In the beginning there was Abebe Bikila, the imperial guard who ran barefoot atop Roman cobblestones by torchlight in 1960 and became the first black African to win the OlymÂpic marathon. The Ethiopians owned the distance then, winning three consecutive gold medals at the Games with Bikila and Mamo Wolde. That was before boycotts took them off the global stage, before the prize money arrived and the Kenyans came by the dozens, then the hundreds, to take over the roads.
Now Bikilaâs countrymen and women have been coming off the track and onto the hardtop and restaking their countryâs original claim to primacy over 26 miles. âFrom the beginning Ethiopia was a name in marathoning,â says coach Haji Adillo.
âNow, Ethiopia has become at the level of the Kenyans.â
The Ethiopia-Kenya rivalry is both friendly and fierce. âWe are neighbors and we have the same talents for long distance but it is a big rivalry,â says Markos Geneti, along with four of his countrymen, took on eight Kenyans in last Aprilâs 118th Boston Marathon, the worldâs most fabled road race. âWe fight for our country and for ourselves.â
Drawn from the track
Kenya, of course, still dominates the planÂetâs highways. Their men and women won 27 of last yearâs 45 top-tier races, including 10 of the 14 World Marathon Majors titles. But the Ethiopians have been making inÂroads.
Tiki Gelana won the Olympic crown in London, the first woman from her homeÂland to do it since Fatuma Roba in 1996. Lelisa Desisa and Gebre Gebremariam finished first and third in Boston last year, their countryâs best menâs showing here, and Desisa and Tadese Tola won silver and bronze at the Moscow world championÂships. This year the Ethiopians have won 11 of the 20 âGold Labelâ marathons and have posted six of the top 10 menâs and womenâs times. The Ethiopians long have dominatÂed the 10,000 meters on the oval, winning eight gold medals at the last six Olympics and 15 at the last 11 world championships. Recently, theyâve been enticed by the same macadam motherlode that lured the KenÂyans in the â80s.
âOne of the major factors is the decline
of good opportunities on the track for a lot of the athletes,â says Terrence Mahon, who coaches the Boston Athletic Associationâs high-performance distance group. âA lot of those races have disappeared or the money has gone away so it has pushed this critical mass to the marathon. The maraÂthon is the one event that keeps growing. That creates an allure. Why suffer on the track to run 27 minutes when they can run a 2:05 marathon? Thatâs a huge incentive.â
Desisa was a promising junior trackÂman before he switched over. Last year as a rookie marathoner he won Dubai in his debut (2:04:45) and claimed Boston with a dash down Boylston Street (2:10:22). âI suppose my life has changed,â mused the 24-year-old from Ambo who earned $400,000 for his labors, nearly 1,000 times his countryâs annual per capita inÂcome. âBut besides that, I have become a known athlete in the world.â
Building depth
Itâs not as if Ethiopia hadnât produced marÂathon stars before. After Bikila and Wolde came Roba, who won Boston three straight times (1997-99) after she collected the gold medal in Atlanta. Haile Gebrselassie, the two-time Olympic champion on the track who was a delayed-vocation maraÂthoner, set the world record.
Whatâs different now is the Ethiopians have significant depth below their aces, especially on the womenâs side where Mare Dibaba (Xiamen), Mula Seboka (Dubai), Tirfi Tsegaye (Tokyo), Geda Ayelu (Rome) and Abebech Afework (Rotterdam) all have won top-tier races this year. âThe new generation started 10 years ago,â says Mahon. âWe just didnât hear about it until now.â
The Ethiopians have been playing catch-up after the lost decade when they joined the African walkout of the 1976 Olympics in Montreal and their Marxist government kept them out of the 1984 and 1988 Games in Los Angeles and Seoul for political reaÂsons. âThe Kenyans have more numbers than us,â acknowledges Gebremariam, who beat a brace of Kenyans when he won
in New York in 2010 in his marathon deÂbut. âIt will take time to have a mass like that but I think we are on that track.â
The Ethiopians have many of the same things going for them as do their southern neighbors. They are born and train at altiÂtude â Addis Ababa, the capital, is more than 7,700 feet above sea level. They have light and lean frames. They have a history of success with distance running. And they have both an aptitude and an appetite for the long haul and the pain that comes with it.
âOne of the most striking things I saw wasnât anything from the local runners,â says Ryan Hall, the two-time US OlymÂpic marathoner who recently trained in Ethiopia for a month in preparation for his return to Boston. âIt was what I saw in the eyes of old ladies with absolutely massive loads of firewood literally tied to their backs. They would carry these loads almost doubled over as they walked someÂtimes as far as 30 kilometers so that they could make $5 to sell the wood when they arrived from their long and treacherous journey in Addis. Iâll never forget the look in these old ladiesâ eyes. What was comÂmunicated to me was, âNo matter what it takes, I am going to make it.â
Following the system
While the Ethiopians canât yet match the Kenyansâ sheer numbers, the hundreds of competitive runners training in numerous camps, they employ a similar model on a smaller scale that still turns out dozens of contenders.
âEverywhere I went, even when I was buried out in the forest and I thought there couldnât possibly be anyone else around, sure enough a massive team of runners would come zig-zagging in a single-file line through thickly wooded eucalyptus trees,â says Hall, who trained at Yaya Village, a self-described ârunners paradise above the cloudsâ just outside of the capital.
If the Ethiopiansâ system isnât quite as extensive as the Kenyansâ itâs decidedly more insular and controlled. âIf the fedÂeration doesnât want you to go to a race,
you donât go, you donât get the visa,â says Mahon. âThey do whatâs best for Ethiopia, not whatâs best for the athlete.â
That approach is nothing new. In 1988, when the Africans made their initial splash in Boston, Ethiopian officials pulled their three runners four days before the race and sent them to Rotterdam instead. âOur system is very clear,â says Gebremariam. âNo one goes outside the rules. Everyone knows his responsibility.â
Aiming high
The biggest responsibility â and priviÂlege â is to win at Olympus, where the Ethiopian men and women have claimed half a dozen marathon gold medals at the 11 Games where theyâve competed since 1960.
âThe athletes want to be a winner at the Olympics and the government gives us a big reception,â says Gebremariam, who competed on the track in Athens and London. âWhen Kenenisa Bekele won [the 5,000-10,000 double in 2008] they had a road and a song with his name. So most of the athletes want to win the Olympics and world championships even more than the big races.â
All 45 of Ethiopiaâs Olympic medals have come in distance running, nearly half of them in the 10,000. But the move to the marathon is unmistakable. âThe 10,000 is not huge like before,â muses Adillo, who coaches Desisa, Dibaba, and Tilahun Regassa. âMost of them want to be in the marathon.â
The payouts are Midas-like by compariÂson. Bostonâs menâs and womenâs winners each receive $150,000 with a $50,000 bonus for a world-best time and $25,000 for a course record. âBut itâs not only about money,â says Geneti, who was sixth here last year. âIt is also about achievement.â
Winning Boston, particularly for an AfÂrican runner, is a lifetime achievement. âIt changed my life when I won here, same as the Kenyans,â said Deriba Merga, who beÂcame only the third Ethiopian menâs chamÂpion when he prevailed here in 2009.

