| Saint Silvester Road Race | |
|---|---|
Saint Silvester Road Race in 2011. | |
| Date | 31 December |
| Location | São Paulo,Brazil |
| Event type | Road |
| Distance | 15 kilometres (men & women) |
| Primary sponsor | Gazeta Esportiva |
| Established | 1925 |
| Official site | Corrida de São Silvestre |
TheSaint Silvester Road Race (Portuguese:Corrida Internacional de São Silvestre) is a long-distance running event, the oldest and most prestigious street race inBrazil.
Regarded as the main international event in Latin American athletics, the Brazilian competition is held yearly in the city ofSão Paulo on December 31. This day isSaint Sylvester's Day, as it is the day in which theCatholic saint, who was aPope, died in the 4th century of the Christian Era.
São Paulo's race was originally known as a "marathon", although the course of the race, whose length has varied considerably over the years, was never that of a full marathon. Because of that, the organization eventually dropped the term "marathon", starting to refer to the event as a "race", "international race" or "road race". There was never an official effort on the part of the organization to address the change in the nomenclature, which causes many, including some media outlets,[1] to continue using the term "Saint Silvester Marathon" when referring to the event. Its course is only 15 km (9.3 mi) long, just over a third of a marathon. However, the race is made more difficult by the steep streets throughout the course and the fact that it happens during the local summertime.
Several other places likeAmadora,Porto andVolta à cidade do Funchal inPortugal (Corrida de São Silvestre[2]),Calderara di Reno (Maratona di San Silvestro[3]) andBolzano (BOclassic) inItaly, andMadrid inSpain (San Silvestre Vallecana), organize yearly Saint Silvester road races or marathons every late December.
Cásper Líbero, a "media millionaire" of the early 20th century Brazil, is credited with originally coming up with the idea for the race. He used it as a means of promoting his newspaper. In 1928, the year of the race's 4th edition, he founded one of the first sports newspapers of the country, theGazeta Esportiva (theSportive Gazette), which then became the race's official organizer and sponsor. The race would be the main advertising element of this sports newspaper.
The race was held for the first time on 31 December 1925 and hadn't been interrupted or suspended even once until 2020, not even for the duration of World War II.
Originally, it was intended for men only, and participation was restricted to citizens of the city of São Paulo. In the following years, runners from other parts of the country joined the race, but it was not until 1941 that a runner not from the city of São Paulo won the race: José Tibúrcio dos Santos, ofMinas Gerais, another Brazilian state. At that time, the event was not yet open to foreign participation. That meant that athletes from other countries could not come in to participate, but foreigners residing in the city of São Paulo (immigrants) were free to enroll. Because of this, Italian Heitor Blasi was the only foreigner to have won the race before 1947.
In 1945 the field was opened so that foreign runners could participate. The first international race was restricted to invited runners from South America, but the success of the first two "international events" led race organizers to open the event to the rest of the world in 1947. That year marked the beginning of a 34-year-long period during which no Brazilian man won the event, until José João da Silva, fromPernambuco, won in 1980 (he would repeat the feat in 1985).
The event would remain a men-only affair until 1975, when theUnited Nations declared that year as theInternational Year of Women. In commemoration of this, the race organizers held the women's race for the first time. The women's race started as an open event, and the first Brazilian victory would come only in its 20th edition (in 1995), when Carmem Oliveira won.
Starting December 31, 1982,Rede Globo began to telecast the road race via satellite to the whole of Brazil, in partnership withTV Gazeta.
Since 1993, a shorter race for children is held a few days before the main event (dubbed "São Silvestrinha", or "Little Saint Silvester" – aunisex event).
Until 1988, the race took place at the late night hour starting at 23:00, approaching the New Year's, but the year of 1989 - the year the race began to be recognized as an international running event - saw substantial changes in the race's format, in order to comply with the rules of theIAAF. The time of the race was altered for first afternoon (to 3:00 p.m. for women and 5:00 p.m. for men), the course direction was reversed, and men and women, who used to run together, had their races separated. In 1991, the length of the race was extended to 15,000 meters (the distance for the event used to vary almost yearly, usually between 6.5 km and 8.8 km). This variance needed to be corrected in order to meet IAAF marathon and road race regulations and requirements.
The 2020 race was postponed to July 2021 and later cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic in Brazil,[4] mark the first time that the race was not held since the debut in 1925.
