2025 TMM / MUSINGS

Illustration: Shyam G Menon
Anish Thapa; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Anish Thapa

For their training, the Indian Army’s battery of elite marathoners is typically spread over Pune, Ooty, Ranikhet and Bengaluru. Anish Thapa came to Mumbai straight from Ooty. He had just two days to adjust from the cool climes of the southern hill station to Mumbai’s warm and humid weather. Not to mention – race day in the city has always been a last-minute kiss or kick as regards the weather. You never really know what’s in store, till the day dawns. For instance, overall, on the warmer, humid side, Mumbai had thrown a surprise in 2024 gifting athletes excellent weather conditions and they responded with good performances. As it turned out, 2025 race day witnessed Mumbai back to its usual self. It wasn’t a kiss but a kick. “ My run was okay till the bridge over the sea. After that, the uphill at Peddar Road took a toll. Then past 40 kilometers or so, my hamstring got tight. The last two kilometers was really tough for me,’’ Anish Thapa said. Despite the difficulties, Anish completed his run in two hours, 17 minutes and 23 seconds to place first among Indian elite men and seventh overall. He was among those who – while speaking to this blog – recommended an earlier start for the elite race in Mumbai. In 2025, it commenced at 7.20 AM. He felt a 6 AM or 6.30 AM start would be better given the general trend of race days in the city staying warm and humid. Provided his post-TMM recovery goes off well, Anish hopes to run the marathon in New Delhi in February second half. 

Nirmaben Thakor; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Nirmaben Thakor

This elite runner, who hails from Gujarat, ably defended her title at the 2025 edition of the Tata Mumbai Marathon. However, it was not without its share of difficulties. Nirmaben placed first in the Indian elite women’s category with timing of 2:50:06. Last year, she had won the race with a personal best timing (PB) of 2:47:11. This time around, weather played spoilsport despite her training being quite good. Nirmaben trains under Vijendra Singh at Nashik. On social media accounts Vijendra Singh describes himself as an athletics coach from Sports Authority of India training at Bonsala Military School, Nashik. Nirmaben hails from a village in Patan district, Gujarat. “ During my school days I did not do much of sport. But somewhere along the way I got into running,” she told this blog. In competitions around running, Nirmaben was able to turn in very good timings. At the Bajaj Allianz Pune Half Marathon 2023, she finished the women’s race in 1:17:16 securing an overall second position. She turned in her best timing in the full marathon at the 2024 edition of Tata Mumbai Marathon. “ That is my personal best in the full marathon,” she said. The 27-year-old runner survives on her podium earnings. According to Nirmaben, the weather on January 19, 2025 – race day in Mumbai – was challenging. “ It was quite warm and the humidity was also high. My body was getting heated up. Our start time is very late,” she said. The elite runners started their race at 7.20 AM. Despite the heat, she was free of cramps. “ During the last three kilometers I had difficulties with my shoes as they had become wet and my feet were feeling squishy inside. But I decided to ignore it as I was too close to the finish line,” she said. Nirmaben may opt to go for the New Delhi Marathon, slated to be held on February 23, 2025.

Man Singh; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Man Singh

The winner of the 2024 Asian Marathon Championships, wasn’t quite happy with how he fared at 2025 TMM. “ I am not satisfied with my performance. It could have been better,’’ Man Singh said. According to him, he had targeted a sub-two hours, 14 minutes timing. But the weather on race day proved to be a problem. It was warm and humid. “ My run was good in the beginning. But then, the heat started to take a toll. I got muscle cramps,’’ he said. The cramps in turn hindered his progress, slowing him down especially in the last five to seven kilometers. “ I became slow,’’ Man Singh said. Covering the 42 kilometer-distance in 2:17:37, Man Singh placed second among Indian elite men and eighth overall. The difference in timing between him and Anish Thapa, winner among Indian elite men, was 14 seconds. With his TMM outing not up to satisfaction and India’s elite athletes continuing to chase the late Shivnath Singh’s longstanding national record (2:12:00 – set in 1978) in the marathon, Man Singh hopes to recover well from his run in Mumbai and be ready for the marathon in New Delhi, due February second half. He would also like to do a race abroad.

