Athletics at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon explained

Event:Men's marathon
Games:2024 Summer
Venue:Paris
Win Value:2:06:26 OR
Gold:Tamirat Tola
Goldnoc:ETH
Silver:Bashir Abdi
Silvernoc:BEL
Bronze:Benson Kipruto
Bronzenoc:KEN
Prev:2020
Next:2028

The men's marathon at the 2024 Summer Olympics was held in Paris, France, on 10 August 2024. This was the 30th time that the men's marathon was contested at the Summer Olympics.

Summary

All three medalists in Tokyo returned: 2016 and 2020 gold medalist Eliud Kipchoge from Kenya, 2020 silver medalist Abdi Nageeye from the Netherlands, and 2020 bronze medalist Bashir Abdi from Belgium. Kipchoge, the champion of the past two Olympic marathons, sought to make history with a victory in Paris becoming the first athlete to win three Olympic gold medals in the marathon.[1] 2022 World Championship gold medalist Tamirat Tola, who also took silver back in 2017 and a track 10,000 bronze medal from 2016, came here as the alternate filling the shoes of injured Sisay Lemma. Abdi was also bronze medalist in 2022. 2023 World Champion Victor Kiplangat and silver medalist Maru Teferi are also entered. One athlete, Yaseen Abdalla, made his marathon debut after gaining entry through a universality spot.[2] The marathon world record holder, Kelvin Kiptum, was killed in a car accident in February 2024.

For most of the first 5K, nearly 43 year old Bat-Ochiryn Ser-Od run in front of the pack. For most of the next 5K, Héctor Garibay migrated to the front barely ahead of a large pack. Around 12K Eyob Faniel made the first significant break, dropping the pace down to 3:00 per kilometre while the field was going closer to 3:07. Faniel had 23 seconds over the field at 15K but the first series of hills had already begun. The hills broke apart the large pack, the lead "chase group" included Tamirat Tola, Bashir Abdi, Conner Mantz, Alphonce Simbu, Akira Akasaki, Elroy Gelant, Suguru Osako, with Deresa Geleta and Clayton Young hanging on the back. Faniel was slowing on the hills, with the chasers only 11 seconds behind at 20K. Tola would decide to accelerate on his own to bridge the gap. Still running uphill, a gap had opened up behind Tola, causing Mantz to take off to regain contact, with the two catching Faniel just over half a kilometer later. The three crossed the half marathon mark in 1:04:51. Geleta was next, 7 seconds back. With the easy downhill section, it took the lead chase group a little over 2K to catch back up to the leaders. By 25K, the lead pack had again congealed into 15 runners, Akasaki slightly in the lead. Faniel was no longer with the leaders, the next straggler behind. Just before 28K, the hills began again. Akasaki continued to lead for the first hill, but then Tola went by him and continued to open up a gap. Behind him, the lead pack was disintegrating. By the 29K marker, it was a 7 second gap back to Emile Cairess, the next chaser. After a water station near the top of the hill, Tola started the downhill, passing 30K 11 seconds ahead of Cairess. Geleta, Abdi and Akasaki were the next over the top. With the steep descent, the order shifted again. Geleta passed Cairess. Akasaki passed Abdi. Then Simbu, roaring down the hill, passed all of them. Geleta then responded and moved back ahead of Simbu. By the time they reached the bottom of the hill near 33K, Tola was maintaining a 13 second gap. The group behind him were tightening up. Tebello Ramakongoana and Benson Kipruto ran fastest of all down the hill to latch onto the chase group. With 5K remaining, Geleta, Abdi and Kipruto broke into a chase group separating from the next chaser, Akasaki. Tola's lead was out to 27 seconds. Seconds later, Kipruto looked around at the situation and suddenly was losing contact. With a kilometre to go, Abdi brought the gap down to 17 seconds. Tola finished with the time 2:06:26 and setting a new Olympic record. 21 seconds later, Abdi finished for silver 13 seconds ahead of Kipruto. Japan was the first country to get three across the finish line, ahead of Ethiopia and Italy.[3]

Background

The men's marathon has been present on the Olympic athletics programme since the inaugural edition in 1896, making this the 30th appearance of the event.

