BBC SPORTArabicSpanishRussianChinese
BBCiNEWS  SPORT  WEATHER  WORLD SERVICE  A-Z INDEX   SEARCH 

BBC Sport
 You are in: Other Sports: London Marathon 2002 
Sport Front Page
-------------------
Football
Cricket
Rugby Union
Rugby League
Tennis
Golf
Motorsport
Boxing
Athletics
Other Sports
Statistics
US Sport
Horse Racing
Snooker
Sailing
Cycling
Skiing
-------------------
Special Events
-------------------
Sports Talk
-------------------
BBC Pundits
TV & Radio
Question of Sport
-------------------
Photo Galleries
Funny Old Game
-------------------
Around The UK: 
N Ireland
Scotland
Wales

BBC Sport Academy
News image
BBC News
News image
BBC Weather
News image
SERVICES
-------------
LANGUAGES
EDITIONS

Monday, 8 April, 2002, 18:05 GMT 19:05 UK
London's big budget production
Haile Gebrselassie will make his marathon debut in London
Stars like Gebrselassie are vital to London's profile
By BBC Sport Online's David Walmsley.

Few football managers charged with assembling an all-star cast on a limited budget have ever welcomed the agent's knock on the dressing room door.

And the promoters of Europe's biggest athletics meetings have needed ever deeper pockets since the men in suits began advising those in spikes.

But in the world of marathon running, the arrival of the athlete's representative has taken the headache out of assembling top quality fields.

Both the men's and women's line-ups for Sunday's London Marathon are arguably the most eye-catching ever.


The London Marathon is a cross between the Olympic Games and the Notting Hill Carnival
Race director David Bedford
The men's race will see the world's greatest runner, Haile Gebrselassie, make his debut over the distance.

And the prospect of Paula Radcliffe also tackling 26.2 miles for the first time has attracted at least as much interest as the signing of the Ethiopian great.

But both runners will have their work cut out to get their marathon careers off to a winning start.

Radcliffe must take on defending champion Derartu Tulu, former winner Joyce Chepchumba and world marathon championship bronze medallist Svetlana Zakharova.

And in the men's race, it is not just the new distance that Gebrselassie must come to terms with.

World record-holder Khalid Khannouchi, defending champion Abdelkader El Mouaziz and world half-marathon record-holder Paul Tergat also bar his route to glory.

War chest

Race director David Bedford is the man who has assembled Sunday's star-studded line-up.

He says that signing so many big names would have been almost impossible in the days when he had to track down each athlete to obscure training camps scattered across the globe.

"It's actually become easier to put these sort of fields together since the advent of the agent," he said.

"At one time, about 10 years ago, putting the elite field together was the only thing I did.

"Now it takes less time when you know the agents, you know the contracts and you have a very strong budget."

The size of that budget is, of course, the key.

Bedford's war chest bulges to the tune of US$2.2m (�1.54m) annually.

David Bedford leads the field in the 1972 Olympic 10,000m final
David Bedford held the world 10,000m record
And with marathon runners able to compete only a handful of times a season, the sums on offer make London an attractive destination on the circuit.

While Bedford will not reveal individual appearance fees, Gebrselassie is rumoured to be receiving a six-figure sum.

But whatever he pays his international class participants, the former 10,000m world record-holder believes it is money well-spent.

London is not the world's fastest marathon course, and so seeks kudos in the quality of its racing instead.

So vital is a world-class field that Bedford has been known to borrow against the following year's budget to get the names he wants.

He said: "That's very important. Without that elite field it would be very easy for it to become just another spectacle, like the Notting Hill Carnival.

"The London Marathon is a cross between the Olympic Games and the Notting Hill Carnival.

"The key to its success is having world class athletes and the fun-runners and fancy-dressers within the same event."

BBC Sport Online's guide to the London Marathon

In-depth coverage

Winners in focus

Marathon guides

Photo Gallery

Marathon sportstalk

Official website
Links to more London Marathon 2002 stories are at the foot of the page.


News image
News imageE-mail this story to a friend

Links to more London Marathon 2002 stories

News imageNews imageNews image
News image
© BBCNews image^^ Back to top

Sport Front Page | Football | Cricket | Rugby Union | Rugby League |
Tennis | Golf | Motorsport | Boxing | Athletics | Other Sports |
Special Events | Sports Talk | BBC Pundits | TV & Radio | Question of Sport |
Photo Galleries | Funny Old Game | N Ireland | Scotland | Wales