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Press Release - Nairobi Marathon - 10/29/06

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                                         Contact: Race Office 
                                                  +44 (0) 7717 275140
                                                  

     Fastest time ever on Kenyan soil by Greatest Race on Earth woman

29 October 2006, Nairobi - Standard Chartered's Greatest Race on Earth 
(GROE) athlete Irene Jerotich today recorded the fastest time ever on 
Kenyan soil to win the Women's Nairobi Marathon. The victory puts her team 
Cyclone into the lead of the GROE Women's Challenge after the first of four 
marathons. In a tough contest, Kenyan Jerotich recorded a time of 2:32:46 
beating the existing record by over three minutes. 

Another GROE runner, China Team's 19 year-old  Zhang Xin, came second with 
a time of 2:37:34 in her first ever Nairobi Marathon, and elevates her 
prospects as an emerging talent for China in the 2008 Olympics. Beatrice 
Omwanza, of the Run for Peace team, came third with a time of 2:39:15.

Kenyan Christopher Cheboiboch was the highest-placed male athlete in this 
first leg of GROE, the Standard Chartered Nairobi Marathon, with a time of 
2:14:59, taking fifth place in the overall marathon.  This takes his Run 
for Fun team into the lead of the GROE Main Team Challenge.

Close behind in second place was Erastus Thumbi running for Posso Nyahururu 
in 2:15:24, with only one second separating him from Lisoreng Philmon of 
Kericho team. 

The 2006/07 Standard Chartered GROE, which has a total prize pool of US$1.5 
million, is a team relay of four challenging marathons in Nairobi, 
Singapore, Mumbai and Hong Kong. The field of elite athletes and emerging 
talent sped away from the start-line at 7.45am along the Mombasa Road, all 
battling the 1,600m altitude.

The new series sees participation from over 30 countries.  The GROE Nations 
Challenge saw Uganda shine, as Moses Cherop stormed through the course to 
finish with a time of 2:18:26, a creditable 4 minutes 16 seconds ahead of 
current holders Kenya who are third. 

Uganda now lead also the Africa regional competition with Kenya second and 
Zimbabwe third, finishing with a time of 2:23.39.  The six regional 
competitions within the Nations Challenge look set to be very exciting in 
this year's series. Vietnam leads Indonesia by 12 minutes 40 seconds with 
Indonesia running a 2:35.19 race in the South East Asia category. Amnuay 
Tongmit from Thailand was third with a time of 2:43:07. 

In the North East Asia region, Taiwan are leading with a time of 2:45:40, 
whilst the South Korea team are in second place over 11 minutes behind and 
Hong Kong are in third place. 

India leads the South Asia region with national representative Lyngkhoi 
Bining completing the course in 2:25:24. Close rivals Sri Lanka are second 
with 2:26:18 and Pakistan are third with a time of 2:41:30.   

The Oceania and Europe region is lead by Ireland. Cathal O'Connell ran 
2:37:53, 3 minutes 49 seconds ahead of Australia with 2:42:42 and Denmark 
who are placed third. 

In the Americas, a new addition to GROE this series, Argentina lead with a 
time of 2:34:07, almost ten minutes ahead of Mexico.

In an increase on last year's Nairobi marathon attendance of 12,000, it was 
estimated that nearly 16,000 runners participated. The consistent growth in 
the popularity of the Nairobi Marathon since its inception in 2003 was 
mirrored by the thousands of spectators that lined the new route, and is 
strong testament to the passion and popularity of long distance running in 
Kenya.  

Greatest Race on Earth Results (provisional) – Leg 1: Nairobi Marathon

Main Team Challenge (open to all teams)

Position           Name             Team Name                Time 
                                                             (hrs:min:sec)
1.        Christopher Cheboiboch    Run for Fun              02:14:59
2.        Erastus Maina Thumbi      Posso Nyahururu          02:15:24
3.        Lisoreng Yarasia Philmon  Kericho                  02:15:25
4.        Jonstone Kemboi Chebii    Kensky Athletics Intyl1  02:16:19
5.        Francis Kipketer Chesumei Pace Sports Management   02:16:26

Women's Challenge

Position           Name             Team Name                Time 
                                                             (hrs:min:sec)
1.                 Irene Jerotich   Cyclone                  02:32:46
2.                 Zhang Xin        China Team               02:37:34
3.                 Beatrice Omwanza Run for Peace            02:39:15

Nations Challenge (Open to National Associations only)

Position           Name                  Team Name           Time 
                                                             (hrs:min:sec)
1.                 Moses Cherop          Uganda              02:18:26
2.                 Nguyen Chi Dong       Vietnam             02:22:39
3.                 Sammy Karanja Karuku  Kenya               02:22:42


Nations Challenge – Regions

Position           Name                  Team Name           Time 
                                                             (hrs:min:sec)
Africa
1.                 Moses Cherop          Uganda              02:18:26
2.                 Sammy Karanja Karuku  Kenya               02:22:42
3.                 Abel Chimukoko        Zimbabwe            02:23:39
 
