Canberra Marathon

Annual race in Australia held since 1976 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Canberra Marathon

The Canberra Times Marathon Festival is an annual marathon held in the city of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. The marathon was established in 1976 and is the oldest city marathon in Australia.[1] The marathon was initially held on November before being moved to April in 1979.[2]

Quick Facts Date, Location ...
Canberra Marathon
Thumb
Start line in 2006
DateMid-April
LocationCanberra, Australia
Event typeRoad
DistanceMarathon, Half marathon, 10K run, 5K run, Ultramarathon
Primary sponsorCanberra Times
Established1976 (49 years ago) (1976)
Course recordsMen's: 2:15:02 (1995)
John Andrews
Women's: 2:32:57 (1994)
Sue Hobson
Official siteCanberra Times Marathon Festival
Participants1,600 (2021)
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History

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The marathon was first held in November 1976 and had 30 people start.[3][2] It was founded by John Harding, who also was the race director and inaugural winner, with a finish time of 2:36:39. The whole purpose of the event was to allow John Harding to get a qualifying time in order to enter the Australian Marathon.[4] In total 17 people completed the course of which 14 finished in under 3 hours.[4][3]

In November 1977, the race was known as the "Pre-Pacific Conference Games Marathon"[2][5][6] with a total of 85 finishers.[6] The 1978 race had 260 participants and was known as the "Canberra International Marathon" after which it was decided to run the marathon in April to avoid clashing with other races with the 1979 race restricted to 300 runners.[2] The number of runners peaked in 1984 with almost 2,400 starters but dropped in the late 1980s to around 500 runners each year.[7]

The event was sponsored by Nike from 1979 to 1989 before sponsorship was taken over by the ACT Academy of Sport for the 1990 race with a $7,000 sponsorship package.[8][9] Sponsorship for the race was then provided by Mobil starting in 1991.[7]

The 1995 race was the Australian trial for the IAAF World Marathon Cup after being nominated by Athletics Australia.[10]

From 2003 a memorandum of understanding was undertaken with ACT Cross Country Club to give Cundy Sports Marketing responsibility to manage the event.[11]

In 2010 a dispute between the two groups both claiming to own the event (Cundy Sports Marketing and ACT Cross Country Club) went to court to resolve. As a result of this, government approvals for the event were not granted and the race was not held.[12][13] As a result of this the ACT Cross Country Club disbanded. The 2011 event was organised by Fairfax Events as part of the Australian Running Festival.[14]

The 2020 in-person edition of the race was postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all entries automatically transferred to 2021 and all registrants given the option of also running the race virtually and receiving a medal for free.[15][16][17] The 2021 race attracted 1,600 entries.[18]

Course

In 2014 the race course moved from being a 3-lap race starting and finishing at Telopea Park School in Manuka to a new, single lap, route starting and finishing at Old Parliament House after passing landmarks such as the National Zoo & Aquarium, Government House and Telstra Tower.[19]

The marathon starts at Telopea Park School in the suburb of Manuka, within sight of Parliament House. The route starts with a 10 km (6.2 mi) lap around the old and new Parliament buildings and other major government buildings. This is followed by a double lap crossing Lake Burley Griffin (over the Kings Avenue and Commonwealth Avenue bridges) and along Parkes Way out towards the Glenloch interchange near the Telstra Tower landmark.[20]

Other awards

Runners who complete ten Canberra marathons are given the honorary title of 'Griffin', after Walter Burley Griffin, the designer of the city of Canberra. 20 or more finishes receives the title of 'Burley Griffin' and 30 or more finishes the title of 'Walter Burley Griffin'.[21]

Other races

The event has five races: 5 km race on a Saturday, and the 10 km, half marathon, marathon and ultramarathon on the following day.[22]

The ultramarathon allows those registered for the marathon to "go beyond the marathon" and compete in a 50 km (31 mi) event. At the time, once participants completed the marathon, they were recorded as marathon finishers and were eligible to run a few extra kilometres to also complete the 50 km race.[22] The ultramarathon and marathon were later split into separate races with separate start times.[23][24]

Community impact

Under the Australian Running Festival, the event worked to fundraise approximately $200,000 for over 250 charities in 2018. Individuals or teams may participate in the event and work towards fundraising money for their charity of choice; with some teams, such as 'Team Beyond Blue' raising $25,099.[25] Individuals or teams that are participating in the event contribute a donation as part of their entry and may also work towards accumulating sponsors.[26]

