| Host city | Nanning,Guangxi,China |
|---|---|
| Nations | 30 |
| Athletes | 123 |
| Events | 2 |
| Dates | 16 October 2010 |
| Race length | 21.0975 km (13.1 mi) |
| Individual prize money (US$) | 1st: 30,000 2nd: 15,000 3rd: 10,000 4th: 7,000 5th: 5,000 6th: 3,000 |
| Team prize money (US$) | 1st: 15,000 2nd: 12,000 3rd: 9,000 4th: 7,500 5th: 6,000 6th: 3,000 |
The2010 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held inNanning,China on 16 October 2010.[1] The competition took place on the city streets, beginning and ending atWuxiang Square, with a total prize purse ofUS$245,000 at stake.[2]
TheKenyan athletes emerged with both the individual and team titles in the men's and women's races. Despite limited experience in top level half marathon races,Wilson Kiprop andFlorence Kiplagat won their respective races. Kiprop brokeZersenay Tadese's winning streak which dated back to 2006, out-sprinting the defending champion in the final stages.Sammy Kitwara won the men'sbronze medal and helped Kenya to the men's team title. Led by Zersenay, theEritrean men beatEthiopia to the teamsilver medal spot.
Kiplagat, who was ever present at the front of the women's race, outdidEthiopianDire Tune in the last kilometre to win her secondgold medal on the global stage. Mirroring Kitwara, Kenya's women's bronze medallistPeninah Jerop Arusei secured the team's victory over Ethiopia. Representing the hosts,Zhu Xiaolin was the only non-African to reach the top eight at the championships. The joint effort of theJapanese women aided them to a sixth consecutive team bronze medal – making them the only medalling country outside the typically strong African triumvirate of Kenya, Ethiopia and Eritrea.
A total of 30 countries were represented at the 19th edition of the competition and 123 runners altogether were entered into the men's and women's races. The event was the final edition to be held on an annual schedule, as the competition switched to a biennial format for the2012 championships.
The city ofNanning was announced as the host venue for the 2010 World Half Marathon Championship at theIAAF Council Meeting inMonaco in November 2008. The winning bid was a continuation of a series of major internationalathletics events in thePeople's Republic of China, which included the2006 World Junior Championships and a highly successfulathletics competition at the2008 Beijing Olympics.[3][4] It was the first time that China hosted the competition, becoming the secondAsian country to do so afterIndia, which held the2004 edition inNew Delhi.[5]
The Local Organizing Committee was headed by the Nanning Sports Bureau and worked in conjunction with theChinese Athletics Association and theIAAF.[6] The event gained a high-profiletitle sponsor inSinopec, the major Chinese state-ownedpetroleum corporation.[4] The competition featured an original event mascot – an anthropomorphicox, called "Ah Niu", which was dressed in thetraditional costume of theZhuang people.[7]
In addition to the primary events of the day, the competition was held in conjunction with Nanning's 28th Liberation Day celebrations and mass races over 10 km and 4 km were also held.[8] The Chinese state broadcasterCCTV showed live television coverage of the event via helicopter.[9]
Continuing in the tradition of previous editions, the championships comprised separatehalf marathon road races for men and women, with each race having an individual and international team aspect. Each nation could enter a maximum of five athletes per race and the team scores were calculated by combining the finishing times of each team's top three runners. Nations with less than three runners were disregarded for the team event and their runners competed for the individual prizes only.[10]
Athletes typically gained selection for their country in one of two ways: through recent performances on the internationalroad running circuit, or via a performance at a specially designated half marathon national championships.[11]
A totalprize money pot ofUS$245,000 was available to athletes at the championships, with awards being given those placing from first to sixth in both the individual and team sections. The amounts on offer for each competition wereequal across the sexes. The top prize for the individual race winners was $30,000, while the three athletes in the winning teams earned a share of $15,000. A further $50,000 was provided as in incentive for runners who improved upon the half marathonworld record mark, but ultimately this award was not claimed at the 2010 championships. All athletes receiving prize money needed to submit to – and pass – adoping test in order to claim their award.[10]
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual race | 30,000 | 15,000 | 10,000 | 7,000 | 5,000 | 3,000 |
| Team race | 15,000 | 12,000 | 9,000 | 7,500 | 6,000 | 3,000 |

