World Marathon Majors will add a seventh race to its elite series if all goes well at the biggest marathon field assembled in Australia to race 42 kilometres across the streets of Sydney on Sunday. 

If the Sydney Marathon meets the WMM requirements for the second year in a row, it will join the ranks of long-standing majors in New York, London, Boston, Berlin, and Chicago, becoming the first to do since Tokyo in 2013. 

Race director Wayne Larden declared: “We’re prepared, we’re ready. All of our plans look good on paper, I feel we’re ticking all the boxes. So we’ve just got to go out there now and deliver the event as per the plans and I’m sure we’ll meet the criteria.” 

Larden has been the event director since 2005, when there were 2,300 finishers. Since then, he has let the number of runners grow to 25,000, who will compete on a course that has been redesigned. He added: “It’s taken me 18 years to build it to 5,000 and two years to get it to 25,000… So the trajectory has been very steep in the last two years since we became a candidate race, because there’s a lot of excitement about the world majors being in Sydney.” 

With the field so large and the new start location—North Sydney Oval, the site of the 2000 Olympic marathon—the goal may be a little more challenging for Larden and his team, but he is optimistic they can pull it off.

“I’m feeling confident, but it’s a big event and anything can happen. But I think we’re well prepared for it… I will pretty well know on race day how we’ve gone, based on our plans and how we’ve delivered them,” Larden remarked.

 

Source: CNA