Spartathlon
Spartathlon is a 246-kilometre (153 mi) ultramarathon race held annually in Greece since 1983, between Athens and Sparti, the modern town on the site of ancient Sparta. The spartathlon is based on the run of Pheidippides,[citation needed] who ran from Athens to Sparta before the Battle of Marathon in a day and a half to seek aid against the Persians. Five Royal Air Force officers attempted the course in 1982 and the competition was started the next year. The winner of the first Spartathlon, Yiannis Kouros, still holds the record for fastest time at 20 hours and 25 minutes.
As the race grew more popular, stringent entry criteria were implemented to ensure participants were fit enough to run the course. The race has 75 checkpoints where race officials disqualify runners who fail to meet time cutoffs or who are too tired to continue.
Origin[]
The Spartathlon aims to trace the footsteps of Pheidippides, an Athenian messenger sent to Sparta in 490 BC to seek help against the Persians in the Battle of Marathon. Pheidippides, according to an account by Greek historian Herodotus, arrived in Sparta the day after he departed.[1] Herodotus wrote: "On the occasion of which we speak when Pheidippides was sent by the Athenian generals, and, according to his own account, saw Pan on his journey, he reached Sparta on the very next day after quitting the city of Athens."[2]
Based on this account, John Foden, an officer of the Royal Air Force and a long distance runner, went to Greece in 1982 with four officers to test whether it was possible to cover the nearly 250 kilometres (155 miles) in a day and a half.[2] Three runners were successful in completing the distance: John Foden in 37:37, John Scholtens in 34:30, and John McCarthy in 39:00.[3] The following year a team of enthusiastic supporters (British, Greek and other nationalities) based at the British Hellenic Chamber of Commerce in Athens and led by Philhellene Michael Callaghan organised the running of the first Open International Spartathlon Race. The event was run under the auspices of SEGAS, the Hellenic Amateur Athletics Association.
Race[]
The Spartathlon is usually held around late September. Runners have 36 hours to run 245 kilometres (152 mi), roughly the equivalent of six consecutive marathons, between Athens and Sparti, the site of ancient Sparta. Runners have to deal with the Greek heat in the day, the cold of the night, and the mountainous terrain. There are 75 checkpoints along the way, where runners are disqualified for safety reasons if they fail to meet time cut-offs. Many runners have crews that support them during the race, such as helping them resupply at the checkpoints. Any non-finishers are picked up by a bus and taken to Sparta together.[1]
The race begins at 7:00 am, roughly when dawn breaks, at the foot of the Acropolis of Athens, near the Odeon of Herodes Atticus and the Agora of Athens.[1] The runners head westwards and the first major checkpoint is at 80 kilometres (50 mi), at the Corinth Canal on the Isthmus of Corinth that connects the Peloponnese to mainland Greece. Runners then proceed to the site of ancient Corinth.[1]
Runners ascend the 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) high Sangas mountain pass on Mount Parthenion, and then descend towards Tegea, which is about 200 kilometres (120 mi) from the start of the race. According to Herodotus, Pheidippides had a vision of Pan at Tegea, in what may be the first recorded case of . The rest of the race is a 50 kilometres (31 mi) downhill segment to the town of Sparta.[1]
The end of the race is a statue of Leonidas I, the Spartan king who died at the Battle of Thermopylae fighting the Persians ten years after Marathon, which is placed at the end of the main street in Sparta. Runners who finish the race receive a laurel wreath and water from schoolgirls dressed in chitons, and have access to medical tents. The national anthem of the winner is also played.[1]
No monetary award is given to any of the finishers, but winning the race is considered prestigious and generates publicity that is helpful in attracting sponsors. Unlike Pheidippides, none of the runners have to make the return run back to Athens.[1]
Entry requirements[]
In order to run in this race an individual must have recently performed at least one of a number of qualifying feats, such as:
- Finishing a race of at least 100 km (62 mi) in less than 10 hours (male) or 10 hours 30 minutes (female).