Gopi Thonakal; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Gopi Thonakal

Among the most familiar faces at TMM, Gopi’s preparations for the 2025 edition of the race had been good. The outcome – he finished in 2:19:59 to place third among Indian elite men – wasn’t to his satisfaction. “ I had prepared well but couldn’t deliver as expected,’’ he said. Gopi too found the warm, humid weather of race day challenging. Around 25 kilometers, he sensed his body developing catches. Result – he couldn’t run as freely as he wished to. Nevertheless, it being too early in the race to worry over such issues, he soldiered on. Plus, unlike in some of the previous editions of TMM, this time around, he wasn’t getting cramps or requiring to stop and stretch. According to Gopi, given the weather was impacting the foreign elite athletes too, they weren’t very far from the Indian elites even at kilometer-30. Overall, his progression was okay till the 32nd kilometer or so. “ Then I became slow,’’ he said. Depending on how well he recovers post-TMM, he would like to participate in the upcoming marathon in New Delhi scheduled for February second half (he won the 2024 edition of this event in 2:14:40) . He also plans to do a race overseas in the months ahead. At the time of writing, Gopi (he won gold at the Asian Marathon Championship in 2017) still held the second fastest time yet by an Indian in the marathon – 2:13:39, set at the Seoul International Marathon in 2019.

Sonam; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Sonam

Sonam finished third among Indian elite women runners at 2025 TMM. Uniquely, she is, as yet, only an occasional long-distance runner. The 2025 TMM was her first marathon. She has run the half marathon distance at a few races before. Her main disciplines in athletics are the steeplechase and the 5000 meters. The 20-year-old athlete commenced running along with youngsters training for entry into the services. “ I had started running before the pandemic induced lockdown,” she said. At the 2022 National Junior Athletic Championships held in Assam, Sonam got the gold medal in the 2000 meter-steeplechase event. She also got a podium finish at the 2022 National Cross-Country Championships held in Kohima, Nagaland. At the 2022 edition of Vasai Virar Municipal Corporation Marathon (VVMM), she finished fifth among elite women in the half marathon run. Sonam’s decision to sign up for Tata Mumbai Marathon was largely fuelled by her family’s need for money. Her sister’s wedding was coming up. “ My coach signed me up for this race as he was confident that I would finish within the first seven finishers among Indian elite women,” she said. The first seven finishers are assured of prize money. Sonam, originally from Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh, lives in Delhi and trains under coach Sanjeev Kumar, whose disciplines include steeplechase and hurdles. Sonam did not do much training before the TMM race, barring a couple of runs of 30 and 32 kilometers. “ It was quite a challenging race for me. First, the late start was not comfortable. For the first five to six kilometers I got no water,” she said. She was also quite clueless about the hydration requirements for a marathon as this was her first race over the distance. “ I had no idea about the route or how much I had finished. I was beginning to get cramps and suffered cracked nails. But when I crossed the finish line, I felt overwhelmed,” Sonam said. Mumbai’s humid weather is something she has to get accustomed to. “ During the race, I was running alone and I felt scared. I have a phobia of water and running on those bridges was quite a daunting experience for me,” she said, adding that she did consider giving up the race somewhere along the route. Looking back, she is glad she did not give up. She finished in 2:55:45. “ Having completed the marathon, I can say it was a great experience. A lot of the niggling issues that we athletes tend to get bothered by seem so negligible once you finish a marathon,” she said. She will now be participating in the National Games in February, focusing on her disciplines – the 5000 meter run and the 3000 meter-steeplechase.