The half marathon course was designed in a double-looped, orfigure eight, format which hadWuxiang Square as the central start and finish point for the race, situated just off Nanning's Minzu Avenue. The route left the square in a westerly direction along Minzu Avenue, before turning north on Binhu Road. It turned left onto Changu Road and followed Dongge Road up to theGuangxi People's Hall, which was around the 8 km mark. Turning back eastwards via Minsheng Road and Gonghe Road, the route ran along the straightway of Minzu Avenue, passing the halfway marker at this point.[12][13][14]
The racers then headed right to go south along Shuangyong Road and Qingshan Road, passing the Qingzhu Flyover on their way. Going northwards along Zhuxi Avenue, the race came up to theNanning International Convention and Exhibition Center and headed east on Minzu Road before doubling back via Qingxiu Road. Tracing a path alongside The Admiral City Shopping Mall, the route went east to return the starting point of Wuxiang Square.[12][13][14] There was little elevation on the generally flat course, which ranged between eight and twelve metres wide along the route.[10]
The championships were held on 16 October 2010. The women's race began at 8:30am local time (GMT+8) and the men's competition began half an hour after this. In addition to the elite races, a complementary massfun run event of 10 km and 4 km was held for the people of Nanning (beginning at 9:15am). The competitions took place in the morning in order to avoid the heat of the day in what is one ofPR China's most southerly cities.[10]
Nanhu Park was the designated training area for the athletes in attendance.[13]
| Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | ||||||
| Men | 1:00:07 | 1:00:11 | 1:00:22 | |||
| Women | 1:08:24 | 1:08:34 | 1:09:05 | |||
| Team | ||||||
| Team Men | 3:01:32 | 3:03:04 | 3:05:26 | |||
| Team Women | 3:26:59 | 3:27:33 | 3:33:40 | |||
The favourite for the men's race was Eritrean runnerZersenay Tadese (the defending champion with four straight wins), who had broken theworld record earlier that year with a run of 58:23 minutes at theLisbon Half Marathon.[15] Newly mintedAfrican ChampionWilson Kiprop was the most prominent of the Kenyan contingent, which was the clear favourite for the team title through its hoard of sub-60 minute runners includingSammy Kitwara,Silas Kipruto andMoses Mosop. Other contenders were EthiopianLelisa Desisa and EritreanSamuel Tsegay.[16][17][18] Kenya was the defending champion in the team race.[19]

The hot and humid conditions in Nanning slowed the runners' pace and twelve of them remained within the main pack by the 10 km point. The following five kilometres was decisive for the race, as Samuel Tsegay, Titus Masai and Mosop were all left trailing. The leading four runners were soon reduced to three, as Kipruto fell away to leave Zersenay Tadese, Wilson Kiprop and Sammy Kitwara to battle for the medal positions. Zersenay and Kiprop were neck and neck in the lead from the last kilometre and it was Kiprop who pulled away in the final 100 metres to break the Eritrean's four-year undefeated streak. Zersenay faded badly at the end and appeared injured after taking second place. Kitwara and Kipruto were third and fourth, sealing the Kenyan team victory, while Samuel Tsegay's fifth place helped Eritrea to the team silver.[20][21][22]
The win continued Kiprop's meteoric rise of 2010 – a year in which he had gone from a low-profile circuit runner to the10,000 metres Kenyan and African champion, with a sub-60 minute half marathon best after wins inParis andLille.[23][24] Silver medallist Zersenay received some consolation as he was given theAIMS/Citizen World's Fastest Time Award days after the competition in respect of his position as world record holder, becoming only the second half marathon athlete to be selected for the accolade afterLornah Kiplagat.[25][26] There were no surprise breakthroughs in the men's race as all the top performers were those predicted to make an impact before the race. However, there were some other achievements of note including: Kitwara's first individual medal for Kenya, personal bests forBirhanu Bekele andTomoya Onishi in eighth and ninth place respectively, and (much further back in the field) anational record forBhutanese racerPassang Passang.[27]

