Led by pacemakers the Kenyan passed the 10 k mark in 28:26 – this pointed towards a finishing time of just under two hours. 60:16 was Sabastian Sawe’s half marathon split time, and that was exactly the pace for the world record of 60:35. While defending champion Milkesa Mengesha (Ethiopia) was unable to hold on and later dropped out the last pacemaker stopped earlier than planned at 23 k.

In the heat Sabastian Sawe now had to run alone at the front and it was no surprise that he was unable to maintain his pace. With a 1:26:06 split at 30 k he was still on course for the course record set by Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge in 2022 (2:01:09). But it was not a day for major records. “I gave it my all and I am very happy to have won the race. It was tough in the heat,” said Sabastian Sawe, who has now won all his three marathons. In 2024 he took Valencia and this spring he triumphed in London. “That was an incredible performance by Sabastian in these conditions,” said Race Director Mark Milde. A number of top runners struggled and dropped out in the heat after running too fast early on.

Hendrik Pfeiffer was the best German runner finishing eighth in 2:09:14. This was the best place by a German male runner in Berlin since 1990 when former national record holder Jörg Peter was third. “That was the best race of my career,” said Hendrik Pfeiffer.

The women's race

Because of the warm temperatures the women’s leaders ran slower than planned from the start. Four athletes were still in the first group when the half marathon point was reached after 69:07. Shortly after the 25 k mark the favourite, Rosemary Wanjiru, pulled away and at 30 k she already had a 24-second lead. At the end the Kenyan was so exhausted that she almost lost the race in the final meters. Dera Dida was closing in but the Ethiopian had to settle for second place for the third time this year. Dida had also missed victory by just a few seconds in Dubai and Paris. Wanjiru won in 2:21:05, Dida ran 2:21:08. “I didn't even realize it was so close at the end. I'll keep working to win next time,” said Dera Dida. Wanjiru needed medical attention after finishing and did not make it for the press conference.

Germans Fabienne Königstein and Domenika Mayer produced strong performances and ran personal bests. Königstein finished sixth with 2:22:17 and became the third fastest German of all time while Mayer took eighth in 2:23:16. “I am really happy. I don't usually run very well in the heat and it got very difficult towards the end, but the spectators pushed me,“ said Fabienne Königstein.

Harry Styles wearing sunglasses on the track; the Brandenburg Gate in the background.

Harry Styles ran a strong 2:59:13 hours at the BMW BERLIN-MARATHON 2025. © Sportograf

Celebrities once again took part

Many celebrities once again took part in the BMW BERLIN-MARATHON. Alongside German footballers André Schürrle (3:21:25 hours) and Felix Kroos (4:28:23 hours), British singer and actor Harry Styles ran a really strong time of 2:59:13 hours.

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