Kalidas Hirave; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Kalidas Hirave

One of India’s best civilian marathoners, it was only in early December 2024 that Kalidas Hirave won the year’s edition of the Vasai Virar Municipal Corporation Marathon (VVMM). He won it with timing of 2:18:21, missing the course record narrowly. A little over a month later, came the 2025 TMM. “ My preparation was good but the heat and humidity of race day got to me,’’ Kalidas said. He wanted to attempt a good timing, something in the range of two hours and 15 minutes. On January 19 in Mumbai, Kalidas’s run proceeded more or less according to plan till about the 25th kilometer. Then he began to feel the impact of exerting himself in Mumbai’s weather. By kilometers 33 and 34, he was sensing some sort of failure in the body. “ Over, the last 3-4 kilometers, I was very slow,’’ he said. He finished in 2:20:28, to place fourth in the Indian men’s elite category. Looking back, Kalidas is unsure if two marathons in two months – both at high levels of performance – may have impacted his performance at 2025 TMM. Big races call for comprehensive recovery periods in between. Consequently, even as he would like to go for the February second half-marathon in Delhi (like the other elites) he pegs it to proper recovery from his outing at TMM. Still, at the time of writing, he had already recommenced training and was hoping to make it to Delhi for the annual marathon there. For this runner based out of Nashik, the biggest challenge faced in training is the typical curse of the elite civilian athlete. Alone in that space, one trains alone. One does not have a marathon pack for company (a pack of that level of running), like runners in the military do. This is one of the major problems in Indian marathon running – the lack of inclusiveness between civilian and military in training so that talent is drawn from a common pool. The blunt truth is that civilians, despite all the work-life challenges they face (in the military you can focus on sports), have made good progress in the past few years and there are civilian athletes now delivering sub-2:30 performances; some of them, consistently. “ I wish I could also train in Ooty or Bengaluru along with the other elites or be supported by big companies into sports,’’ Kalidas said.   

Srinu Bugatha; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Srinu Bugatha

Last year at TMM, Srinu Bugatha had placed first in the Indian men’s elite category with time to finish of 2:17:29. He improved that to 2:14:38 at the 2024 Apollo Tyres New Delhi Marathon held in February. Then in April, he suffered an injury to his right hamstring. In Europe, where he went to participate in the year’s Prague Marathon, the injury worsened. He had to spend time recovering from the injury and nursing himself back to form.  In August 2024, he finished first among Indian men at the NDMC Hyderabad Marathon with timing of 2:29:25. Two months later, he was laid low by dengue fever. Recovering from it, he was able to train for roughly two months and get ready for 2025 TMM. “ My run at TMM this year, didn’t go as I had planned,’’ Srinu said. After kilometer-23, his pace began to slacken a bit and at that stage his fellow runners from the Indian men’s elite squad, keeping up with their pacer, left him behind. For the remainder of the race, he soldiered on alone, not exactly an ideal position to be in. Srinu finished in 2:20:43 to place fifth in the Indian elite men’s category. He now plans to run at the 2025 edition of the New Delhi marathon slated for February 23.   

Jyoti Gawate; from 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Jyoti Gawate

An elite runner, Jyoti Gawate from Parbhani in Maharashtra, is a regular participant at many of the races around the country. Jyoti has won the Mumbai marathon’s race for Indian elite women twice, secured second position four times and third position once. She won the race for Indian elite women in the 2011 and 2017 editions. She came in second in 2010, 2018, 2019 and 2020 editions. In 2014, she finished third among elite women runners. In 2015, she finished fourth and in 2012 and 2013 she finished in fifth position. In 2016, she finished in sixth position. “ I am returning to the Mumbai marathon after four years. My training was quite good but the race was very tough because of the weather,” she said. Jyoti finished the race in 3:11:09 to place seventh among Indian elite women runners. “ I did not get any energy drinks during the run,” she said. Jyoti had represented India in the IAU 100 km World Championship held in Bengaluru on December 7, 2024. But she had to quit the race at 60 kilometers due to injury. Jyoti has represented the country for 100K and 50K races in both Asian and world championships. Jyoti holds the women’s national record for 100 kilometers, 8:20:07 set at the IAU 100 km World Championship in Bernau-Berlin in 2022. Immediately on the cards for Jyoti is probably the 50 kilometer-race at Tata Ultra, due on February 23, 2025. “ I have nothing planned but I would like to attempt the 100 kilometer-race again to see if I can improve my national record timings,” she said.

