IAU 100 km World Championships

Summary

The IAU 100 km World Championships have been held annually since 1987, at different locations, and is organized by the International Association of Ultrarunners (IAU).[1][2] Due to lack of sponsorship, the 2013 event, planned for Jeju Island, South Korea,[3] was cancelled and the 2014 event, originally due to be held at Daugavpils, Latvia, was held instead in Doha, Qatar.

IAU 100 km World Championships
Most recent season or competition:
2022 IAU 100 km World Championships
SportUltramarathon
First season1987
CountryWorldwide
Official websitehttp://www.iau-ultramarathon.org/

The championships from 2007 to 2012 incorporated the IAU 100 km European Championships.[4]

Editions edit

Men edit

# Year Location Gold Silver Bronze
1st 1987   Torhout   Domingo Catalán   Don Ritchie   Roland Vuillemenot
2nd 1988   Santander   Domingo Catalán   Jean-Marc Bellocq   Bruno Scelsi
3rd 1989   Rambouillet   Bruno Scelsi   Bruno Joppen   Herbert Cuntz
4th 1990   Duluth   Roland Vuillemenot   Russell Prince   Stefan Fekner
5th 1991   Faenza   Valmir Nunes   Roland Vuillemenot   Jean-Marc Bellocq
6th 1992   Palamós   Konstantin Santalov   Domingo Catalán   Erik Seedhouse
7th 1993   Torhout   Konstantin Santalov   Peter Hermanns   Cornet Mantonane
8th 1994   Saroma   Aleksey Volgin   Jarosław Janicki   Kazimierz Bak
9th 1995   Winschoten   Valmir Nunes   Aleksey Volgin   Tom Johnson
10th 1996   Moscow   Konstantin Santalov   Jarosław Janicki   Aleksey Kruglikov
11th 1997   Winschoten   Sergey Yanenko   Mikhail Kokorev   Andrzej Magier
12th 1998   Shimanto   Grigoriy Murzin   Igor Tyupin   Ravil Kashapov
13th 1999   Chavagnes-en-Paillers   Simon Pride   Thierry Guichard   Takahiro Sunada
14th 2000   Winschoten   Pascal Fétizon   Dmitriy Radyuchenko   Oleg Kharitonov
15th 2001   Cléder   Yasufumi Mikami   Rich Hanna   Pascal Fétizon
16th 2002   Torhout   Mario Fattore   Igor Tyazhkorob   Fermín Martínez
17th 2003   Tainan   Mario Fattore   Grigoriy Murzin   Michael Sommer
18th 2004   Winschoten   Mario Ardemagni   Jarosław Janicki   Oleg Kharitonov
19th 2005   Saroma   Grigoriy Murzin   Jorge Aubeso   Tsutomu Sassa
20th 2006   Misari   Yannick Djouadi   Oleg Kharitonov   Denis Zhalybin
21st 2007   Winschoten   Shinichi Watanabe   Kenji Nakanishi   Oleg Kharitonov
22nd 2008   Rome   Giorgio Calcaterra   Jarosław Janicki   Miguel Ángel Jiménez
23rd 2009   Torhout   Yasukazu Miyazato   Jonas Buud   Giorgio Calcaterra
24th[5] 2010   Gibraltar   Shinji Nakadai   Jonas Buud   Michael Wardian
25th[6] 2011   Winschoten   Giorgio Calcaterra   Michael Wardian   Andrew Henshaw
26th[7] 2012   Seregno   Giorgio Calcaterra   Jonas Buud   Alberico Di Cecco
2013 cancelled
27th 2014   Doha   Max King   Jonas Buud   José Antonio Requejo
28th 2015   Winschoten   Jonas Buud   Asier Cuevas   Giorgio Calcaterra
29th 2016   Los Alcázares   Hideaki Yamauchi   Bongmusa Mthembu   Patrick Reagan
2017 cancelled
30th[8] 2018   Sveti Martin na Muri   Hideaki Yamauchi   Takehiko Gyoba   Bongmusa Mthembu
2019–2021 cancelled
31st[9] 2022   Bernau bei Berlin   Haruki Okayama   Jumpei Yamaguchi   Piet Wiersma