North East Asia
1.                 Chien-Hsin Chiu       Taiwan              02:45:40
2.                 Se Jeong, Oh          South Korea         02:56:49
3.                 Tsui Theeradej Winter Hong Kong           03:07:56
 
Oceania & Europe
1.                 Cathal O'Connell      Ireland             02:37:53
2.                 Martin Considine      Australia           02:41:42
3.                 Kenneth Munk          Denmark             02:45:08
 
South East Asia
1.                 Nguyen Chi Dong           Vietnam         02:22:39
2.                 I Gusti Gede Karangasem   Indonesia       02:35:19
3.                 Amnuay Tongmit            Thailand        02:43:07
 
South Asia
1.                Lyngkhoi Bining            India           02:25:24
2.                Ishan Kumara Wijethilaka   Sri Lanka       02:26:18
3.                Muhammad Aslam             Pakistan        02:41:30
 
Americas
1.                Alejandro Gimenez          Argentina       02:34:07
2.                Alejandro Jimenez Cara     Mexico          02:44:04

Visit www.thegreatestrace.com for comprehensive media materials such as 
runner profiles, features, fact file, photo gallery and results.

The Standard Chartered Greatest Race on Earth 

The Greatest Race on Earth (GROE) was created in 2004 – the first-ever 
virtual relay race across four marathons. The Main Team Challenge category 
is open to men and women over 18 years of age, of any nationality, with no 
restriction on the level of competence. Each team member will run in one 
marathon. Teams must nominate who will run in each full marathon before the 
start of the series, and the winning team will be the one whose athletes 
record the lowest aggregate time across the four marathons.

In 2005/06 the quality of the runners was world-class, with 24 male and 30 
female GROE runners placing in the top 10 of each of the four marathons. 

Building on the success of the first two series, Standard Chartered 
presents GROE for the third time. There are over 80 teams and 300 
participants taking part. The race covers marathons in Nairobi, Singapore, 
Mumbai and Hong Kong, representing some of the most challenging 
environments in the world:

*   The highest race at over 1,600 metres in Nairobi – 29 October 2006
*   The island race around Singapore – 3 December 2006
*   The historic race through Mumbai – 21 January 2007
*   The harbour race across Hong Kong – 4 March 2007

The marathons characterise the values and attitude that Standard Chartered 
believes in, and lives by every day. Partnership, teamwork, trust, courage, 
willpower, the determination to “go the distance” and a “can-do” attitude, 
all of which are Standard Chartered core values, will be key factors in 
determining the winners.  

3 overall categories 

Main Team Challenge                 
Prize pool of US$845,000; fastest combined time of four runners across all 
four marathons (one runner per team per race); top prize of US$400,000; 
prizes to 5th place. Includes a bonus prize pool of US$200,000 for top five 
women teams. 

The Nations Challenge 
Prize pool of US$400,000 – fastest National Athletics Association team time 
of four runners across all four marathons (one runner per team per race); 
top overall prize of US$50,000. Teams are also divided into 6 regions – 
Africa, South Asia, South East Asia, North East Asia, Europe & Oceania, and 
Americas, with prizes for teams who finish in top three in each region.

Performance Awards                   
Bonus pool of US$55,000 has been set aside for special achievement awards. 
These are awarded to national teams that have made a significant 
improvement on their previous GROE times, and teams that have demonstrated 
commitment, endeavour and determination in competing in and completing the 
Greatest Race on Earth.
 
Standard Chartered – leading the way in Asia, Africa and the Middle East

Standard Chartered PLC is listed on both the London Stock Exchange and the 
Stock Exchange of Hong Kong and is consistently ranked in the top 25 among 
FTSE-100 companies by market capitalisation. 

Standard Chartered has a history of over 150 years in banking and is in 
many of the world's fastest-growing markets with an extensive global 
network of over 1,200 branches (including subsidiaries, associates and 
joint ventures) in over 50 countries in the Asia Pacific Region, South 
Asia, the Middle East, Africa, the United Kingdom and the Americas. 

As one of the world's most international banks, Standard Chartered employs 
almost 50,000 people, representing over 90 nationalities, worldwide. This 
diversity lies at the heart of the Bank's values and supports the Bank's 
growth as the world increasingly becomes one market.

With strong organic growth supported by strategic alliances and 
acquisitions and driven by its strengths in the balance and diversity of 
its business, products, geography and people, Standard Chartered is well 
positioned in the emerging trade corridors of Asia, Africa and the Middle 
East. 

Standard Chartered uniquely derives over 90 per cent of profits from Asia, 
Africa and the Middle East. Serving both Consumer and Wholesale Banking 
customers worldwide, the Bank combines deep local knowledge with global 
capability to offer a wide range of innovative products and services as 
well as award-winning solutions. 

Trusted across its network for its standard of governance and corporate 
responsibility, Standard Chartered takes a long term view of the 
consequences of its actions to ensure that the Bank builds a sustainable 
business through social inclusion, environmental protection and good 
governance.

Standard Chartered is also committed to all its stakeholders by living its 
values in its approach towards managing its people, exceeding expectations 
of its customers, making a difference in communities and working with 
regulators. 

For more information on Standard Chartered, please log on to 
www.standardchartered.com
 
                                     ###

 

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