Marathon de La Rochelle

Summary

The Marathon de La Rochelle is an annual road running event which takes place in late November in La Rochelle, France. It features a full 42.195 km marathon race as well a 10 km race for amateur runners, a half marathon for wheelchair athletes, and a recreational 4 km jog around the city's harbour.

Marathon de La Rochelle
The course goes through La Rochelle's historic port
DateLate November
LocationLa Rochelle, France
Event typeRoad
DistanceMarathon
Established1991
Course recordsMen: 2:07:13 (2011)
Kenya John Komen
Women: 2:23:38 (2021)
Kenya Celestine Chepchirchir
Official siteMarathon de La Rochelle
Participants6,611 finishers (2021)
5,167 (2019)
6,091 (2018)

The city of La Rochelle had its first marathon race in 1981. This competition, which featured winners such as Driss Dacha, lasted until 1989 (with shorter 20 km races occurring in 1983 to 1985). Following the absence of a race in 1990, the Marathon de La Rochelle was established in its place, having its first edition on 24 November, 1991.[1] The marathon is one of the most popular in France, having had a record high of 10,000 entrants and 8625 finishers at the 20th edition in 2010.[2] Among French races, only the Paris Marathon has had greater participation.

Following the sudden death of Serge Vigot, the race founder and president of the organising committee, during the 2005 Marrakech Marathon, the event was officially renamed the Marathon De La Rochelle - Serge Vigot in his honour.[3][2]

The race held IAAF Bronze Label Road Race status in 2011.[4]

The course of the race is based on the streets of the central and historical port areas of the city. It has a double-looped figure-8 format and a flat race profile, which makes it easier for elite runners to record fast times.[5] The runners in the marathon are predominantly French, but the elite level races attract East African and other European athletes. The total annual prize money available is typically around 37,000.[1]

The current men's and women's course records are held by Kenya's John Kipkorir Komen (2:07:13 hours) and Goitetom Haftu Tesema of Ethiopia (2:28:24 hours), respectively. The most successful athletes historically at the race are John Ngeny (who won three times straight from 2000 to 2002) and Elizabeth Chemweno (who won three times between 2005 and 2008).[1]

Past winners edit

Key:   Course record

Edition Year Men's winner Time (h:m:s) Women's winner Time (h:m:s)
1st 1991   Herve Bouffaux (FRA) 2:23:18   Claudine Golfieri (FRA) 2:53:32
2nd 1992   El Hadi Moumou (FRA) 2:20:31   Galina Ikonnikova (RUS) 2:42:54
3rd 1993   Nourredine Sobhi (FRA) 2:19:19   Anuța Cătună (ROM) 2:37:02
4th 1994   Gilles Diehl (FRA) 2:19:27   Natalia Charanova (RUS) 2:44:52
5th 1995   Andrey Tarasov (RUS) 2:17:11   Annie Coathalem (FRA) 2:40:44
6th 1996   Viktor Rogovoy (UKR) 2:16:14   Irina Permitina (RUS) 2:38:39
7th 1997   Igor Osmak (UKR) 2:17:10   Marina Ivanova (RUS) 2:42:22
8th 1998   Viktor Rogovoy (UKR) 2:15:43   Marina Ivanova (RUS) 2:38:34
9th 1999   Aleksandr Krestyaninov (UKR) 2:15:45   Evelyne Murat (FRA) 2:41:54
10th 2000   John Ngeny (KEN) 2:18:35   Valentina Lunyegova (RUS) 2:40:03
11th 2001   John Ngeny (KEN) 2:16:19   Valentina Enachi (MDA) 2:35:42
12th 2002   John Ngeny (KEN) 2:17:11   Valentina Enachi (MDA) 2:38:55
13th 2003   Elijah Yator (KEN) 2:11:34   Helena Javornik (SLO) 2:31:54
14th 2004   Stephen Rerimoi (KEN) 2:16:08   Halina Karnatsevich (BLR) 2:39:24
15th 2005   Eliud Kurgat (KEN) 2:12:17   Elizabeth Chemweno (KEN) 2:34:50
16th 2006   Peter Biwott (KEN) 2:14:01   Elizabeth Chemweno (KEN) 2:37:58
17th 2007   Johnstone Chebii (KEN) 2:14:17   Flora Kandie (KEN) 2:37:12
18th 2008   Amersisa Ketema (ETH) 2:14:21   Elizabeth Chemweno (KEN) 2:34:52
19th 2009   Oleksandr Sitkovskyy (UKR) 2:10:27   Getnet Selomie (ETH) 2:33:28
20th 2010   Haile Haja (ETH) 2:09:44   Goitetom Haftu (ETH) 2:28:24
21st 2011   John Komen (KEN) 2:07:13   Ture Chaltu (ETH) 2:36:04
22nd 2012   Ishhimael Chemtan (KEN) 2:09:12   Zherfe Boku (ETH) 2:32:59
23rd 2013   Isaac Kosgei (KEN) 2:12:28   Zherfe Boku (ETH) 2:38:00
24th 2014   Afewerk Mesfin (ETH) 2:12:16   Peninah Arusei (KEN) 2:33:10
25th 2015   Norbert Kigen (KEN) 2:09:25   Bekelech Daba (ETH) 2:32:11
26th 2016   Emmanuel Oliaulo (KEN) 2:10:46   Jane Moraa (KEN) 2:30:51
27th 2017   Workneh Tesfa (ETH) 2:11:07   Susan Kipsang (KEN) 2:30:57
28th 2018   Alex Saekwo (KEN) 2:13:23   Beth Muthoni (KEN) 2:40:08
29th 2019   Emmanuel Oliaulo (KEN) 2:08:22   Marion Kibor (KEN) 2:29:51
30th 2021   Edwin Soi (KEN) 2:09:16   Celestine Chepchirchir (KEN) 2:23:38

Wins by country edit

Country Men's race Women's race Total
  Kenya 16 10 26
  Ethiopia 4 6 10
  France 4 3 7
  Russia 1 6 7
  Ukraine 5 0 5
  Moldova 0 2 2
  Belarus 0 1 1
  Romania 0 1 1
  Slovenia 0 1 1

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Festou, Michel et al (2011-11-27). La Rochelle Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2011-11-27.
  2. ^ a b Previous Editions. Marathon de la Rochelle. Retrieved on 2011-11-30.
  3. ^ Décès du vice-président du tribunal de Rochefort lors du marathon de Marrakech (in French). Marathons (2005-01-17). Retrieved on 2011-11-30.
  4. ^ Vazel, Pierre-Jean (2011-11-28). Komen breaks La Rochelle record with 2:07:13. IAAF. Retrieved on 2019-04-03.
  5. ^ Vazel, Pierre-Jean (2011-11-26). Kenyans ready to steal the show in La Rochelle - PREVIEW. IAAF. Retrieved on 2019-04-03.
List of winners

External links edit

  • Official website