Shyamali Singh (photo: courtesy Shyamali)

Shyamali Singh

At the 2025 edition of TMM, Shyamali Singh had to give up the race at around eight kilometers as she had a severe backache. “ While travelling to Mumbai a few days before the race itself, I noticed that my back was hurting quite badly. I kept taking medicines but to no avail,” she said. There’s more to Shyamali’s story than the above-mentioned setback of January 19, 2025. No stranger to TMM, twenty-five-year-old Shyamali has been running for several years and has finished with podium or near podium positions, including in the Indian women’s elite category in Mumbai. In the 2017 edition of the Mumbai marathon, Shyamali finished second among Indian elite women (3:08:41). She finished second among Indian elite women at the Tata Steel 25K event in Kolkata, in 2019 (1:39:02). At the 2020 edition of TMM, she placed third among Indian elite women with timing of 2:58:42. That same year in September, she started to have mild headache and fever. Following routine visits to local doctors and taking medicines, her fever came down but the headache worsened. A resident of Asansol in West Bengal, Shyamali, had to go through a series of hospitalizations and wrong diagnoses before she and her husband, Santosh Singh, learnt of Dr Siddhartha Ghosh, neurosurgeon at Apollo Hospital in Chennai. “ By this time, we had already incurred a huge amount of expenses,” Santosh said. For their consultation with Dr Ghosh, they had to take a flight from Durgapur to Chennai. After the diagnosis – the doctors discovered a tumor – and the initial treatment, they went back home to Asansol and returned to Chennai in December 2020 for surgery. Shyamali underwent a 12-hour brain surgery in December, 2020. “ For us, Dr Ghosh is akin to God. He was aware that Shyamali was an elite long-distance runner and therefore allowed her to resume running slowly after six months,” Santosh said. At the 2024 edition of TMM, she finished in third place in the Indian elite women’s category with timing of 3:04:35. This year’s TMM didn’t prove as successful. But such is life. Going ahead, Shyamali is likely to participate in Kochi Marathon, slated to be held on February 9, 2025.

Reenu Sandhu (photo: courtesy Reenu)

Reenu Sandhu

Running the elite marathon at 2025 TMM, Reenu Sandhu pulled out of the race at around 27 kilometers. “ During the 2025 National Cross-Country Championship last week I ended up with fever and I had not fully recovered. Because of the overall fatigue and the weather conditions on race day I had to give up the TMM race,” she said. The late start was also not helpful. The race for elite runners commences at 7:20 AM, which is considered late for Mumbai’s humid weather. Reenu, a head constable with the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) and posted in Bhopal, is a track and field athlete who focuses on 5000 meters and 10,000 meters. The 27-year-old athlete, hailing from Haryana, also runs the half marathon and the full marathon. In 2023, Reenu won the Indira Marathon, held in Prayagraj. The following year she earned a silver medal. She had secured a gold medal in the 2023 Indian Army Veteran Half Marathon held in Delhi. Her personal best in the marathon is 2:47:11, which she secured at the Coal India Ranchi Marathon 2024. She will now be heading for the 2025 Coal India Ranchi Marathon scheduled to be held on February 9, 2025. Next on the cards will be the 2025 World Police Athletics to be held in the US. She will be running the 5000 meters and 10,000 meter-races at this event.

