Cracovia Marathon

Annual race in Poland held since 2002 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cracovia Marathon

The Cracovia Marathon (Polish: Cracovia Maraton) is an annual marathon which has taken place every year in Kraków, Poland since its inception in 2002. It is one of Poland's largest marathons in terms of the number of finishers.[1]

Quick Facts Date, Location ...
Cracovia Marathon
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Logo of the 19th Cracovia Marathon
DateMid-April
LocationKraków, Poland
Event typeRoad
DistanceMarathon, 10K run, Wheelchair
Established2002 (23 years ago) (2002)
Course recordsMen's: 2:09:18 (2019)
Cyprian Kotut
Women's: 2:28:03 (2019)
Viktoriya Khapilina
Official siteCracovia Marathon
Participants2,954 finishers (2022)
5,184 (2019)
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Start of the marathon in 2012

History

The Cracovia Marathon was established in 2002 and has been run every year since. The marathon is held usually in May. The competition features professional athletes and amateur fun runners. A total of 3,200 people finished the race in 2011[2] while in 2013 a total of 4,415 participants finished the race, which made it the third largest such race in Poland after the Warsaw Marathon and the Poznań Marathon.[3]

The marathon is one of five in the Crown of Polish Marathons program, along with the Dębno Marathon, Poznań Marathon, Warsaw Marathon, and Wrocław Marathon.[4][5]

Since 2016, the Cracovia Marathon has been part of the Royal Running Triad (Polish: Królewska Triada Biegowa) alongside Cracovia Royal Half-Marathon and the Three Mounds Race.[6]

The 2020 edition of the race was postponed to 2022 due to the coronavirus pandemic, with all entries automatically transferred to 2022 and all registrants given the option of obtaining a refund.[7][8][a]

Winners

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2018 & 2022 winner Lilia Fisikovici (left) of Moldova and 2022 winner David Metto of Kenya en route to winning their respective marathons

Key:    Course record

More information Ed., Year ...
Ed. Year Men's winner Time[b] Women's winner Time[b] Rf.
1 2002  Thomas Magut (KEN) 2:19:24  Mirela Zięcina (POL) 3:02:16
2 2003  Azzedine Sakhri (ALG) 2:17:59  Norah Maraga (KEN) 2:50:09
3 2004  Henry Kimeli (KEN) 2:16:52  Zahia Dahmani (FRA) 2:42:15
4 2005  Piotr Gładki (POL) 2:19:30  Janina Malska (POL) 2:43:20
5 2006  Matthew Kosgei (KEN) 2:17:16  Alena Mazouka (BLR) 2:43:53
6 2007  Matthew Kosgei (KEN) 2:18:16  Kateryna Stetsenko (UKR) 2:39:08
7 2008  Andrei Hardzeyeu (BLR) 2:13:41  Olha Kotovska (UKR) 2:39:49
8 2009  Julius Kilimo (KEN) 2:11:26  Nastassia Padalinskaya (BLR) 2:36:29
9 2010  Abebe Dagane (ETH) 2:16:13  Etaferahu Tarekegne (ETH) 2:37:22
10 2011  Cosmas Kyeva (KEN) 2:12:20  Tetyana Hamera-Shmyrko (UKR) 2:28:14 [10]
11 2012  Peter Wanjiru (KEN) 2:12:11  Lucia Kimani (BIH) 2:36:54 [11]
12 2013  Patrick Nyangero (TAN) 2:19:08  Emilia Zielińska (POL) 3:03:15 [12]
13 2014  Edwin Kirui (KEN) 2:15:17  Elizabeth Chemweno (KEN) 2:38:06
14 2015  Taras Salo (UKR) 2:17:03  Hellen Kimutai (KEN) 2:43:04
15 2016  Cosmas Kyeva (KEN) 2:11:58  Gladys Chemweno (KEN) 2:30:30
16 2017  Cosmas Kyeva (KEN) 2:12:52  Stella Barsosio (KEN) 2:33:01
17 2018  Birhanu Bekele (ETH) 2:11:34  Lilia Fisikovici (MDA) 2:31:27
18 2019  Cyprian Kotut (KEN) 2:09:18  Viktoriya Khapilina (UKR) 2:28:03
2020postponed to 2021 due to coronavirus pandemic[7][8]
2021postponed to 2022 due to coronavirus pandemic
19 2022  David Metto (KEN) 2:14:07  Lilia Fisikovici (MDA) 2:40:35
20 2023  Lani Ruto (KEN) 2:17:05  Lina Kiriluik (LTU) 2:42:25 [13]
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By country

More information Country, Total ...
Country Total Men's Women's
 Kenya18135
 Ukraine514
 Poland413
 Belarus312
 Ethiopia321
 Moldova202
 Algeria110
 Bosnia and Herzegovina101
 France101
 Lithuania101
 Tanzania110
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Notes

  1. It had initially been postponed to 8 November before being postponed to 2021 and then to 2022.[7][8][9]
  2. h:m:s

See also

References

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