For the first race, in 1925, 60 people filled applications to participate, but only 48 actually showed up on the day of the race. Of these, only 37 were officially qualified, since the rules then required that all runners had to finish within 3 minutes of the winner in order to qualify in the final board.
In 2004, 13,000 men and 2,000 women participated in their respective events.
Although the event had been open since 1945, it would become a noteworthy affair in the international calendar only in 1953, when the most famous runner of the time (and arguably of all time),Emil Zátopek, participated and won the race. In recent times, the foremost long distance runners of the last two decades (almost all of them, with the exception ofHaile Gebrselassie ofEthiopia) have participated at least once in the event.
The principal winner of all times is nowPaul Tergat, ofKenya, who has won the race 5 times (1995, 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000). The record time for the present distance of 15 km is for his compatriotKibiwott Kandie with a time of 42 minutes and 59 seconds in the 2019 edition.[5]
Course record (for 15 km distance)
| Edition | Year | Distance | Men's winner | Time (m:s) | Women's winner | Time (m:s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National era | ||||||
| 1st | 1925 | 6.2 km | 23:10 | Not held | ||
| 2nd | 1926 | 6.2 km | 22:32 | |||
| 3rd | 1927 | 6.2 km | 23:00 | |||
| 4th | 1928 | 8.8 km | 29:11 | |||
| 5th | 1929 | 8.8 km | 29:11 | |||
| 6th | 1930 | 8.8 km | 25:35 | |||
| 7th | 1931 | 8.2 km | 26:05 | |||
| 8th | 1932 | 8.8 km | 25:23 | |||
| 9th | 1933 | 7.6 km | 23:50 | |||
| 10th | 1934 | 7.6 km | 24:10 | |||
| 11th | 1935 | 7.6 km | 25:51 | |||
| 12th | 1936 | 7.6 km | 23:38 | |||
| 13th | 1937 | 7.6 km | 23:26 | |||
| 14th | 1938 | 7.6 km | 23:38 | |||
| 15th | 1939 | 7.6 km | 24:50 | |||
| 16th | 1940 | 7 km | 23:14 | |||
| 17th | 1941 | 7 km | 22:12 | |||
| 18th | 1942 | 5.5 km | 17:02 | |||
| 19th | 1943 | 5.5 km | 17:31 | |||
| 20th | 1944 | 5.5 km | 17:40 | |||
| International era | ||||||
| 21st | 1945 | 7 km | 21:54 | Not held | ||
| 22nd | 1946 | 7 km | 21:57 | |||
| 23rd | 1947 | 7 km | 21:45 | |||
| 24th | 1948 | 7 km | 22:18 | |||
| 25th | 1949 | 7.3 km | 22:45 | |||
| 26th | 1950 | 7.3 km | 22:37 | |||
| 27th | 1951 | 7.3 km | 22:26 | |||
| 28th | 1952 | 7.3 km | 21:38 | |||
| 29th | 1953 | 7.3 km | 20:30 | |||
| 30th | 1954 | 7.4 km | 21:51 | |||
| 31st | 1955 | 7.4 km | 22:18 | |||
| 32nd | 1956 | 7.3 km | 21:58 | |||
| 33rd | 1957 | 7.3 km | 21:37 | |||
| 34th | 1958 | 7.4 km | 21:40 | |||
| 35th | 1959 | 7.4 km | 21:55 | |||
| 36th | 1960 | 7.4 km | 22:02 | |||
| 37th | 1961 | 7.4 km | 21:24 | |||
| 38th | 1962 | 7.4 km | 22:08 | |||
| 39th | 1963 | 7.4 km | 21:55 | |||
| 40th | 1964 | 7.4 km | 21:37 | |||
| 41st | 1965 | 7.4 km | 21:20 | |||
| 42nd | 1966 | 9.2 km | 29:57 | |||
| 43rd | 1967 | 8.7 km | 24:31 | |||
| 44th | 1968 | 8.7 km | 24:32 | |||
| 45th | 1969 | 8.7 km | 24:02 | |||