Sarswati Rai (photo: courtesy Sarswati)

Sarswati Rai

Winner of the women’s race in the open category of 2025 TMM, 46-year-old Sarswati Rai commenced running about 10 years ago. “ My husband, who was in the army at that time, encouraged me to take up running. Initially, I used to wake up early, go for a run at 4 AM and return home before daylight appeared. I was very shy of getting out and running. There was no running culture where I lived,” she said. Her husband now works with Defence Security Corps (DSC). A resident of Kalimpong, Sarswati was initially clueless about distances. “ I did not know what a distance of one kilometer was. In 2015, I enrolled for half marathon at the Rotary Darjeeling Marathon. It was a tough run for me. I kept stopping as I was feeling dizzy. I finished in two hours, 50 minutes. The guy who was driving the ambulance kept asking if I wanted to stop running,” she said. Sarswati then began focusing on shorter distances to improve her timing and worked her way up through the distances. Her training for 2025 TMM was quite good but her performance on race day did not match up to the training, she said. “ The weather was tough. It was very warm and humid. Normally, I can do 10 kilometers without water but here I had to have water at seven kilometers itself,” she said. She finished the marathon in 3:10:45 winning overall among women in the open category as well as in her age category of 45-49 years. With this race, she completed the Procam Slam for the second time. Procam Slam entails running the four races organized by Procam. These include Tata Mumbai Marathon, TCS World 10K Bengaluru, Vedanta Delhi Half Marathon and the Tata Steel World 25K Kolkata; each of these races have to be completed within a stipulated finish time. In February 2024, Sarswati won the women’s open category marathon at New Delhi Marathon also known as National Marathon, with a timing of 3:02:46, her best so far. “ It would be ideal to come a few days ahead of the race to Mumbai but as we have to spend our own money for travel and stay it is not feasible,” she said. Her next race was a half marathon at Golden Pagoda Marathon 2025 at Namsai in Arunachal Pradesh on February 9, 2025.

Amar Singh Devanda (photo: courtesy Amar Singh)

Amar Singh Devanda

Amar Singh Devanda did not train specifically for the Mumbai Marathon. A seasoned ultrarunner who has been in the Indian ultrarunning team multiple times, he had recently represented India in the IAU 100 km World Championship held in Bengaluru in December 2024. Amar was the fastest runner among Indian ultrarunners at that championship. At Tata Mumbai Marathon 2025, Amar finished overall third in the open category and first in his age category of 25 to 29 years. He finished his marathon in 2:35:13, a new personal record for him. Amar could see many runners struggle on account of the weather but he was able to sustain his pace primarily because of his exposure to ultrarunning. He believes that his mind used to ultrarunning helped him cope with the adverse weather. Amar holds the national record for 24-hour run (272.54 km). “ I was able to maintain my hydration and nutrition well throughout the run,” he said. At TMM, the problem for early finishers is the wall of runners especially from the 10 km segment. “ After 31 km it is a struggle running through the crowd of runners. Volunteers need to be guided to direct 10K runners to keep to one side of the road so that there is space for marathon runners to run,” he said. Amar will now be doing 50 km at the Tata Ultra Marathon, slated to be held on February 23, 2025. Thereafter, his focus will be on 24-hour running.

Anil Korvi (photo: courtesy Anil)

Anil Korvi

Last year Anil Korvi ran the half marathon at TMM as he was nursing an injury. He won in his age category (30 to 34 years old). This time around he did the marathon and finished overall 13th in the open category and third in his age category with timing of 2:42:34. His performance could have been better if not for a niggling back pain, the fatigue of three events run within the duration of a month and tough weather on race day. A month ago, he did TSK 25 km in Kolkata. He finished seventh overall and third in his age category. Following this run, he ended up with back pain and fever. He had barely recovered when he had to travel to Gorakhpur for a 10 kilometer-cross country run there. Anil is an employee of Indian Railways. “ I was not able to do any long runs because of lack of time. I was not able to do speed runs either. Every time I tried to step up my speed my back pain would return,” he said. On the TMM course, Anil tried running with Manoj Rane (also a podium finisher) and Amar Singh Devanda but after a few kilometers he decided to fall back; he could not keep pace with the fast runners. “ The weather was not much of an issue for me. My training was inadequate. Also, after the 38th kilometer-mark I did not get hydration support as the water stations were on the other side of the road,” he said.