- Competing in an event of more than 200 km (120 mi) and completing it in less than 29 hours (male) or 30 hours (female).
- Competing in Spartathlon within the two previous years and overcoming the mountain to reach the Nestani checkpoint at 172 km (107 mi) in less than 24 hours 30 minutes.
The criteria have been tightened at least once in the past and a ballot introduced, since the increasing prestige of the race and the gradual increase in the number of qualifying athletes mean that it is now always oversubscribed; however, elite athletes who can exceed the criteria by a large margin (25%, formerly 20%) are able to avoid the ballot and qualify automatically. Entries are now capped at 400 each year with non-automatic qualifiers chosen through a lottery system.
Records[]
Yiannis Kouros, who won the first Spartathlon, still holds the record time at 20:25:00. Kouros competed in four Spartathlons, won all four and holds the four fastest times ever recorded. In 2005, he decided to trace the steps of Pheidippides completely and ran—out of competition—the Athens–Sparta–Athens distance.
Hubert Karl of Germany and András Lőw of Hungary hold the record for most finishes with 21 each. Lőw also holds the record for most consecutive finishes with 19.
In 2017, the 35th anniversary competition had a record 264 finishers under the 36-hour cut-off time. In 2018, the later stages of the race were substantially disrupted by the Medicane Zorbas, though almost all runners capable of finishing within the cut-off time were eventually able to do so.
Following are the winners of the Spartathlon:
Men[]
Time = hours:minutes:seconds
Year | 1st | Nationality | Time | 2nd | Nationality | Time | 3rd | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1983 | Yiannis Kouros | Greece | 21:53:42 | Dusan Mravlje | Yugoslavia | 24:40:38 | Alan Fairbrother | United Kingdom | 27:39:14 |
1984 | Yiannis Kouros | Greece | 20:25:00 | Dusan Mravlje | Yugoslavia | 23:44:00 | Patrick Macke | United Kingdom | 24:32:05 |
1985 | Patrick Macke | United Kingdom | 23:18:00 | Dusan Mravlje | Yugoslavia | 24:39:22 | Jean Calbera | France | 24:42:00 |
1986 | Yiannis Kouros | Greece | 21:57:00 | Ernő Kis-Király | Hungary | 26:07:00 | Peter Mann | Germany | 26:41:00 |
1987 | Rune Larsson | Sweden | 24:41:46 | Patrick Macke | United Kingdom | 26:41:51 | James Zarei | United Kingdom | 27:27:16 |
1988 | Rune Larsson | Sweden | 24:42:05 | James Zarei | Iran | 25:59:42 | Georges Makris | Greece | 26:47:00 |
1989 | Patrick Macke | United Kingdom | 24:32:05 | Rune Larsson | Sweden | 25:28:48 | Seiichi Morikawa | Japan | 26:08:18 |
1990 | Yiannis Kouros | Greece | 20:29:04 | Patrick Macke | United Kingdom | 23:08:41 | János Bogár | Hungary | 24:49:19 |
1991 | János Bogár | Hungary | 24:15:31 | James Zarei | United Kingdom | 26:48:50 | George Stoakes | United Kingdom | 30:50:35 |