Women edit

# Year Location Gold Silver Bronze
1st 1987   Torhout   Agnes Eberle   Monique Exbrayat   Marie-France Plas
2nd 1988   Santander   Ann Trason   Márta Vass   Eleanor Adams
3rd 1989   Rambouillet   Katherina Janicke   Sigrid Lomsky   Hilary Walker
4th 1990   Duluth   Eleanor Adams   Ann Trason   Márta Vass
5th 1991   Faenza   Eleanor Adams   Nadezhda Gumerova   Márta Vass
6th 1992   Palamós   Nurzia Bagmanova   Márta Vass   Carolyn Hunter-Rowe
7th 1993   Torhout   Carolyn Hunter-Rowe   Valentina Shatyeyeva   Valentina Lyakhova
8th 1994   Saroma   Valentina Shatyeyeva   Trudi Thomson   Irina Petrova
9th 1995   Winschoten   Ann Trason   Helene Joubert   Maria Bak
10th 1996   Moscow   Valentina Shatyeyeva   Linda Meadows   Yelena Sidorenkova
11th 1997   Winschoten   Valentina Lyakhova   Isabelle Olive   Andrzej Magier
12th 1998   Shimanto   Carolyn Hunter-Rowe   Lilac Flay   Maria Venâncio
13th 1999   Chavagnes-en-Paillers   Anna Balosáková   Martine Cubizolles   Oksana Ladyshina
14th 2000   Winschoten   Edit Bérces   Yelvira Kolpakova   Constanze Wagner
15th 2001   Cléder   Yelvira Kolpakova   Marina Bychkova   Monica Casiraghi
16th 2002   Torhout   Tatyana Zhyrkova   Akiko Sekiya   Monica Casiraghi
17th 2003   Tainan   Monica Casiraghi   Paola Sanna   Elke Hiebl
18th 2004   Winschoten   Tatyana Zhyrkova   Marina Bichkova   Monica Casiraghi
19th 2005   Saroma   Hiroko Sho   Anne Riddle-Lundblad   Yoko Yamazawa
20th 2006   Misari   Elizabeth Hawker   Monica Carlin   Hiroko Sho
21st 2007   Winschoten   Norimi Sakurai   Laurence Fricotteau   Hiroko Sho
22nd 2008   Rome   Tatyana Zhirkova   Kami Semick   Monica Carlin
23rd 2009   Torhout   Kami Semick   Irina Vishnevskaya   Monica Caelin
24th[5] 2010   Gibraltar   Ellie Greenwood   Monica Carlin   Lizzy Hawker
25th[6] 2011   Winschoten   Marina Bychkova   Joasia Zakrzewski   Lindsay van Aswegen
26th[7] 2012   Seregno   Amy Sproston   Kajsa Berg   Irina Vishnevskaya
2013 cancelled
27th 2014   Doha   Ellie Greenwood   Chiyuki Mochizuki   Joasia Zakrzewski
28th 2015   Winschoten   Camille Herron   Kajsa Berg   Marija Vrajić
29th 2016   Los Alcázares   Kirstin Bull   Nikolina Sustic   Joasia Zakrzewski
2017 cancelled
30th[8] 2018   Sveti Martin na Muri   Nikolina Šustić   Nele Alder-Baerens   Mai Fujisawa
2019–2021 cancelled
31st[10] 2022   Bernau bei Berlin   Floriane Hot   Camille Chaigneau   Caitriona Jennings

Total medals tables edit

Men edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Russia67619
2  Japan62210
3  Italy6039
4  France43411
5  Spain2338
6  Brazil2002
7  Sweden1405
8  United States1236
9  Great Britain1113
10  Ukraine1001
11  Poland0415
12  South Africa0112
13  Belgium0101
  Netherlands0101
  New Zealand0101
16  Germany0033
17  Canada0011
Totals (17 entries)30302888

Women edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Russia95519
2  Great Britain72514
3  United States5319
4  Japan2248
5  Italy1359
6  Germany1236
7  Hungary1225
8  Croatia1113
9  Slovakia1102
10  Switzerland1001
11  France0415
12  Sweden0202
13  South Africa0112
14  Australia0101
  New Zealand0101
16  Brazil0011
  Poland0011
Totals (17 entries)29303089

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletics 100 km World Cup - Men: Individual". sports123.com. Archived from the original on June 23, 2009. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  2. ^ "Athletics 100 km World Cup - Women: Individual". sports123.com. Archived from the original on October 6, 2011. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
  3. ^ "100km IAU World Championships 2013 Cancelled". multidays.com. Retrieved 19 February 2014.
  4. ^ Khan, Nadeem (2012-04-24). Calcaterra and Sproston win the 26th IAU 100km World Championship. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-05-07.
  5. ^ a b "VA's Wardian Earns Bronze, US Men Silver at World 100K". New England Runner. 2010-11-11. Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2013-11-27.
  6. ^ a b Powell, Bryon (2011-09-12). "2011 Wasatch 100, 100k World Championship & World Mountain Running Championships Results". iRunFar. Retrieved 2013-11-27.
  7. ^ a b Powell, Bryon (2012-04-22). "2012 IAU 100k World Championship Results". iRunFar. Retrieved 2013-11-27.
  8. ^ a b Paul Halford (8 September 2018). "Yamauchi and Sustic victorious at IAU 100 km World Championship". IAAF. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  9. ^ "2022 IAU 100 km World Championships Race Report". iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  10. ^ "2022 IAU 100 km World Championships Race Report". iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 12 December 2023.

External links edit

  • IAU official site
  • IAAF reports: 2010, 2011, 2012