Mrinal Biswas (photo: courtesy Mrinal)

Mrinal Biswas

During the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown period, Mrinal Biswas, 67, was unable to go swimming as most pools were closed. He decided to take up running. Initially, he ran on the terrace of his building in Mira Road. Later he came on to the road and started running on the streets of his colony. “ My cousin Abhijit Shome is a runner. I took his advice and tips on running from him. I took it slow,” he said. In October 2024, Mrinal competed in the Goa Ironman. The 2025 edition of Tata Mumbai Marathon was his third year at this iconic running event. The annual Mumbai marathon commenced in 2004 and completed 20 years this year, having lost two years in 2021 and 2022 to the pandemic. In the previous two editions, Mrinal ran the half marathon race. At this year’s edition of TMM, he was running his second full marathon race. “ In my first full marathon I finished in 3:55. Many runners were surprised with my timing,” he said. Mrinal wanted to train properly and so, joined Snails2Bolt group under Coach Manish Jaiswal. He followed Jaiswal’s training plans. “ My training for this event went off very well,” he said, adding, “ race-day was quite good for me. I did not find the weather too tough. It was a well-organized run with very good work by the volunteers.” Mrinal finished the marathon in 3:33:21, finishing first in his age category of 65 to 69 years.

Kmoin Wahlang; near Mumbai’s Taj Mahal hotel and Gateway of India, hours after 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Team Meghalaya

Kmoin Wahlang is not your everyday senior citizen. A small woman, easily lost among the physically bigger people and still bigger crowds clustered near Mumbai’s Gateway of India, which was where this blog met her, Kmoin had just claimed her sixth victory in her age group hours earlier at 2025 TMM. The 76-year-old, sole participant in TMM’s ` 75 years & above female’ category completed the 42 kilometer-marathon in 4:37:30. The mother of 16 children (12 of who are alive today), grandmother to 54 and great grandmother to seven, was relaxed and betraying no sign of exhaustion from that morning’s race. This blog asked her if Mumbai’s weather – race day was warm and humid affecting the performance of many athletes – had been an issue. She dismissed it; she faced no problems worth mentioning. In 2024, she had completed the marathon at TMM in 4:29:24. What strikes the observer is the timing – in 2025 for instance, the timing returned by the 76-year-old would fetch her a third place in TMM’s 60 to 64-year-old age category; a group that is more than 10 years younger in age. Hailing from Shngimawlein in Meghalaya, Kmoin said she started her journey in running at age 69 or 70. She reaches Mumbai every year for TMM with the team of runners regularly coming for the event from the state in north east India. Besides Kmoin, Meghalaya had a podium finisher in Tlanding Wahlang, who completed the marathon in 2:45:18 to place first in the 45 to 49 years age category for men.   

Thomas Bobby Philip; at 2025 TMM (photo: Shyam G Menon)

Thomas Bobby Philip

For Bengaluru-based Thomas Bobby Philip, 2025 TMM was an enjoyable experience. Bobby plans his annual training calendar around two events – the TCS World 10K in Bengaluru and the Tata Mumbai Marathon. TMM is an event he looks forward to every year. He found the 2025 edition of the event well executed. Equally, the execution of his own plan and strategy at the event, went off well. He had targeted a finish time of below three hours and 15 minutes and was delighted to complete the race in 3:11:48. Strategy and disciplined delivery appear to have been the key. “ Had I altered the pace and gone a second or two faster, I would have probably messed it up. Over time, you learn to leash in that urge to accelerate and run in a more controlled fashion,’’ Bobby, who has by now years of experience running marathons, said. The only difficulty he felt may have been at the uphill section on Peddar Road but even that went by without much exertion and only some ache in the calves to cope with for the rest of the run. Asked about the weather conditions on race day, Bobby said that it didn’t affect him because Mumbai has a general nature of weather that is characteristic to the city and also, he “ had planned for the worst.’’ “ Even in that phase when I was getting sub-three hour-timings, I didn’t let the weather bother me too much,’’ he said. Further, this was Bobby’s thirteenth TMM; he knew what to expect and when he runs, he doesn’t allow external factors to affect him. He keeps his mind in check. Bobby said that the completion of the infrastructure projects underway earlier, definitely made the course in Mumbai more enjoyable. A barefoot runner, he also said that the resurfacing of some of the roads made his 2025 outing in Mumbai among the best he had in all these years of running in the city. Bobby placed third in his age category (55-59 years) in the marathon at 2025 TMM.  