1992[4] | Rusko Kadiev | Bulgaria | 24:08:13 | Paul Beckers | Belgium | 25:05:48 | Roy Pirrung | United States | 28:33:02 |
1993 | Rune Larsson | Sweden | 25:57:12 | Jean-Claude Lapeyrigne | France | 29:48:00 | Schutze W.D. | Germany | 29:50:38 |
1994 | James Zarei | United Kingdom | 26:15:00 | Kenji Okiyama | Japan | 25:55:00 | Peeter Kirppu | Estonia | 26:07:00 |
1995 | James Zarei | United Kingdom | 25:59:42 | Vasilios Chalkias | Greece | 27:49:46 | Kazuyoshi Ikeda | Japan | 28:12:00 |
1996 | Roland Vuillemenot | France | 26:21:00 | Mravlje Dusan | Slovenia | 27:55:00 | Roy Pirrung | United States | 27:56:32 |
1997 | Constantinos Repos | Greece | 23:37:00 | Kenji Okiyama | Japan | 25:55:00 | Rune Larsson | Sweden | 28:11:00 |
1998 | Kostas Reppos | Greece | 25:11:41 | Kenzi(Kenji) Okiyama | Japan | 26:13:13 | James Zarei | United Kingdom | 26:44:04 |
1999 | Jens Lukas | Germany | 25:38:03 | Jean Pierre Guyomarch | France | 27:08:57 | Jun Onoki | Japan | 27:16:36 |
2000 | Masayuki Ohtaki (Otaki, Ōtaki) | Japan | 24:01:10 | Jens Lukas | Germany | 24:59:54 | Cees Verhagen | Netherlands | 25:35:50 |
2001 | Valmir Nunes | Brazil | 23:18:05 | Jens Lukas | Germany | 24:46:51 | Ryōichi Sekiya | Japan | 25:27:30 |
2002 | Ryōichi Sekiya | Japan | 23:47:54 | Markus Thalmann | Austria | 25:16:56 | Jeffry Oonk | Netherlands | 26:58:55 |
2003 | Austria | 23:28:24 | Valmir Nunes | Brazil | 25:30:35 | Jean-Jacques Moros | France | 26:26:16 | |
2004 | Jens Lukas | Germany | 25:49:59 | Markus Thalmann | Austria | 26:20:02 | Martin Juri | Australia | 27:19:15 |
2005 | Jens Lukas | Germany | 24:20:39 | Jean-Jacques Moros | France | 25:03:30 | Markus Thalmann | Austria | 26:34:42 |
2006 | Scott Jurek | United States | 22:52:18 | Ryōichi Sekiya | Japan | 24:14:11 | Masayuki Ohtaki (Otaki, Ōtaki) | Japan | 25:19:12 |
2007 | Scott Jurek | United States | 23:12:14 | Piotr Kurylo | Poland | 24:29:41 | Valmir Nunes | Brazil | 25:37:40 |
2008 | Scott Jurek | United States | 22:20:01 | Markus Thalmann | Austria | 24:52:09 | Lars Skytte Christoffersen | Denmark | 25:29:41 |
2009 | Ryōichi Sekiya | Japan | 23:48:24 | Lars Skytte Christoffersen | Denmark | 24:32:00 | Jon Harald Berge | Norway | 25:10:00 |
2010 | Ivan Cudin | Italy | 23:03:06 | Jan Albert Lantink | Netherlands | 23:31:00 | Jan Prochaska | Germany | 24:56:00 |
2011 | Ivan Cudin | Italy | 22:57:40 | Yuji Sakai | Japan | 24:22:24 | Michael Vanicek | Germany | 24:55:59 |
2012 | Stu Thoms | Germany | 26:28:19[5] | Tetsuo Kiso | Japan | 26:36:23 | Markus Thalmann | Austria | 27:14:25 |
2013 | João Oliveira | Portugal | 23:28:31 | Florian Reus | Germany | 25:29:11 | Ivan Cudin | Italy | 25:53:44 |
2014 | Ivan Cudin | Italy | 22:27:57 | Florian Reus | Germany | 23:56:19 | Andrzej Radzikowski | Poland | 25:48:25 |
2015 | Florian Reus | Germany | 23:16:44 | Dan Lawson | United Kingdom | 23:53:05 | Hansen Kim | Denmark | 23:53:52 |
2016 | Andrzej Radzikowski | Poland | 23:02:23 | Marco Bonfiglio | Italy | 23:36:58 | Radek Brunner | Czech Republic | 24:07:29 |
