Great Edinburgh Run
Great Edinburgh Run | |
---|---|
Date | Early October |
Location | Edinburgh |
Event type | Road |
Distance | 10 mile |
Established | 1993 |
Official site | Great Edinburgh Run |
The Great Edinburgh Run was an annual ten-mile road running event which took place in the city centre of Edinburgh in Scotland. The last event was in April 2017 and the organiser have no plans to reinstate the event at present. Part of the Great Run series of competitions, it was formerly a 10 km 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 would 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 Béhar (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.
- ^ a b 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.