H.C. Andersen Marathon
Appearance
H.C. Andersen Marathon | |
---|---|
Date | Late September |
Location | Odense, Denmark |
Event type | Road |
Distance | Marathon, Half marathon |
Established | 2000 |
Course records | Men's: 2:10:37 (2012) Luka Chelimo Women's: 2:30:49 (2019) Jerubet Perez |
Official site | H.C. Andersen Marathon |
Participants | 1,236 (2019) |
The H.C. Andersen Marathon (HCA Marathon) is a marathon in Odense, Denmark, which was established in 2000.[1] From 2006 onwards, the event has included a half marathon and from 2017 a 10K race "Run the last 10".
HCA Marathon is named after the Danish Faity-tale writer Hans Christian Andersen.
HCA Marathon is the worlds fastest marathon in 2019. On average the runners finish the marathon in just 3:51:22 which is just 8 minutes 50 second a mile. HCA Marathon is also the marathon with the cleanest air in the world. [1]
Course
The race is held on a round course, starting and finishing at Odense Idrætspark. The course is run twice, and the finish is in the athletics stadium.[2]
Statistics
Course records
- Men: 2:10.37 Luka Chelimo (KEN), 2012
- Women: 2:30:48 Jerubet Perez (KEN), 2019
Winners
Date | Men's Winner | Nation | Time | Women's winner | Nation | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 15, 2000 | Daniel Cheribo | Kenya | 2:14:17 | Gitte Karlshøj | Denmark | 2:35:39 |
October 14, 2001 | Witalij Melzajew | Ukraine | 2:18:14 | Gitte Karlshøj | Denmark | 2:32:41 |
October 13, 2002 | Andrei Tarassow | Russia | 2:20:59 | Karina Szymańska | Poland | 2:33:20 |
October 12, 2003 | Alexei Chlochlow | Russia | 2:19:33 | Gitte Karlshøj | Denmark | 2:34:57 |
October 10, 2004 | Daniel Too | Kenya | 2:13:57[3] | Gitte Karlshøj | Denmark | 2:45:46[3] |
September 25, 2005 | Josephat Rop | Kenya | 2:14:49 | Irina Songerlainen | Russia | 2:41:25 |
September 17, 2006 | Daniel Too | Kenya | 2:15:49 | Lene Duus | Denmark | 2:40:41 |
September 23, 2007 | Jonah Kemboi | Kenya | 2:15:05 | Irina Songerlainen (2) | Russia | 2:42:15 |
September 21, 2008 | Benjamin Serem | Kenya | 2:14:44 | Tatjana Mironowa | Russia | 2:42:00[4] |
September 20, 2009 | Jonah Kemboi | Kenya | 2:15:32 | Gitte Karlshøj | Denmark | 2:51:30 |
September 19, 2010 | Raymond Kandie | Kenya | 2:10.41 | Sviatlana Kouhan | Belarus | 2:33:18 |
September 23, 2012 | Luka Chelimo | Kenya | 2:10:37 | Emely Chepkorir | Kenya | 2:34:48 |
September 22, 2013 | Julius Mutai | Kenya | 2:15:12 | Annemette Aagaard | Denmark | 2:52:19 |
September 28, 2014 | James Cheboi | Kenya | 2:17:16 | Hellen Kimutai | Kenya | 2:40:50 |
October 4, 2015 | Julius Karinga | Kenya | 2:11:21 | Mulunesh Zewdu | Ethiopia | 2:34:10 |
October 2, 2016 | Fikadu Debele | Ethiopia | 2:15:21 | Roza Dereje | Ethiopia | 2:31:16 |
October 1, 2017 | Paul Chege | Kenya | 2:14:37 | Louise Batting | Denmark | 2:38:52 |
September 30, 2018 | Paul Matheka | Kenya | 2:13:18 | Bulbula Abebech | Ethiopia | 2:42:23 |
September 29, 2019 | Meseret Aragaw | Ethiopia | 2:16:27 | Jerubet Perez | Kenya | 2:30:48 |
References
- ^ "Hans Christian Andersen marathon in Odense Denmark". The H of the A to Z of marathons. Time-to-Run. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
- ^ "Die Strecke". Course. H.C. Andersen Marathon. Archived from the original on 2013-09-05. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
- ^ a b "Hans Christian Andersen Marathon, Denmark". Race Results. AIMS. 10 October 2004. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
- ^ "Tatyana Mironova wins at Hans Christian Andersen Marathon". Russian Athletics News. RusAthletics. 22 September 2008. Retrieved 2010-03-03.
External links
- Official Site
- H. C. Andersen Marathon on marathoninfo.free.fr