Great Edinburgh Run
Great Edinburgh Run | |
---|---|
A fun runner at the race finish point in 2009 | |
Date | Early October |
Location | Edinburgh |
Event type | Road |
Distance | 10 mile |
Established | 1993 |
Official site | Great Edinburgh Run |
The Great Edinburgh Run is an annual ten-mile road running event which takes place in early October in the city centre of Edinburgh in Scotland. Part of the Great Run series of competitions, it was formerly a 10KM event, switching to the ten-mile distance in 2014.
The event was first held in 1993 under the title of the Great Caledonian Run.[1] The race was moved from Edinburgh to the Balmoral estate in Aberdeenshire in 1998 and was hosted there for seven years as part of the Balmoral Road Races, a collection of race from 3 km to 10 km.[2] The Caledonian run became more of a national level competition in its stint in Balmoral as the 5-mile race. The race in Balmoral was voted as the nation's most scenic run by Runner's World magazine in 2004.[3] The competition was financially supported by Scottish Enterprise Grampian in a partnership to promote tourism in north-east Scotland, but after the BBC decided to stop televising the event the decision was made for it to return to Edinburgh in 2005.[4] During the seven-year period that the run was not held in the city, a separate and unrelated competition was held there under the title of the Capital City Challenge 10K.[5] The Great Edinburgh Run acquired its current title in 2006.[6]
Since 2005 the Great Edinburgh Run has been held on a course within the city centre. Starting in Holyrood Park, runners will see a number of the city's famous landmarks such as Edinburgh Castle, Greyfriars Bobby, Scott Monument and Arthur's Seat.
The men's course record for the 10 km (28:03 minutes) was set by Martin Mathathi in 2011, while Florence Kiplagat is the women's course record holder with her time of 32:10 minutes from 2010.[7] At the second edition in 1994, amateur runner Dave Lewis won the men's race ahead of Olympians John Treacy and Gary Staines.[8]
Past winners
Key:
Course record 8 km course 5-mile course
Edition | Year | Men's winner | Time (h:m:s) | Women's winner | Time (h:m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st[9] | 1993 | Gary Staines (GBR) | 28:37 | Lyudmila Borisova (RUS) | 33:37 |
2nd | 1994 | Dave Lewis (GBR) | 28:56 | ? | ? |
3rd[10] | 1995 | Gary Staines (GBR) | 28:48 | Liz McColgan (GBR) | 32:27 |
4th[11] | 1996 | Christopher Kelong (KEN) | 29:11 | Yvonne Murray (GBR) | 33:16 |
5th[12] | 1997 | Christopher Kelong (KEN) | 29:05 | Liz McColgan (GBR) | 32:43 |
6th[13] | 1998 | Abdellah Behar (FRA) | 22:52 | Paula Radcliffe (GBR) | 24:54 |
7th[14] | 1999 | Thomas Nyariki (KEN) | 28:25 | Tegla Loroupe (KEN) | 32:26 |
8th | 2000 | Mark Carroll (IRL) | 25:28 | Jo Wilkinson (GBR) | 29:26 |
9th[15] | 2001 | Dan Whitehead (GBR) | 33:16 | Janette Stevenson (GBR) | 37:46 |
10th | 2002 | ? | ? | ? | ? |
11th[16] | 2003 | ? | ? | Liz McColgan (GBR) | 37:25 |
12th | 2004 | ? | ? | ? | ? |
13th | 2005 | Juan Carlos de la Ossa (ESP) | 28:22 | Jeļena Prokopčuka (LAT) | 32:42 |
14th | 2006 | Fabiano Joseph (TAN) | 28:38 | Jeļena Prokopčuka (LAT) | 32:25 |
15th | 2007 | Hosea Macharinyang (KEN) | 29:14 | Jeļena Prokopčuka (LAT) | 32:53 |
16th | 2008 | Bernard Kipyego (KEN) | 28:59 | Benita Johnson (AUS) | 32:20 |
17th | 2009 | Micah Kogo (KEN) | 28:13 | Deena Kastor (USA) | 32:38 |
18th[17] | 2010 | Titus Mbishei (KEN) | 28:46 | Florence Kiplagat (KEN) | 32:10 |
19th[7] | 2011 | Martin Mathathi (KEN) | 28:03 | Lucy Kabuu (KEN) | 32:28 |
20th | 2012 | Tom Humphries (GBR) | 29:23 | Jess Coulson (GBR) | 33:12 |
21st | 2013 | Andrew Lemoncello (GBR) | 30:18 | Jen Rhines (USA) | 34:22 |
22nd | 2014 | Chris Thompson (GBR) | 49:36 | Gemma Steel (GBR) | 56:06 |
24th | 2016 | Daniel Wallis (NZL) | 51:11 | Hillory Davis (AUS) | 66.13 |
References
- ↑ Gillon, Doug (1993-10-02). Martin at head of the capital show. Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Roden, Alan (2005-01-20). Road race gets set to run back to Capital. Scotsman. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Bupa Great Caledonian is voted most scenic run. Bupa (2004-01-28). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Smith, Graeme (2004-08-18). End of road for Balmoral races as BBC pulls out . Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Mooney, Chris (2004-09-13). Capital city challenge 2004. Scotsman. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Edwards, Gareth (2006-05-08). Runners reign supreme in drizzle. Scotsman. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- 1 2 Martin, David (2011-10-02). Mathathi clocks course record in Edinburgh 10Km. IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Lewis runs away with capital title . Herald Scotland (1994-10-03). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Sporting Digest: Athletics. The Independent (1993-10-04). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Sporting Digest: Athletics . The Independent (1995-10-02). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Murray is the homecoming queen in road race. Herald Scotland (1996-09-30). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Confident McColgan sets record on way to victory . Herald Scotland (1997-10-20). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Smith, Graeme (1998-04-13). Scot yields to Radcliffe's brilliance as Englishwoman sets new world best McColgan bows to the queen of Balmoral. Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Gillon, Doug (1999-04-26). Radcliffe is chasing an elusive dream Queen of the road aiming for track glory. Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Smith, Graeme (2001-04-16). Radcliffe has to give up crown Wami takes Balmoral title in a late sprint to line. Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ Smith, Graeme (2003-05-12). Holmes toughs it out at Balmoral. Herald Scotland. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- ↑ BUPA Great Edinburgh Run: Kenyan stars Mbishei & Kiplagat run away with the glory . Daily Record (2010-05-03). Retrieved on 2011-10-02.
- List of winners from 2005 onwards
- Great Edinburgh Run: Race History. Great Run. Retrieved on 2011-10-02.