Winners

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Key:    Course record

More information Ed., Year ...
Ed. Year Men's winner Time[a] Women's winner Time[a] Ref.
1 1976  John Harding (AUS) 2:36:39 [3][27]
2 1977  Chris Wardlaw (AUS) 2:27:42 [27]
3 1978  Geoffrey Moore (AUS) 2:26:58  Susan Hill (AUS) 2:59:28 [27][28]
4 1979  John Stanley (AUS) 2:18:45  Mary Murison (AUS) 3:10:00 [27]
5 1980  Chris Pilone (NZL) 2:17:51  Susan Hill (AUS) 2:55:17 [27][29]
6 1981  Graeme Kennedy (AUS) 2:15:16  Judith Hine (NZL) 2:44:08 [27][29]
7 1982  Derek Froude (NZL) 2:17:45  Shane Barrett (AUS) 2:45:12 [27][29]
8 1983  Colin Neave (AUS) 2:16:57  Ngaire Drake (NZL) 2:44:11 [27][29]
9 1984  Grenville Wood (AUS) 2:15:50  Lisa Martin (AUS) 2:35:05 [27][29]
10 1985  Colin Neave (AUS) 2:21:27  Iris Cook (AUS) 2:54:45 [27]
11 1986  Graham Macky (NZL) 2:21:21  Rhonda Mallinder (AUS) 2:46:29 [29]
12 1987  Garrick Hand (AUS) 2:19:00  Annette McNeil (AUS) 2:49:43 [27][30]
13 1988  Gerard Barrett (AUS) 2:15:07  Annette McNeil (AUS) 2:48:18
14 1989  Gerard Ryan (AUS) 2:26:55  Trudy Fenton (AUS) 2:41:39
15 1990  Derek Froude (NZL) 2:22:24  Mary Silver (AUS) 2:58:00 [31]
16 1991  Colin Neave (AUS) 2:23:23  Joanne Cowan (AUS) 2:46:18 [32]
17 1992  Gerard Barrett (AUS) 2:19:46  Joanne Cowan (AUS) 2:42:31 [33]
18 1993  Gerard Barrett (AUS) 2:22:20  Joanne Cowan (AUS) 2:42:00 [34]
19 1994  Allan Carman (AUS) 2:19:39  Sue Hobson (AUS) 2:32:57 [35]
20 1995  John Andrews (AUS) 2:15:02  Joanne Cowan (AUS) 2:41:48 [36]
21 1996  Vin McCarthy (AUS) 2:25:39  Birgit Schuckmann (GER) 2:42:43
22 1997  Edward Nabunone (INA) 2:23:38  Gabrielle O'Rourke (NZL) 2:42:45
23 1998  Paul Wilson (AUS) 2:23:25  Robin Roocke (AUS) 2:51:05
24 1999  Raymond Boyd (AUS) 2:18:01  Melissa Bulloch (AUS) 2:47:30
2000 not held due to Host City Marathon in Sydney [37][38]
25 2001  Gemechu Woyecha (QAT) 2:16:23  Susan Michelsson (AUS) 2:41:59
26 2002  Gemechu Woyecha (QAT) 2:20:20  Elizabeth Miller (AUS) 2:49:09
27 2003  Gemechu Woyecha (AUS) 2:22:35  Nyla Carroll (NZL) 2:38:56 [39]
28 2004  Martin Dent (AUS) 2:15:12  Shireen Crumpton (NZL) 2:43:21
29 2005  Magnus Michelsson (AUS) 2:21:01  Belinda Schipp (AUS) 2:43:52
30 2006  Barry Keem (AUS) 2:24:10  Shireen Crumpton (NZL) 2:42:55
31 2007  Magnus Michelsson (AUS) 2:20:55  Magdaliní Karímali (GRE) 2:43:40 [40][41]
32 2008  Mark Tucker (AUS) 2:24:13  Jackie Fairweather (AUS) 2:46:01 [42]
33 2009  David Criniti (AUS) 2:26:09  Magdaliní Karímali (GRE) 2:43:19
2010 cancelled due to ownership dispute [12]
34 2011  Rowan Walker (AUS) 2:24:14  Magdaliní Karímali (GRE) 2:50:49 [43]
35 2012  Anthony Farrugia (AUS) 2:28:23  Magdaliní Karímali (GRE) 2:47:45 [1][44]
36 2013  Rowan Walker (AUS) 2:24:23  Magdaliní Karímali (GRE) 2:52:46 [45][46]
37 2014  Samuel Woldeamanuel (ETH) 2:21:38  Kirsten Molloy (AUS) 2:49:57 [47]
38 2015  Rowan Walker (AUS) 2:26:27  Fleur Flanery (AUS) 2:53:54 [48]
39 2016  Rowan Walker (AUS) 2:28:43  Ruth Wilson (AUS) 2:46:55
40 2017  Matthew Cox (AUS) 2:21:38  Leah Fitzgerald (AUS) 2:58:41 [49]
41 2018  Dion Finocchiaro (AUS) 2:25:38  Kirsten Molloy (AUS) 3:00:57
42 2019  Nick Earl (GBR) 2:20:25  Stephanie Auston (AUS) 2:43:33 [50][51]
2020not held due to coronavirus pandemic [18][15]
43 2021  Myles Gough (AUS) 2:25:18  Riine Ringi (AUS) 2:42:29 [52][53]
44 2022  Jamie Lacey (AUS) 2:31:28  Marnie Ponton (AUS) 2:43:28 [54][55]
45 2023  Harry Smithers (AUS) 2:28:24  Cassie Little (AUS) 2:45:00 [56]
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Notes

  1. h:m:s

References

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