Great North Run
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Great North Run |
|
Date and location | 5th October 2008 Newcastle upon Tyne and South Shields, United Kingdom |
Race type | road |
Distance | Half marathon |
Official site | www.greatrun.org |
The BUPA Great North Run is the world's most popular half marathon road running event[1]. Participants run between Newcastle upon Tyne and South Shields in England. The run was devised by former Olympic 10,000 m bronze medallist and BBC Sport commentator Brendan Foster. Foster was inspired after running in the Round the Bays Race in New Zealand in 1979.
The first ever Great North Run was staged on the 28 June 1981, when 12,000 runners participated. By 2003, the number of participants had risen to 47,000. For the first year it was advertised as a local fun run; twenty years on it has become one of the biggest running events in the world, and the biggest in the UK. Only the London Marathon (Britain's second biggest road race every year since 1981) comes close to attracting 'similar' numbers of athletes each year.
In recent years, a Great North Mile has also been held.
In the 2004 Great North Mile race on Saturday 25 September, double Olympic Gold medalist Kelly Holmes made her first appearance in Britain since returning from the 2004 Summer Olympics. Holmes also fired the gun to start the main event on Sunday 26 September, and waved and shook hands with many of the 50,000 starters.
In addition the The 'Tunnel 2K' international warm up race, on the day before the Great North run sees wheelchair athletes competing over a 2km course ran through the Tyne Tunnel between North and South Shields.
Contents |
[edit] Winners of the men's race
- 1981 Mike Mcleod, United Kingdom, 1:03:23
- 1982 Mike Mcleod, United Kingdom, 1:02:44
- 1983 Carlos Lopez, Portugal, 1:02:46
- 1984 Oyvind Dahl, Norway, 1:04:36
- 1985 Steve Kenyon, United Kingdom, 1:02:44
- 1986 Mike Musyoki, Kenya, 1:00:43
- 1987 Rob De Castella, Australia, 1:02:04
- 1988 John Treacy, Ireland, 1:01:00
- 1989 M El Mechchadi, Morocco, 1:02:39
- 1990 Steve Moneghetti, Australia, 1:00:34
- 1991 Benson Masya, Kenya, 1:00:28
- 1992 Benson Masya, Kenya, 1:00:24
- 1993 Moses Tanui, Kenya, 59:47
- 1994 Benson Masya, Kenya, 1:00:02
- 1995 Moses Tanui, Kenya, 1:00:39
- 1996 Benson Masya, Kenya, 1:01:43
- 1997 Hendrick Ramaala, South Africa, 1:00:25
- 1998 Josiah Thugwane, South Africa, 1:02:32
- 1999 John Mutai, Kenya, 1:00:52
- 2000 Faustin Baha, Tanzania, 1:01:57
- 2001 Paul Tergat, Kenya, 1:00:30
- 2002 Paul Malakwen Kosgei, Kenya, 59:58
- 2003 Hendrick Ramaala, South Africa
- 2004 Dejene Berhanu, Ethiopia, 59:37
- 2005 Zersenay Tadesse, Eritrea, 59:05
- 2006 Hendrick Ramaala, South Africa, 1:01:03
- 2007 Martin Lel, Kenya, 1:00:08
[edit] Winners of the women's race
- 2003 Paula Radcliffe, United Kingdom, 1:05:40 [2]
- 2004 Benita Johnson, Australia, 1:07:55
- 2005 Derartu Tulu, Ethiopia, 1:07:33
- 2006 Berhane Adere, Ethiopia, 1:10:03
- 2007 Kara Goucher, United States, 1:06:57
[edit] Winners of the men's wheelchair race
- 2005 David Weir, United Kingdom, 42:33
- 2006 Kurt Fearnly, Australia, 42:39
- 2007 Ernst Van Dyk, South Africa, 42:35
[edit] Winners of the women's wheelchair race
- 2005 Shelly Woods, United Kingdom, 50:04
- 2006 Diane Roy, Canada, 50:33
- 2007 Shelly Woods, United Kingdom, 50:33
[edit] 2005 Great North Run
In the 2005 Great North Run, the race celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary. Events to mark the anniversary included the launch of the Great North Run Cultural Programme at the Sage Gateshead
On race day itself, four participants died en-route to South Shields. An inquest into the four deaths from 2005 began on Monday 5 June 2006 at Gateshead Council Chambers.
[edit] 2006 Great North Run
Following the death of four runners in 2005, more emergency service personnel were brought in to ensure there was adequate cover, although on race day itself, one participant died en-route to South Shields.
[edit] 2007 Great North Run
The 2007 Great North Run was held on 30 September and was started by Sir Bobby Robson. Kara Goucher defeated Paula Radcliffe in an impressive victory for the American. Goucher's winning time was 1:06:57.
[edit] References
- ^ "Great North Run", BBC Sport. Retrieved on 2007-10-01.
- ^ Track and Field all-time Performances Homepage - Women's half-marathon
[edit] External links
- BUPA Great North Run Official site for entry and information.
- Four men die in Great North Run, BBC News, 18 September 2005.
- North Run inquests warning
- Tragedy hits 26th Great North Run, BBC News report on the 29 year old, unnamed Yorkshire man who died in the 2006 run.