Vaijayanti Ingawale (photo: courtesy Vaijayanti)

Vaijayanti Ingawale

A paediatrician based in Thane, Vaijayanti Ingawale was not able to execute a good training plan ahead of the 2025 TMM. “ I had some back issues and was not able to do speed practice,” she said. Vaijayanti, who is also an ultrarunner, had enrolled for the Border 100 kilometer-run, held over December 14-15, 2024. She had to quit after 30 kilometers as she started cramping. She has been securing age category podium positions in marathons and shorter distances for the past several years. At TMM, she decided to take it slow and steady. “ The weather did not get to me but I could see a lot of runners suffering,” she said. Vaijayanti had a fall at around 21 kilometers but she was able to resume walking and then, running. “ My target was to finish somewhere between 5:13 and 5:30 hours,” she said. Vaijayanti, 67, finished the marathon in 5:24:51 securing first place in her age category of 65 to 69 years. She has enrolled for the 50 kilometer-race at Tata Ultra, due on February 23, 2025 in Lonavala.

Pervin Batliwala (photo: courtesy Pervin)

Pervin Batliwala

Pervin Batliwala has been an age category podium finisher in most of the running events that she participates. At TMM 2025, she finished the half marathon in 2:14:20, winning yet another age category podium (70 years and above). In December 2024, at Vasai Virar Municipal Marathon (VVMM), she had covered the distance with an even better timing of 2:11:48 to finish second in her age category of 60 year and above. “ When I started the run at TMM, I found my friends running too fast. I decided to do my own race,” she said. Her training for Mumbai Marathon was good, though her focus has been more on swimming in recent months. “ In 2024, much of my training time was focused on swimming. I wanted to focus on freestyle swimming technique as I am new to it. I am good in the breast stroke,” she said. Pervin also takes part in open water swimming races. She has completed the six-star World Marathon Majors, done a few ultrarunning events including Comrades Marathon (an ultramarathon in South Africa) and the Khardung La Challenge, a 72 km run in Ladakh among others. This time around at TMM, weather was a dampener. “ It was quite warm. I found it difficult to accelerate. I saw many runners suffering cramps. In such situations we have to be sensible and careful and pull back from our targets,” she said. Her next event is in swimming. Later, she may consider signing up for the Sydney Marathon, which is now part of the World Marathon Majors.

Asokan Shanmugam (Photo: courtesy Asokan )

Asokan Shanmugam

A runner based in Chennai, Asokan Shanmugam, got into recreational running when he was 41 years old. Over the past 11 years (now he is 52) he has been able to get age category podium finishes at many of the running events that he participates in. “ I run six days a week and for two to three days I do strength training,” he said. At the 2024 edition of Vasai Virar Municipal Marathon (VVMM) Asokan won in his age category (50-59 years) with a personal best timing of 1:23:53 in the half marathon race. “ At the time of the Vasai Virar race the weather was quite good but by the time of the Mumbai marathon, the heat had increased,” he said. He was not unduly affected by Mumbai’s weather during the TMM run as he is used to running in similar weather in Chennai. At 2025 TMM, he finished the half marathon in 1:24:59, getting a third position in the age category of 50 to 54 years. “ I would like to bring down my half marathon timing by another 2-3 minutes before I attempt a full marathon,” he said.

(The authors, Latha Venkatraman and Shyam G Menon, are independent journalists based in Mumbai. This article is a work in progress and will keep growing as more conversations happen)