Making a second attempt at the start line of the Vienna City Marathon on 19th April, Oqbe Kibrom will be hoping to become the first Eritrean runner to win the men’s race of the prestigious event at his second attempt. Kibrom was third at Austria’s most spectacular road race in 2022 and heads the current start list with a personal best of 2:05:37.
Race organisers of the 43rd Vienna City Marathon, which is a World Athletics Elite Label Road Race, have registered 13,000 runners for the classic distance. The race organizers have also aded races at shorter distances during the two-day event attracting a record total of over 46,000 athletes.
4 years ago Vienna looked like a place where he would etch his name in the annals of history but alas once the last pacemaker dropped out after the 30 k point he surged ahead and seemed on course to become the first Eritrean to win in the Austrian capital. However Kibrom, whose manager is the Swiss record holder Tadesse Abraham, had not met lady luck.
While he could not hold the pace the eventual winner Cosmas Muteti of Kenya came from behind and passed him with five kilometres to go. Kibrom finished third with 2:07:25. While there has been an Eritrean women’s winner in Vienna no runner from Eritrea has taken the men’s race.
With three sub 2:06:00 times in his career so far Oqbe Kibrom has consistently produced fine marathon performances. While Vienna stands out because it was his best race with regard to a podium finish the Eritrean clocked his personal record of 2:05:37 in Berlin when he was eighth two years ago. In 2025 he ran another fine marathon taking fourth place in Daegu, South Korea, with 2:06:04. The time might be right now for the 28 year-old to achieve a first marathon victory.
Two other Africans will be mounting a challenge on Oqbe and who have also clocked their personal bests in the last two years. They include Ethiopia’s Tafese Delegen ran 2:06:11 in Seville and Stanley Kurgat of Kenya clocked 2:07:05 in Berlin, finishing seven places behind Kibrom. A runner who achieved his PB more recently is Albert Kangogo. The Kenyan was runner-up in Mersin, Turkey, in December with 2:07:26. Kangogo knows the Vienna City Marathon well. He was third here two years ago in 2:10:44.
Another athlete from Austria is also tipped to produce a strong performance: Aaron Gruen caused an upset in spring last year, when he became the first national runner to clock a sub 2:10:00 time in the marathon. The 27 year-old ran 2:09:53 in Congers, New York, improving by almost five minutes. In the build-up to the Vienna City Marathon Gruen ran a promising 61:14 half marathon PB in Houston this January. However he has to balance marathon training and his duties as a student at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
European Marathon Classics introduced in Vienna
In addition to seven other races the Vienna City Marathon forms the new series European Marathon Classics (EMC), which was introduced in Vienna a short while ago. Major marathon races in London, Rome, Madrid, Lisbon, Warsaw, Copenhagen and Frankfurt form the series together with Vienna. Runners who finish at least five of these marathons in different cities and without a time limit receive a specially crafted medal.
“European Marathon Classics embodies our ambition to explore Europe together while pushing boundaries – both geographically and philosophically. I am confident this series will show that across Europe we are better together than we are apart and that we are more similar than we are different. I hope it will inspire participants from around the world to experience Europe’s great marathons, cities and communities,” said Hugh Brasher, Event Director of the TCS London Marathon.