2017 | Aleksandr Sorokin | Lithuania | 22:04:04 | Radek Brunner | Czech Republic | 22:49:37 | Nikolaos Sideridis | Greece | 22:58:40 |
2018 | Yoshihiko Ishikawa | Japan | 22:55:13 | Radek Brunner | Czech Republic | 23:37:25 | João Oliveira | Portugal | 24:34:30 |
2019 | Bódis Tamás | Hungary | 23:29:24 | Csécei Zoltán | Hungary | 24:16:59 | Radek Brunner | Czech Republic | 24:26:20 |
Women[]
Time = hours:minutes:seconds
Year | 1st | Nationality | Time | 2nd | Nationality | Time | 3rd | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Zsuzsanna Maraz | Hungary | 30:16:18 | Irina Masanova | Russia | 31:18:08 | Natasa Robnik | Slovenia | 32:15:31 |
2018 | Zsuzsanna Maraz | Hungary | 27:05:28 | Kateřina Kašparová | Czech Republic | 27:47:16 | Teija Honkonen | Finland | 28:36:08 |
2017 | Patrycja Bereznowska | Poland | 24:48:18 | Zsuzsanna Maraz | Hungary | 25:43:40 | Aleksandra Niwińska | Poland | 26:28:48 |
2016 | Katalin Nagy | United States | 25:22:26 | Smith Pam | United States | 27:11:53 | Maraz Zsuzsanna | Hungary | 27:44:01 |
2015 | Katalin Nagy | United States | 25:06:05 | Alyson Venti | United States | 26:50:51 | Szilvia Lubics | Hungary | 29:18:44 |
2014 | Szilvia Lubics | Hungary | 26:53:40 | Katalin Nagy | United States | 28:55:03 | Eva Esnaola | Spain | 30:52:41 |
2013 | Szilvia Lubics | Hungary | 28:03:04 | Antje Krause | Germany | 30:07:15 | Heike Bergmann | Germany | 30:22:03 |
2012 | Elizabeth Hawker (also 3rd overall that year)[1] | United Kingdom | 27:02:17[5] | Leonie van den Haak | Netherlands | 28:42:36 | Szilvia Lubics | Hungary | 29:45:56 |
2011 | Szilvia Lubics | Hungary | 29:07:39 | Ruth Podgornik Res | Slovenia | 32:17:19 | Mimi Anderson | United Kingdom | 32:33:23 |
2010 | Emily Gelder | United Kingdom | 30:17:03 | Heather Fouwdlink-Hawker | United Kingdom | 32:43:00 | Yoshiko Matsuda | Japan | 33:31:00 |
2009 | Sumie Inagaki | Japan | 27:39:49 | Yoshiko Matsuda | Japan | 31:16:00 | Lisa Bliss | United States | 32:27:00 |
2008 | Sook-Hue Hur | South Korea | 30:03:22 | Stacey Bunton | United States | 31:25:59 | Heinlein Marika | Germany | 31:39:19 |
2007 | Japan | 31:09:24 | Vrigitte Bec | France | 31:56:03 | Kimie Noto | Japan | 32:11:05 | |
2006 | Sumie Inagaki | Japan | 28:37:20 | Takako Furuyama | Japan | 31:40:31 | Mary Larsson-Hanudel | United States | 31:41:56 |
2005 | Kimie Noto | Japan | 30:23:07 | Elke Streicher | Germany | 32:19:59 | Anke Drescher | Germany | 32:52:23 |
2004 | Kimie Noto | Japan | 29:57:40 | Hiroko Okiyama | Japan | 31:01:17 | Anke Drescher | Germany | 32:55:26 |
2003 | Akiko Sakamoto | Japan | 29:07:44 | Sumie Inagaki | Japan | 29:38:54 | Barbara Szlachetka | Germany | 31:50:23 |
2002 | Irina Reutovich | Russia | 28:10:48 | Hiroko Okiyama | Japan | 30:25:49 | Mayumi Okabe | Japan | 31:33:35 |
2001 | Alzira Portela-Lario | Portugal | 30:31:41 | Kimie Funada(later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 33:49:17 | Heike Pawzik | Germany | 34:41:10 |