Course

The marathon course began at the Hôtel de Ville and traversed many of the host city's most iconic landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre before concluding at Les Invalides. Paris officials have stated the route has taken inspiration from the Women's March on Versailles. Due to the elevation profile, the course has been discussed as one of the more challenging Olympic marathons. Notably, for the first time in Olympic history, the public had the opportunity to run the marathon course. Following the Olympic marathon, up to 40,000 runners will be able to participate in a public marathon or a 10k race.[4]

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Olympic, and area records were as follows.[5]

Record! scope="col"
Athlete (Nation)TimeLocationDate
World record2:00:35[6] Chicago, United States8 October 2023
Olympic record2:06:32Beijing, China24 August 2008
World leading2:02:16[7] Tokyo, Japan3 March 2024
Africa
2:00:35
Asia 2:04:43
Europe 2:03:36
North, Central America
and Caribbean
2:05:36
Oceania 2:07:31
South America 2:04:51

Qualification

In order to comply with the 80-athlete capacity imposed by the IOC, World Athletics debuted a new qualification system ahead of the Paris games. Each country is eligible to send three athletes to compete in the marathon; however, each spot must be "unlocked" in one of three ways between 6 November 2022 to 30 April 2024. To unlock guaranteed spots for their country, athletes must run under a 2:08:10 in an eligible race within the time period. Athletes may also unlock a spot for their country by placing top five at a World Athletics platinum-level race or by reaching a high-enough World Athletics rankings. The world rankings were used to fill any entries not allocated to time-unlocked spots. Once spots have been unlocked for a country, the National Olympic Federation can select athletes to fill their spots as they see fit. While any athlete can be assigned to an unlocked spot, they must have run at least the Quota Reallocation Time of 2:11:30.[8] [9]

National Olympic Federations could also use a universality spot in the marathon. Any country with no qualified athlete was be allowed to enter their best-ranked runner in the marathon regardless of qualification standards.[10]

The qualification period for the 2024 Olympic Marathon ended on 30 April 2024 and exceeded the 80-athlete target by one entry.[11]

Qualification standardwidth=90No. of athleteswidth=230NOCNominated athletes
Entry standard – 2:08:103Bashir Abdi
Koen Naert
Michael Somers
3He Jie

Yang Shaohui
3Samsom Amare
Berhane Tesfay
Kibrom Weldemicael
3Kenenisa Bekele
Deresa Geleta
Sisay Lemma
3Morhad Amdouni
Felix Bour
Nicolas Navarro
3Samuel Fitwi
Amanal Petros
Richard Ringer
3Emile Cairess
Mahamed Mahamed
Philip Sesemann
3Maru Teferi
Gashau Ayale
Girmaw Amare
3Yemaneberhan Crippa
Eyob Faniel
Daniele Meucci
3Eliud Kipchoge
Benson Kipruto
Alexander Mutiso
3Othmane El Goumri
Mohcin Outalha
Zouhair Talbi
3Ibrahim Chakir
Tariku Novales
Yago Rojo
3Victor Kiplangat
Stephen Kissa
Andrew Rotich Kwemoi
2Brett Robinson
Patrick Tiernan
2Cameron Levins
Rory Linkletter
2Naoki Koyama
Suguru Osako
2Khalid Choukoud
Abdi Nageeye
2Zerei Kbrom Mezngi
Sondre Nordstad Moen
2Tadesse Abraham
Matthias Kyburz
2Gabriel Geay
Alphonce Simbu
2Conner Mantz
Clayton Young
0Marius Kimutai
1Héctor Garibay
0Daniel Ferreira do Nascimento
1Carlos Díaz
1Bouh Ibrahim
1Alberto González Mindez
1Tebello Ramakongoana
1Cristhian Pacheco
1Samuel Barata
1Stephen Mokoka
1Suldan Hassan
1Kaan Kigen Özbilen
1Shokhrukh Davlatov
1Isaac Mpofu
World Athletics Rankings1Liam Adams
1Hugo Catrileo
1Akira Akasaki
1Elroy Gelant
1Leonard Korir
Universality Places1Samuel Freire
1Valentin Betoudji
1Mo'ath Alkhawaldeh
1Bat-Ochiryn Ser-Od
1Han Il-ryong
1Dario Ivanovski
1Yaseen Abdalla
1Eduardo Garcia
Invitational places1Tachlowini Gabriyesos
Total81

Results

The event was held on 10 August, starting at 08:00 (UTC+2) in the morning.[12]

