http://www.iaaf.org/news/Kind=2/newsId=28982.html

Monday 28 March 2005

There is no doubt that Dieter Hogen is the most successful German long
distance running coach, yet he doesn't train a single German runner.
Instead he concentrates on a group of international runners,
especially Kenyans.

In order to be able to support his athletes in the best possible way
Hogen and US manager Tom Ratcliffe have recently founded a new
management group: KIMbia Athletic, that will concentrate on long
distance track events, cross country and road races, especially the
marathon.

Elite group – a memory of Kim

At present the group consists of about 25 runners. Among them are the
Kenyans Evans Rutto, who has won all his first three marathons and set
an unofficial world debut record in Chicago in 2003 (2:05:50), Timothy
Cherigat (winner of the Boston Marathon 2004), Sammy Kipketer and
Abraham Chebii. The latter was second behind Kenenisa Bekele in the
short course event at last weekend's World Cross Country
Championships.

Frenchman Bouabdellah Tahri has recently chosen Dieter Hogen as his
coach just as Bob Kennedy (US) and Elana Meyer (South Africa) had done
earlier. Among those who have joined the management team are former
long distance runner Godfrey Kiprotich, who had been one of the first
Kenyans coached by Dieter Hogen in the mid 90ies, and Jane Howarth,
who had been working for the late Kim McDonald.

Tom Ratcliffe, who had been Kim McDonald's business partner for many
years, and Dieter Hogen chose the name and spelling KIMbia for two
reasons. Kimbia' is from the Kenyan language Swahili and means 'to
run'. The name is an acknowledgement of the impact Kenyan runners have
on international athletics and also serves as a reminiscence to Kim
McDonald who had been one of the world's most respected athletes
managers before his sudden death in 2001. "Today his name as well as
his philosophy lives on in KIMbia", says Tom Ratcliffe.

>From the very beginning to Pippig's brilliance

Dieter Hogen has worked as a coach for more than 25 years. Originally
coming from Thüringen in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR)
he had joined one of the renowned East German clubs in 1973: ASK
Potsdam. He was then coached by the well known Bernd Dießner, who had
for example guided Olaf Beyer to his famous win against Sebastian Coe
at 800 metres in the 1978 European Championships.

Dieter Hogen was a promising middle and long distance runner. But by
the age of 22 his career as a runner was already over in 1975 due to
an injury. He then concentrated on his teaching studies at Potsdam
University. But it was not long and before graduation, when ASK
Potsdam offered him a job as a coach. "Since top level sport was more
interesting for me than school teaching, I took charge of a group of
13 to 15-year-old runners", Hogen explains. A couple of years later in
1986 he took over as a coach for adults for long distance and marathon
at ASK Potsdam. It was then when he met Uta Pippig.

Hogen then guided Pippig to international class and she was third in
the 1989 World Marathon Cup. But none of the two, who had a personal
relationship until a few years ago, felt comfortable in the GDR's
system. Hogen felt he could not realise his true potential. For
example most of the requests for races abroad were turned down.
Shortly after the Berlin Wall came down in late 1989 he and Uta Pippig
left for Stuttgart but soon returned to Berlin when the political
circumstances had finally changed.

Negative experience – total commitment

Despite negative experiences Hogen's thoughts about the past are not
all bad. "In the GDR you learned what absolute commitment to a goal
meant and to accept only the highest standards. You don't always get
that with athletes these days. They give much less than 100 percent
and average performances are too quickly described as good, both in
Germany and America. If you want to become world class, it takes much
more commitment and hard training than many imagine," says Hogen.

"You have to prepare yourself professionally. The GDR had many
professionals and that brought success. In long distance running
doping played no role. But unfortunately one was strongly tormented by
the GDR government both politically and personally. That destroyed the
good points."

It has always been Hogen's aim to give maximum support and provide as
much individual supervising of training to his athletes as possible.
In his view, the most important step towards world class results is
creating a professionally organised environment for the athlete, with
every detail in daily life taken into account.

Pippig had been the most prominent German athlete Hogen coached. She
was a triple winner of both the Berlin and the Boston Marathons.
Additionally until today the national record holder for the classic
distance (2:21:45) and the half marathon (67:58) is the only German to
have won the New York Marathon. Hogen coached a number of other
runners from his home country in the 90s. One of them was Yvonne
Graham, who switched to Jamaican citizenship.

The Kenyan connection

It was Kim McDonald who originally connected Hogen with the Kenyan
runners. He had looked for a coach who was able to transform top
Kenyan runners into top marathoners. In 1994 the German coach started
working with a group of Kenyans. One who joined the team was Sammy
Lelei. In 1995 he clocked a sensational 2:07:02 to win the Berlin
Marathon. At that time it was the second fastest marathon time ever
and the fastest for more than seven years. Ondoro Osoro was another of
Hogen's athletes. He became the then fastest debut marathon runner
winning the Chicago Marathon in 1998 with 2:06:54. Already in the mid
90s Hogen predicted that the day would come when a Kenyan would break
2:05:00 for the marathon. Paul Tergat proved him right by running
2:04:55 in Hogen's German hometown Berlin in 2003 (though there is no
connection between the two).

After a break Hogen started coaching Kenyans again in the summer of
2003. Nearly immediately, away Evans Rutto won the Chicago marathon
ahead of Paul Koech, another prominent team member of KIMbia.

Two training venues

Dieter Hogen mainly switches between two training camps. One is in
Iten (Kenya), the other in his US hometown Boulder (Colorado). Hogen
had been training and living in Boulder with Pippig since the
beginning of the 1990s. The two still work together closely today.
Pippig for example supports his athletes during hard training weeks in
Boulder.

"We'd heard even before we went there that the city was at altitude
and we knew that many good athletes such as Rob de Castella, Steve
Jones, Arturo Barrios, Rosa Mota and Ingrid Kristiansen trained there.
Boulder has an alpine climate with close to 300 days of sunshine each
year," confirms Hogen explaining their choice.

"When you coach Kenyans, you are working with a whole new quality of
runners. They are in very good condition and ready to work hard."

Judging chances of American or European runners Hogen confirmed:
"Anyone who is ready to live the right kind of life, 24-hours-a-day,
be patient for a couple of years and work according to the latest
research, can reach the top these days and will be able to do so in
future."

Nutrition plays the key role believes Hogen who besides coaching, with
Pippig presents seminars on nutrition at big road races or in
companies: "There's excellent research going on in this field in the
USA. In endurance sport you can still be at the top when you're way
past 40, but you've got to make sure you stay fit."

Jörg Wenig for the IAAF


ENDS

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