2000 | Hiroko Okiyama | Japan | 29:16:37 | Mary Larsson | United States | 30:56:16 | Helga Backhaus | Germany | 31:35:24 |
1999 | Anny Monot | France | 35:38:08 | Kimie Funada(later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 35:41:31 | - | - | - |
1998 | Sweden | 28:46.58 | Kimie Funada(later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 29:32:21 | Helga Backhaus | Germany | 29:53:49 | |
1997 | Germany | 30:39:00 | Kimie Funada(later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 33:36:00 | Heike Pawzik | Germany | 33:46:00 | |
1996 | Helga Backhaus | Germany | 29:33:00 | Kimie Funada(later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 33:36:00 | Heike Pawzik | Germany | 33:46:00 |
1995 | Kimie Funada (later Kimie Noto) | Japan | 29:32:21 | Helga Backhaus | Germany | 30:41:00 | Miyako Yoshikoshi | Japan | 35:40:31 |
1994 | Helga Backhaus | Germany | 30:39:00 | Kazuko Kaihata | Japan | 34:12:17 | Miyako Yoshikoshi | Japan | 34:33:21 |
1993 | Sigrid Lomsky | Germany | 32:46:17 | Marie Bertrand | France | 33:47:12 | Miyako Yoshikoshi | Japan | 34:18:00 |
1992 | Hilary Walker | United Kingdom | 31:23:30 | Mary Hanudel-Larsson | United States | 33:47:00 | Miyako Yoshikoshi | Japan | 33:47:52 |
1991 | Ursula Blasberg | Germany | 34:42:45 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
1990 | Anne-Marie Deguilhem | France | 34:07:41 | Pascale Mahe | France | 35:08:03 | Mary Hanudel-Larsson | United States | 35:31:30 |
1989 | Mary Hanudel (later Mary Larsson) | United States | 31:57:23 | Monika Kuno | Germany | 34:10:00 | Eiko Endo | Japan | 34:36:49 |
1988 | - | ||||||||
1987 | Hilary Walker | United Kingdom | 31:23:30 | Waltraud Reisert | Germany | 35:31:56 | - | - | - |
1986 | Mary Hanudel (later Mary Larsson) | United States | 31:46:45 | Waltraud Reisert | Germany | 33:21:00 | - | - | - |
1985 | Mary Hanudel (later Mary Larsson) | United States | 34:10 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
1984 | Mary Hanudel (later Mary Larsson) | United States | 30:27:00 | Marcy Schwam Lorna Richey (later Lorna Michael) |
United States United States |
34:15:10 | - | - | - |
1983 | Eleanor Robinson (formerly Adams) | United Kingdom | 32:37:52 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
All-time top 50 performances[]
Athlete | Time | Country | Year | Place | Age | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Yiannis Kouros | 20:25:00 | GRE | 1984 | 1 | 28 |
2. | Yiannis Kouros | 20:29:04 | GRE | 1990 | 1 | 34 |
3. | Yiannis Kouros | 21:53:42 | GRE | 1983 | 1 | 27 |
4. | Yiannis Kouros | 21:57:00 | GRE | 1986 | 1 | 30 |
5. | 22:04:04 | LTU | 2017 | 1 | 36 | |
6. | Scott Jurek | 22:20:01 | USA | 2008 | 1 | 34 |
7. | 22:29:29 | ITA | 2014 | 1 | 39 | |
8. | 22:49:37 | CZE | 2017 | 2 | 42 | |
9. | Scott Jurek | 22:52:18 | USA | 2006 | 1 | 32 |
