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Chuncheon Marathon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Annual marathon in South Korea
Chuncheon Marathon
DateLate October
LocationChuncheon,South Korea
Event typeRoad
DistanceMarathon
Primary sponsorThe Chosun Ilbo
Established1946
Course recordsMen's:2:06:15 (2017)
KenyaLuka Kanda
Women's:2:26:12 (1997)
South KoreaKwon Eun-ju
Official siteChuncheon Marathon

TheChuncheon International Marathon (Korean:춘천마라톤) is an annualmarathon race which is held in late October in the city ofChuncheon,South Korea. First held in 1946, it is the second oldest marathon in the country after theSeoul International Marathon. Sponsored byThe Chosun Ilbo, a major daily newspaper in South Korea, the race is one of two in the country which holdsIAAF Silver Label status, along withGyeongju International Marathon.[1]

History

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Sohn Kee-chung winning the 1936 Olympic marathon – one of the inspirations for the race.

The1936 Summer Olympics saw twoKoreans win Olympic medals:Sohn Kee-chung took the gold whileNam Sung-yong was the bronze medallist. Both runners had competed in the colours ofJapan, as the competition took place whenKorea waspart of the Japanese empire. When Japan was defeated inWorld War II, Korea was liberated and the first "Chosun Ilbo Shortened Marathon" was held the following year, building upon the newly free country'srunning tradition.Suh Yun-bok, a sports coach atAnyang Technical College, won the first race and later took victory at theBoston Marathon. The race was extended to the marathon distance for the next year and the event was held on the eleventh anniversary of Sohn's Olympic win.[2]

The race was not held from 1950 to 1953 due to theKorean War, but the annual competition has been uninterrupted since then. Marathon running became less popular in Korea in the 1960–70s and it was not until the 1980s that there was a resurgence of interest in the event, which saw women competing in the programme for the first time. Improving course times eventually resulted inKim Wan-Ki'sSouth Korean record run of 2:11:02 to win in 1991. The national race turned into an international one in 1995 and top runners fromKenya andJapan became frequent participants.[2] The 1996 event hosted theAsian Marathon Championship race.[3]

Course and records

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The runners cross rivers over the city's bridges.

The course overall is a relatively flat one, with small uphill and downhill sections coming around the 5-kilometre and 30-kilometre marks. The looped course starts near the city centre on the east bank and heads south, following the waterfront. It turns northwards at the 8 km mark as it reaches the city suburbs and traces along the west side of the river for a 20 km stretch. The course then crosses the river and heads back towards the finishing point in down-town Chuncheon.[4]

Kim Wan-Ki's 1991 national and course record lasted only three years asLee Bong-Ju dipped under the two hours, ten minutes mark with a run of 2:09:59.Moses Tanui became the first Kenyan winner in 1997 and knocked almost a minute off the record.[5] This mark stood for thirteen years, at which point another Kenyan (Benjamin Kiptoo Kolum) took over a minute more off that time for the current men's course best of 2:07:54.[1] That mark was beaten the following year byStanley Biwott, who went 51 seconds faster.[6] The women's record for the course isKwon Eun-ju's long-standing time of 2:26:12, which is also a South Korean record.[5]

Past winners

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National era

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Not much is known of the early winners of the race. Suh Yun-bok won the first race in a time of 1:29:24 on a shortened course estimated to have been around 25 km in length.[5] A university student, Hong Jong-Oh, won the second race, beating a field of 50 runners to complete Chuncheon's first true marathon in a time of 2:57:20.[2] The next documented winner came from after the Korean War, asLee Chang-Hoon won a shorter 20 km race in 1957. The next known winners after this come from the race's period of growth in the 1980s:Kim Won-Tak won in 1985 in around two hours seventeen minutes, whileKim Jae-Ryong took the 1987 race in a time around three minutes faster than that.[5]