| 46th | 1970 | 8.9 km | 24:27 | |||
| 47th | 1971 | 8.9 km | 23:47 | |||
| 48th | 1972 | 8.9 km | 23:24 | |||
| 49th | 1973 | 8.9 km | 23:25 | |||
| 50th | 1974 | 8.9 km | 23:58 | |||
| 51st | 1975 | 8.9 km | 23:13 | 28:39 | ||
| 52nd | 1976 | 8.9 km | 23:50 | 28:36 | ||
| 53rd | 1977 | 8.9 km | 23:55 | 27:15 | ||
| 54th | 1978 | 8.9 km | 23:51 | 28:55 | ||
| 55th | 1979 | 9 km | 23:26 | 29:07 | ||
| 56th | 1980 | 8.9 km | 23:40 | 27:48 | ||
| 57th | 1981 | 8.9 km | 23:30 | 26:45 | ||
| 58th | 1982 | 13.548 km | 39:41 | 47:21 | ||
| 59th | 1983 | 12.6 km | 37:39 | 43:44 | ||
| 60th | 1984 | 12.640 km | 36:43 | 43:35 | ||
| 61st | 1985 | 12.640 km | 36:48 | 43:00 | ||
| 62nd | 1986 | 12.6 km | 36:45 | 43:25 | ||
| 63rd | 1987 | 13 km | 39:02 | 46:27 | ||
| 64th | 1988 | 12.630 km | 36:23 | 42:12 | ||
| 65th | 1989 | 12.650 km | 36:45 | 43:52 | ||
| 66th | 1990 | 12.640 km | 35:58 | 43:16 | ||
| 67th | 1991 | 15 km | 44:04 | 54:02 | ||
| 68th | 1992 | 15 km | 44:08 | 54:00 | ||
| 69th | 1993 | 15 km | 43:20 | 50:26 | ||
| 70th | 1994 | 15 km | 44:11 | 51:17 | ||
| 71st | 1995 | 15 km | 43:12 | 50:53 | ||
| 72nd | 1996 | 15 km | 43:50 | 52:32 | ||
| 73rd | 1997 | 15 km | 44:40 | 52:03 | ||
| 74th | 1998 | 15 km | 44:47 | 51:35 | ||
| 75th | 1999 | 15 km | 44:35 | 51:29 | ||
| 76th | 2000 | 15 km | 43:57 | 50:33 | ||
| 77th | 2001 | 15 km | 44:15 | 52:09 | ||
| 78th | 2002 | 15 km | 44:59 | 54:02 | ||
| 79th | 2003 | 15 km | 43:49 | 51:24 | ||
| 80th | 2004 | 15 km | 44:43 | 52:58 | ||
| 81st | 2005 | 15 km | 44:19 | 51:37 | ||
| 82nd | 2006 | 15 km | 44:06 | 51:23 | ||
| 83rd | 2007 | 15 km | 45:54 | 51:37 | ||
| 84th | 2008 | 15 km | 44:42 | 51:37 | ||
| 85th | 2009 | 15 km | 44:40 | 52:30 | ||
| 86th | 2010 | 15 km | 44:07 | 50:19 | ||
| 87th | 2011 | 15 km | 43:35 | 48:48 | ||
| 88th | 2012 | 15 km | 44:05 | 51:42 | ||
| 89th | 2013 | 15 km | 43:48 | 51:58 | ||
| 90th | 2014 | 15 km | 45:04 | 50:43 | ||
| 91st | 2015 | 15 km | 44:31 | 54:01 | ||
| 92nd | 2016 | 15 km | 44:53 | 48:34 | ||
| 93rd | 2017 | 15 km | 44:17 | 50:18 | ||
| 94th | 2018 | 15 km | 45:03 | 50:02 | ||
| 95th | 2019 | 15 km | 42:59 | 48:54 | ||
| 96th | 2021 | 15 km | 44:54 | 50:06 | ||
| 97th | 2022 | 15 km | 44:43 | 49:39 | ||
| 98th | 2023 | 15 km | 44:52 | 49:54 | ||
| 99th | 2024 | 15 km | 44:21 | 51:25 | ||
| Country | Men | Women | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18 | 19 | 37 | |
| 29(1) | 5 | 34 | |
| 7 | 4 | 11 | |
| 4 | 7 | 11 | |
| 4 | 5 | 9 | |
| 6 | 0 | 6 | |
| 6 | 0 | 6 | |
| 4 | 2 | 6 | |
United States | 2 | 2 | 4 |
| 1 | 3 | 4 | |
| 3 | 0 | 3 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | |
| 2(2) | 0 | 2 | |
| 0 | 2 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | |
| 2 | 0 | 2 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| 0 | 1 | 1 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 |
1Brazilians won 18 times in the national era, and 11 times in the international era.
2 Italy only won in the national era, with theItalo-Brazilian, Heitor Blasi.