10. | 22:57:40 | ITA | 2011 | 1 | 36 | |
11. | Nikolaos Sideridis | 22:58:40 | GRE | 2017 | 3 | 36 |
12. | Andrzej Radzikowski | 23:02:23 | POL | 2016 | 1 | 35 |
13. | 23:03:06 | ITA | 2010 | 1 | 35 | |
14. | Patrick Macke | 23:08:41 | GBR | 1990 | 2 | 35 |
15. | Scott Jurek | 23:12:14 | USA | 2007 | 1 | 33 |
16. | 23:17:31 | GER | 2015 | 1 | 31 | |
17. | Patrick Macke | 23:18:00 | GBR | 1985 | 1 | 30 |
18. | Valmir Nunes | 23:18:05 | BRA | 2001 | 1 | 37 |
19. | 23:20:56 | JPN | 2017 | 4 | 29 | |
20. | 23:28:24 | AUT | 2003 | 1 | 39 | |
21. | Joao Oliveira | 23:29:08 | POR | 2013 | 1 | 36 |
22. | Jan Lantink | 23:31:22 | HOL | 2010 | 2 | 52 |
23. | Marco Bonfiglio | 23:36:58 | ITA | 2016 | 2 | 39 |
24. | Kostas Reppos | 23:37:00 | GRE | 1997 | 1 | 31 |
25. | 23:44:00 | YUG | 1985 | 2 | 32 | |
26. | Ryōichi Sekiya | 23:47:54 | JPN | 2002 | 1 | 35 |
27. | Ryōichi Sekiya | 23:48:24 | JPN | 2009 | 1 | 42 |
28. | Dan Lawson | 23:53:32 | GBR | 2015 | 2 | 42 |
29. | Kim Hansen | 23:54:37 | DEN | 2015 | 3 | 40 |
30. | 23:57:13 | GER | 2014 | 2 | 30 | |
31. | Ohtaki Masayuki | 24:01:10 | JPN | 2000 | 1 | 34 |
32. | Radek Brunner | 24:07:29 | CZE | 2016 | 3 | 42 |
33. | 24:08:13 | BUL | 1992 | 1 | 34 | |
34. | Ryōichi Sekiya | 24:14:11 | JPN | 2006 | 2 | 39 |
35. | János Bogár | 24:15:31 | HUN | 1991 | 1 | 27 |
36. | Jens Lukas | 24:20:39 | GER | 2005 | 1 | 39 |
37. | Yuji Sakai | 24:21:29 | JPN | 2011 | 1 | 49 |
38. | 24:29:41 | POL | 2007 | 2 | 35 | |
39. | Sebastian Białobrzeski | 24:30:07 | POL | 2017 | 5 | 28 |
40. | Lars Christoffersen | 24:31:45 | DEN | 2009 | 2 | 37 |
41. | Patrick Macke | 24:32:05 | GBR | 1989 | 1 | 34 |
42. | 24:39:22 | YUG | 1983 | 2 | 30 | |
43. | 24:40:38 | YUG | 1984 | 2 | 31 | |
44. | 24:41:46 | SWE | 1987 | 1 | 31 | |
45. | Jean-Dominique Calbera | 24:42:00 | FRA | 1985 | 3 | 37 |
46. | 24:42:05 | SWE | 1988 | 1 | 32 | |
47. | Jens Lukas | 24:46:51 | GER | 2001 | 2 | 35 |
48. | Patrycja Bereznowska | 24:48:18 | POL | 2017 | 1F | |
49. | János Bogár | 24:49:19 | HUN | 1990 | 3 | 26 |
50. | 24:51:00 | POL | 2017 | 6 | 34 |
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "The lunacy of the long-distance runner". The Economist. 22 December 2012. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Herodotus, The Persian Wars, Chapter 6, paragraph 106
- ^ Spartathlon 1983-2007, page 23, Published by the International Spartathlon Association, Athens, Greece
- ^ "Spartathlon 1992 Results". Official Website. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Finishers". Spartathlon. Retrieved 17 October 2012.
- ^ "Αποτελέσματα".
- ^ Spartathlon 1983-2017, International Spartathlon Association, 7 Kodrou street, 10558, Athens, Greece
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spartathlon. |
- Ultramarathons
- Sport in Greece
- Sparta
- Battle of Marathon
- Athletic culture based on Greek antiquity
- Athletics competitions in Greece
- 1983 establishments in Greece