Gifu Seiryu Half Marathon Explained

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Date:Mid-April
Location:Gifu, Japan
Type:Road
Distance:Half marathon
Sponsor:Suzuki
Est:2011
Participants:459 finishers (2022)
406 finishers (2019)
Record:Men's: 59:56 (2022)
Alexander Mutiso
Women's: 1:06:06 (2019)
Ruth Chepng'etich

The is an annual half marathon road running competition held in May in Gifu, Japan.

First held in 2011, the race is also called the,[1] named after Naoko Takahashi, the retired local runner who won the marathon at the 2000 Sydney Olympics and broke the marathon world record in 2001, becoming the first woman to complete the distance in under two hours and twenty minutes.[2] The first edition featured top level and popular sections for the half marathon as well as a shorter 3-kilometre fun run. All the funds raised during the event went towards the reconstruction effort following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[3] Some 9000 people took part in the inaugural event including elite Kenyan runners Martin Mathathi and Catherine Ndereba.[4]

The 2012 edition of the race attracted greater numbers of elite runners, both international and Japanese. Mathathi won for a second time while South Africa's René Kalmer won the women's race.[5] In 2013 the race gained IAAF Bronze Label status and attracted six-time World Half Marathon champion Zersenay Tadese, who set a course record of 60:31 minutes to dethrone Mathathi. Mestawet Tufa knocked three minutes of the women's course record with her run of 70:03 minutes.[6] In 2015 Eunice Kirwa improved the women's course record to 69:37 minutes.[7]

The course for the competition starts and finishes at the Gifu Nagaragawa Stadium. It has a single-looped format and mainly follows the Nagara River in the north and central parts of the city. The first section of the race heads south for 4 km, passing through the Yanagase shopping district, until it reaches the Golden Statue of Oda Nobunaga beside Gifu Station. The course then returns north and, upon reaching the river, takes a 6 km-long route going east alongside the river, passing Mount Kinka and Gifu Castle. The course then crosses Tidori Bridge into the Nagara-Furutsu district and heads back west before finally ending up at the stadium.[8]

The 2020 edition was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

Past winners

Key:

class=unsortableEditionYearclass=unsortableMen's winnerTime (h:m:s)class=unsortableWomen's winnerTime (h:m:s)
1st20111:00:471:13:45
2nd20121:01:291:13:02
3rd20131:00:311:10:03
4th20141:00:021:10:53
5th20151:02:211:09:37
6th20161:01:511:08:55
7th20171:00:571:07:44
8th20181:01:121:09:53
9th20191:00:341:06:06
2020 cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic in Japan
2021
10th202259:561:08:13
11th20231:00:201:08:18
12th20241:01:261:07:59

See also

External links

35.4414°N 136.7656°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gifu-marathon.jp/outline/index_e.html Race Outline
  2. Nakamura, Ken (2008-10-29). Takahashi, Marathon barrier-breaker, announces retirement. IAAF. Retrieved on 2013-05-20.
  3. http://www.47news.jp/CN/201105/CN2011051501000316.html 世界陸上代表の川内は13位 ぎふ清流マラソン
  4. Larner, Brett (2011-05-13). Mathathi, Kuroda Win Gifu Half Marathon, Kawauchi 13th. Japan Running News. Retrieved on 2013-05-20.
  5. Larner, Brett (2012-05-20). Mathathi Wins Second-Straight Gifu Seiryu Half Marathon, Kalmer Sets Women's Course Record. Japan Running News. Retrieved on 2013-05-20.
  6. Nakamura, Ken (2013-05-19). Course records for Tadese and Tufa at Gifu Seiryu Half Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 2013-05-20.
  7. Nakamura, Ken (2015-05-17). Kirwa breaks course record at Gifu Seiryu Half Marathon. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-05-17.
  8. http://www.gifu-marathon.jp/course/images/course_l.jpg Course Map 2013
  9. Web site: Gifu Half Marathon. www.gifu-marathon.jp. 2020-06-27. 2020-06-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20200627140129/http://www.gifu-marathon.jp/en/news/news_005.html. dead.