Rank Athlete Nation Time Time Behind Notes
Tamirat Tola2:06:26
Bashir Abdi2:06:47 +0:21
Benson Kipruto2:07:00+0:34
4Emile Cairess2:07:29+1:03
5Deresa Geleta2:07:31 +1:05
6Akira Akasaki2:07:32+1:06
7Tebello Ramakongoana2:07:58+1:32
8Conner Mantz2:08:12+1:46
9Clayton Young2:08:44+2:18
10Samsom Amare2:08:56+2:30
11Elroy Gelant2:09:07+2:41
12Richard Ringer2:09:18 +2:52
13Suguru Osako2:09:25+2:59
14Bouh Ibrahim2:09:31+3:05
15Samuel Fitwi Sibhatu2:09:50+3:24
16Nicolas Navarro2:09:56+3:30
17Alphonce Simbu2:10:03+3:37
18Othmane El Goumri2:10:06+3:40
19Isaac Mpofu2:10:09 +3:43
20Hassan Chahdi2:10:09 +3:43
21Alexander Mutiso Munyao2:10:31+4:05
22Michael Somers2:10:32+4:06
232:10:33+4:07
24Patrick Tiernan2:10:34+4:08
25Yemaneberhan Crippa2:10:36+4:10
26Maru Teferi2:10:42+4:16
27Stephen Mokoka2:10:59+4:33
28Suldan Hassan2:11:21+4:55
29Han Il-ryong2:11:21+4:55
30Matthias Kyburz2:11:32+5:06
31Gashau Ayale2:11:36+5:10
32Sondre Nordstad Moen2:11:39+5:13
33Yaseen Abdalla2:11:41+5:15
34Ibrahim Chakir2:11:44+5:18
35Zouhair Talbi2:11:51+5:25
36Cameron Levins2:11:56+5:30
37Victor Kiplangat2:11:59+5:33
38Tadesse Abraham2:12:22 +5:56
39Kenenisa Bekele2:12:24+5:58
402:12:34+6:08
41Yago Rojo2:12:43+6:17
42Tachlowini Gabriyesos2:12:47+6:21
43Eyob Faniel2:12:50+6:24
44Girmaw Amare2:12:51+6:25
45Andrew Buchanan2:12:58+6:32
46Philip Sesemann2:13:08 +6:42
47Rory Linkletter2:13:09+6:43
48Samuel Barata2:13:23+6:57
49Liam Adams2:13:33+7:07
50Felix Bour2:13:46+7:20
51Daniele Meucci2:14:02+7:36
52Zerei Kbrom Mezngi2:14:14+7:48
53Carlos Díaz2:14:25+7:59
54Henok Tesfay2:14:31+8:05
55Yang Shaohui2:14:48+8:22
56Samuel Freire2:15:05+8:39
57Mahamed Mahamed2:15:19+8:53
58Khalid Choukoud2:15:25+8:59
59Hugo Catrileo2:15:44+9:18
60Héctor Garibay2:15:54+9:28
61Koen Naert2:16:33+10:07
62Andrew Rotich Kwemoi2:17:28+11:02
63Leonard Korir2:18:45+12:19
64Berhane Tesfay2:18:50+12:24
65Mo'ath Alkhawaldeh2:20:01+13:35
662:22:12+15:46
67He Jie2:22:31+16:05
68Tariku Novales2:25:50+19:24
69Dario Ivanovski2:28:15+21:49
70Valentin Betoudji2:32:11+25:45
71Bat-Ochiryn Ser-Od2:42:33+36:07
Abdi Nageeye40 km
Mohcin Outalha35 km
Gabriel Gerald Geay30 km
Eliud Kipchoge30 km
Shokhrukh Davlatov30 km
Amanal Petros30 km
Stephen Kissa25 km
Kaan Kigen ÖzbilenHalf
Cristhian Pacheco15 km
Eduardo Garcia5 km

References

  1. Web site: 2024-07-26 . Kenyan Kipchoge ready to make history at Paris Olympics . 2024-08-03 . Africanews . en.
  2. Web site: Kelsall . Christopher . 2024-05-09 . World Athletics adds 20 universality spots to Paris Marathon . 2024-08-03 . Athletics Illustrated . en-CA.
  3. https://olympics.com/OG2024/pdf/OG2024/ATH/OG2024_ATH_C77V_ATHMMARATHON----------FNL-000100--.pdf
  4. Web site: Paris 2024 reveals routes for Olympic marathon and mass event run News Paris 24 Olympic Games . 2024-08-03 . worldathletics.org.
  5. Web site: Stats World Athletics World Athletics . 2024-08-03 . worldathletics.org.
  6. "All time Top lists – Senior – Marathon men", World Athletics, 29 June 2024. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  7. "Season Top Lists – Senior 2024 – Marathon men ", World Athletics, 2024. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  8. Web site: U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials: All you need to know about qualifying NBC Olympics . 2024-07-24 . www.nbcolympics.com . en.
  9. Web site: 2024-01-24 . Why the U.S. Might Have Only Two Men in the Olympic Marathon . 2024-07-24 . Runner's World . en-US.
  10. Web site: Kelsall . Christopher . 2024-05-09 . World Athletics adds 20 universality spots to Paris Marathon . 2024-07-24 . Athletics Illustrated . en-CA.
  11. Web site: 23 July 2024 . Athletic Entries- Men's Marathon . Paris 2024.
  12. "Paris 2024 - Olympic Schedule - Athletics", Olympics.com. Retrieved 29 June 2024.