Key:  Course record  Short course

EditionYearMen's winnerTime (h:m:s)
1st1946 Suh Yun-bok (KOR)1:29:24
2nd1947 Hong Jong-oh (KOR)2:57:20
Race winners not known (1948–49)
Not held due to Korean War (1950–53)
Race winners not known(1953–1956)
8th1957 Lee Chang-hoon (KOR)?
Race winners not known (1958–1984)
36th1985 Kim Won-tak (KOR)2:17
37th1986Unknown2:15
38th1987 Kim Jae-ryong (KOR)2:14
39th1988Unknown2:13
Race winners not known (1989–90)
42nd1991 Kim Wan-gi (KOR)2:11:02NR
43rd1992 Chang Ki-shik (KOR)2:11:24
44th1993 Yoo Young-hoon (KOR)2:13:03
45th1994 Lee Bong-ju (KOR)2:09:59

International era

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Key:  Course record  Asian Marathon Championship race

EditionYearMen's winnerTime (h:m:s)Women's winnerTime (h:m:s)
46th1995 Rolando Vera (ECU)2:11:30 Gang Sun-deok (KOR)2:35:37
47th1996 Norihiro Otoshi (JPN)2:14:02 Yukari Komatsu (JPN)2:37:54
48th1997 Moses Tanui (KEN)2:09:01 Kwon Eun-ju (KOR)2:26:12
49th1998 Oh Sung-keun (KOR)2:18:21 Oh Jung-hee (KOR)2:38:03
50th1999 Je In-mo (KOR)2:14:52 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:35:31
51st2000 Kim Je-kyong (KOR)2:13:57 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:37:02
52nd2001 Ji Young-jun (KOR)2:15:32 Kwon Eun-ju (KOR)2:31:33
53rd2002 Je In-mo (KOR)2:16:49 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:34:05
54th2003 Elijah Mutai (KEN)2:13:54 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:34:27
55th2004 Elijah Mutai (KEN)2:14:31 Oh Jung-hee (KOR)2:35:59
56th2005 Elijah Mutai (KEN)2:09:27 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:37:25
57th2006 Elijah Mutai (KEN)2:13:46 Yun Sun-suk (KOR)2:36:04
58th2007 Victor Mangusho (KEN)2:14:01 Choi Gyeong-hui (KOR)2:35:25
59th2008 Michael Njuroge (KEN)2:19:01 Choi Gyeong-hui (KOR)2:44:35
60th2009 Mulugeta Wami (ETH)2:09:50 Kim Seon-jeong (KOR)2:49:35
61st2010 Benjamin Kiptoo (KEN)2:07:54 Kim Seon-jeong (KOR)2:43:39
62nd2011 Stanley Biwott (KEN)2:07:03 Oh Jung-hee (KOR)2:41:23
63rd2012 David Kemboi (KEN)2:10:05 Park Yu-jin (KOR)2:41:55
64th2013 Nickson Kurgat (KEN)2:08:29 Park Yu-jin (KOR)2:41:30
65th2014 Nickson Kurgat (KEN)2:07:11 Yeom Ko-eun (KOR)2:43:33
66th2015 Adugna Takele (ETH)2:09:40 Lee Yeon-jin (KOR)2:41:53
67th2016 Luka Kanda (KEN)2:07:21 Kim Ji-eun (KOR)2:34:39
68th2017 Luka Kanda (KEN)2:06:15 Lee Yeon-jin (KOR)2:40:02
69th2018 Shifera Tamru (ETH)2:08:50 Kim Sun-ae (KOR)2:40:23
70th2019 Lee Dong-jin (KOR)2:20:08 Kim Su-jin (KOR)2:38:31

References

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  1. ^abJalava, Mirko (2010-10-24).Kiptoo smashes Chuncheon record with 2:07:54 victory.IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-26.
  2. ^abcA Brief History of the Chosun Ilbo Marathon. Chuncheon Marathon. Retrieved on 2010-10-26.
  3. ^Asian Championships Marathon.Association of Road Racing Statisticians (2013-03-02). Retrieved on 2013-09-28.
  4. ^Course. Chuncheon Marathon. Retrieved on 2010-10-26.
  5. ^abcdChosunilbo Chunchon Marathon.Association of Road Racing Statisticians (2009-12-27). Retrieved on 2010-10-26.
  6. ^Yelena Kurdyumova and Sergey Porada (2011-10-23).2:07:03 course record in Chuncheon for Biwott.IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-10-23.
List of winners

External links

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