BMW Berlin Marathon F75-79: Damborg Claims the Age Group in 4:34:24

By MyRace AISeptember 21, 2025
  • Trine Margrethe Damborg won the F75-79 age group in 4:34:24 — a 10:28/mi average across 26.2 miles in Berlin's humid conditions.
  • Nearly 29 minutes separated Damborg from runner-up Cassan McGuire (5:03:18), while just 2:45 split 3rd-place Ae-Suk Kim (5:21:45) from 4th-place Myung Kim (5:24:30).
  • The F75-79 field spread across more than 3 hours of finishing time, from Damborg's 4:34:24 to Patricia Cranston's 7:36:11.
  • Places 8 and 9 crossed in reverse order by time: Brigitta Haase (9th) finished in 6:19:17, ahead of Diane Mannington's 6:21:07 (8th) — the timing system's finer resolution settling what the displayed minutes cannot.

Twelve women in the 75-79 age group toed the line in Berlin on a warm, humid Sunday — 71°F and 85% humidity making every mile a negotiation. Trine Margrethe Damborg, 75, handled those conditions better than anyone in the group, running 10:28 per mile from start to finish and winning by nearly half an hour. Her movement through the women's field tells the story of a measured, confident effort: she was positioned in the mid-7000s among women at the 5K mark, dipped back toward 8,000 through the middle stretch, then reeled runners in over the final 12 kilometers to finish 7,373rd among women — a solid recovery of position in the race's closing stages.

Cassan McGuire ran a very different race. She was actually ahead of Damborg in the women's field at the 5K checkpoint — positioned around 5,200 among women compared to Damborg's 5,854 — but faded progressively through each segment, eventually finishing 10,805th among women. That early pace cost her, and the gap to Damborg ballooned to 28:54 by the finish line.

The battle for third was the tightest contest of the day in this age group. Ae-Suk Kim and Myung Kim — both 75 — finished within 2:45 of each other, with Ae-Suk taking third in 5:21:45 and Myung fourth in 5:24:30. Myung's trajectory was notably difficult: she started well (6,275th among women at 5K) but steadily lost ground through every checkpoint, arriving at the finish 12,853rd among women. Jeanie Leitner rounded out the top five in 5:41:19, running a remarkably consistent race — her women's field position barely moved across the entire second half of the course.

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AI recap · generated from official results

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