Flying Pig Marathon Explained

Bgcolour:pink
Date:Generally the first Sunday in May
Location:Cincinnati, Ohio and Northern Kentucky
Type:Road
Distance:Marathon - 26.2 mi
Record:2:20:25 - Cecil Franke - 2006
2:34:35 - Tatyana Pozdnyakova - 2002
Homepage:flyingpigmarathon.com
Participants:36,000+

The Cincinnati Flying Pig Marathon is an annual 26.2miles[1] race run the first Sunday of May in Cincinnati, Ohio. Founded by Robert J. Coughlin, it was first held in 1999, it is the 3rd-largest first-time marathon in the United States. The marathon had nearly 5000 finishers in 2008, and total participation for all weekend events exceeded 30,408 in 2011.[2] The race starts and finishes downtown and also crosses into Northern Kentucky. It is a qualifying race for the Boston Marathon.

History

The marathon was first held in 1999 when Elly Rono of Kenya and the University of Southern Indiana (and a future 2:10 marathoner), won in the men's division.

In 2002, overall female winner Tatyana Pozdnyakova of Ukraine set the course record with a finishing time of 2:34:35 (achieved at the age of 47).

In 2006, overall male winner Cecil Franke set the course record with a finishing time of 2:20:25.

In 2011, legally blind runner Amy McDonaugh won the race in the women's division without a guide and with a time of 2:58:14.[3] [4] [5]

In 2020, the race was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic, with all registrants given the option of either running the race virtually or transferring their entry to a later year.[6]

The 2023 race has been called “The Floating Pig”, due to the thunderstorms, torrential downpour, and flash flooding that took place during the course of the race. Controversially, the race was not cancelled despite lightning strikes within the first hour.

Course

The race course starts in downtown Cincinnati and crosses the Taylor-Southgate Bridge over the Ohio River into Northern Kentucky, where it travels through Newport and crosses westward over the Licking River via the Fourth Street Bridge into Covington. From Covington, the route takes the Clay Wade Bailey Bridge back over the Ohio River into Cincinnati. After looping westward the first leg ends east of downtown in Eden Park, a distance of . The race course then makes its way east through East Walnut Hills, O'Bryonville, and Hyde Park and ends after at Richards Industries on Wasson Road. The third leg goes east to the village of Mariemont before looping back to head towards the river; it ends in Linwood, having traversed . The final leg is to the finish line downtown. The last 7km (04miles) of the fourth leg follow the Ohio River Scenic Byway (US 52) along the Ohio River, heading downtown toward the finish line.[7]

Other races

In recent years, the Flying Pig has included a 5K race, a 10K race, and a half marathon and a 2-mile "Flying Fur" event for dogs and humans. The 5K and 10K are held on the day before the marathon. The half marathon starts and finishes at the same locations as the full marathon, and is held on the same day as the full marathon.

Winners

Year ! scope="col"
Men's WinnerTime Women's WinnerTime
19992:21:15 2:58:10
20002:23:02 2:49:30
20012:27:59 2:50:41
20022:31:10 2:34:33
20032:27:42 2:57:52
20042:38:07 3:05:52
20052:30:24 3:03:40
20062:20:26 2:56:19
20072:33:36 2:55:56
20082:30:40 3:05:18
20092:20:37 2:52:23
20102:31:55 2:55:00
20112:28:02 2:58:10
20122:22:04 2:54:38
20132:21:49 2:53:56
20142:27:19 2:55:50
20152:32:53 2:53:07
20162:26:03 2:55:46
20172:33:43 2:53:47
20182:29:36 2:46:39
20192:28:58 2:49:17
2020colspan=4
20212:26:28 2:43:44
20222:27:18 2:50:00
20232:27:10 2:45:34
20242:26:01 2:43:23

Repeat champions

Repeat WinnersNo. of WinsYears of the Wins
52009, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016
Caitlin Keen32018, 2021, 2023
Rudolf Jun22000, 2001
Rebecca Gallaher22000, 2001
Amy Robillard22014, 2015
Anne Flower22016, 2019
Jack Randall22017, 2019
Jason Salyer22023, 2024

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Certified Courses search results for Course ID OH08014PR. USA Track and Field. 2014-10-26.
  2. Web site: Kieran O'Connor, Amy McDonaugh win Flying Pig Marathon. Cincinnati Enquirer. https://web.archive.org/web/20110504122813/http://news.cincinnati.com/article/20110501/SPT/110501007. 2011-05-01. 2011-05-04.
  3. Web site: Legally Blind Runner Wins Flying Pig Marathon. 2 May 2011.
  4. Web site: Legally blind runner wins the women's Flying Pig marathon in Cincinnati - GO AMY!. .
  5. Web site: Blind ambition. June 2011.
  6. Web site: Flying Pig Marathon.
  7. Web site: Marathon Course Description.