The provisional favourite for the women's race was Kenyan runnerFlorence Kiplagat, who was the fastest entrant in the field through her win at the Lille Half Marathon in September (also her debut for the distance).[29] Her compatriotsPeninah Arusei andSarah Chepchirchir – second and third in Lille – completed the strongest three of the Kenyan women's team, which was considered the team to beat for the title. The Ethiopians, led byBoston Marathon winnerDire Tune, were their main opposition for the team race, although the nation had sent relatively inexperienced runners to the championships on this occasion. China's leading athlete wasZhu Xiaolin, who despite being an established marathon runner had less experience over the half distance.[30] AlthoughJapan lacked a leading figure individually, their overall consistency (which had brought them team medals in the last five editions) demonstrated their team pedigree.[31] Kenya entered the tournament as the reigning team champions.[19]

The beginning to the race highlighted the dominance of the Kenyan and Ethiopian runners as they set a high tempo from the outset. By the time the first 5 km marker was passed,Australia'sNikki Chapple was the only athlete left in the leading pack to come from outside the two historically strong nations. A few kilometres later, she dropped back from the pack and at the 10 km mark five Ethiopians and four Kenyans had a fifteen-second advantage on the rest of the field. As the race reached the midway point, the temperature began to increase and the heat and humidity reduced the pace of the runners. The conditions took their toll on some of the leaders in this section of the race. Chepchirchir slowed considerably whileMeseret Mengistu,Joyce Chepkirui andFate Tola were the next to gradually lose contact with the front runners. Kiplagat, Dire, Arusei andFeyse Tadese were the sole contenders remaining as the race headed towards the final stages, but Kiplagat and Dire soon left the other two trailing a few minutes later.[22][32][33]
Despite Dire's greater experience over long distances, it was Kiplagat who forged ahead in the last kilometre and she won the race with ten seconds to spare over her Ethiopian rival. Arusei was the third across the line half a minute later, while Feyse Tadese, Joyce Chepkirui, Meseret Mengistu and Fate Tola took places 4–7 around one minute behind the winner. It was Arusei's clear third place which proved the difference between the top African teams, as Kenya won the team gold by a margin of 34 seconds over Ethiopia. A strong final phase saw Zhu Xiaolin take eighth place for the hosts, which was the best non-African individual performance that year.[32] Japan'sYoshimi Ozaki andRyoko Kizaki were immediately behind her, failing to get a top eight finish but yet again leading the country to the team bronze with a buffer of over six minutes between them and Australia.[33][34]
Kiplagat collected her first international road running title in only her second effort over the half marathon distance – her second world title after the senior crown at the2009 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. She said her next priority would be taking a medal on thetrack "That is my goal for next year (World Championships in Daegu) and at the nextOlympics".[35] For Dire and Arusei – both prolific road runners – this was their first individual medal on the world stage.[36][37] The younger Ethiopians (Feyse Tadese, Meseret Mengistu and Fate Tola) missed out on the medals but still set personal bests for the half marathon, as did Kenyan Joyce Chepkirui.[32]


A total of thirty nations were represented at the championships, with a combined total of 123 male and female athletes in attendance. Five countries entered the maximum of five athletes per race:Ethiopia,Japan,Kenya,South Africa, and theUnited States.[27][38] British runnerAndrew Lemoncello was scheduled to be his country's sole representative in the men's race, but he was refused entry into the country without explanation, causing a dispute betweenUK Athletics and theChinese Athletic Association.[39][40]
United States (10)