The Great South Run is an annual 10 mile (16.09 km) road running race which takes place in Portsmouth, United Kingdom providing an intermediate distance between the ten kilometre and the half marathon (21.097 km) runs. Launched in 1990, it is part of the Great Run series created by former British athlete Brendan Foster.[1] It was originally held in Southampton, but the race moved to its current course after the first edition.[2]
Great South Run | |
---|---|
Date | Mid-October |
Location | Portsmouth, United Kingdom |
Event type | Road |
Distance | 10 mile (16.09 km) |
Primary sponsor | AJ Bell |
Established | 1990 |
Course records | Men: Joseph Ebuya 45:15 Women: Eilish McColgan 50:43 |
Official site | Great South Run |
The Great South Run has become one of Europe's most popular mass participation races over 10 miles, with a record 21,000 entries for the 2009 race.[3] Although the elite race is an IAAF Gold Label Road Race which attracts some of the most successful professional runners,[4] it is not a recognised distance for purposes of IAAF records.[5] World record holder Paula Radcliffe and 2007 World Champion Luke Kibet are among the past winners. The event is currently sponsored by AJ Bell. Previous sponsors have been ExpressTest by Cignpost Diagnostics (2021), Simplyhealth (2017–2019), Morrisons (2015),[2] Bupa (1993–2014) and Diet Coke (1990–1992). The 2016 and 2022 races did not have a major sponsor.
The 1999 edition of the race was selected to be the Amateur Athletic Association 10-mile championships that year.[6] In 2021, British runner Eilish McColgan set the current women's record of 50:42.[7] Paula Radcliffe won the women's race in 2008 in a time of 51 minutes 11 seconds, a new British record.[8] Kenyan runner Joseph Ebuya won the 2010 edition in 45:15 minutes, which was a significant improvement upon the previous UK all-comers record held by the 1995 winner Benson Masya.[9]
Channel 5 broadcast the Great South Run every year until 2019. The event is currently untelevised.
Past winners
editKey: Course record
Edition | Year | Date | Men's winner | Time (m:s) | Women's winner | Time (m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 1990 | Marti ten Kate (NED) | 47:52 | Alison Gooderham (GBR) | 56:09 | |
2nd | 1991 | Thomas Naali (TAN) | 47:11 | Olga Bondarenko (URS) | 53:16 | |
3rd | 1992 | Boay Akonay (TAN) | 47:04 | Iulia Negura (ROM) | 53:19 | |
4th | 1993 | Gary Staines (GBR) | 46:11 | Iulia Negura (ROM) | 53:01 | |
5th | 1994 | Gary Staines (GBR) | 47:00 | Gitte Karlshøj (DEN) | 54:49 | |
6th | 1995 | Benson Masya (KEN) | 45:56 | Liz McColgan (GBR) | 53:12 | |
7th | 1996 | Gary Staines (GBR) | 46:57 | Derartu Tulu (ETH) | 52:39 | |
8th | 1997 | Christopher Kelong (KEN) | 46:53 | Liz McColgan (GBR) | 52:00 | |
9th | 1998 | Stéphane Franke (GER) | 47:40 | Marian Sutton (GBR) | 54:17 | |
10th | 1999 | 19 September | Simon Kasimili (KEN) | 47:42 | Esther Kiplagat (KEN) | 54:42 |
11th | 2000 | 26 November (rescheduled after event cancelled in September due to flooding) | Gert Thys (RSA) | 48:26 | Restituta Joseph (TAN) | 55:10 |
12th | 2001 | 14 October | Khalid Skah (MAR) | 46:17 | Restituta Joseph (TAN) | 52:36 |
13th | 2002 | 8 September | Simon Kasimili (KEN) | 47:27 | Sonia O'Sullivan (IRL) | 51:00 |
14th | 2003 | 12 October | John Yuda (TAN) | 46:35 | Sonia O'Sullivan (IRL) | 53:26 |
15th | 2004 | 10 October | Hendrick Ramaala (RSA) | 47:14 | Benita Johnson (AUS) | 52:32 |
16th | 2005 | 9 October | John Yuda (TAN) | 46:45 | Derartu Tulu (ETH) | 51:27 |
17th | 2006 | 22 October | Simon Arusei (KEN) | 47:17 | Jo Pavey (GBR) | 52:46 |
18th | 2007 | 28 October | Luke Kibet (KEN) | 47:31 | Rose Cheruiyot (KEN) | 53:44 |
19th | 2008 | Bernard Kipyego (KEN) | 46:42 | Paula Radcliffe (GBR) | 51:11 | |
20th | 2009 | Mo Farah (GBR) | 46:25 | Inês Monteiro (POR) | 52:32 | |
21st | 2010 | Joseph Ebuya (KEN) | 45:15 | Grace Momanyi (KEN) | 52:03 | |
22nd | 2011 | Leonard Komon (KEN) | 46:18 | Aselefech Mergia (ETH) | 52:55 | |
23rd | 2012 | Stephen Mokoka (RSA) | 46:40 | Jo Pavey (GRB) | 53:01 | |
24th | 2013 | Emmanuel Bett (KEN) | 48:03 | Florence Kiplagat (KEN) | 53:53 | |
25th | 2014 | James Rungaru (KEN) | 46:31 | Belaynesh Oljira (ETH) | 52:40 | |
26th | 2015 | Moses Kipsiro (UGA) | 46:00 | Vivian Cheruiyot (KEN) | 51:17 | |
27th | 2016 | Chris Thompson (GBR) | 47:23 | Tirunesh Dibaba (ETH) | 51:49 | |
28th | 2017 | Chris Thompson (GBR) | 48:32 | Gemma Steel (GBR) | 55:25 | |
29th | 2018 | Chris Thompson (GBR) | 46:56 | Eilish McColgan (GBR) | 54:43 | |
30th | 2019 | Marc Scott (GBR) | 46:57 | Eilish McColgan (GBR) | 51:38 | |
2020 | Event cancelled due to COVID-19 | |||||
31st | 2021 | Jack Rowe (GBR) | 47:20 | Eilish McColgan (GBR) | 50:43 | |
32nd | 2022 | Ben Connor (GBR) | 47:19 | Lily Partridge (GBR) | 54:29 | |
33rd | 2023 | Zak Mahamed (ETH) | 46:41 | Lily Partridge (GBR) | 54:05 | |
2024 | Event cancelled due to high winds and rain[10] |
References
edit- General
- British Road Race Championships – Great South Run winners. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- Martin, Dave (2006-10-22). Pavey bounces back with Great South Run victory. IAAF. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- Martin, Dave (2009-10-25). Farah scores tremendous victory while Monteiro destroys opposition in Portsmouth. IAAF. Retrieved 2009-10-25.
- Specific
- ^ IAAF back Nova International in street racing initiative[permanent dead link ]. Great Run (18 May 2009). Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ a b History and Tradition Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Great Run. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ Hedley, Nicola (19 October 2009). Kibet seeks another victory in Portsmouth. IAAF. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ Ndereba to headline women's 10-miler field in Portsmouth. IAAF (29 September 2009). Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "Gebrselassie approaching Record for Running Records". International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). 16 March 2006. Retrieved 25 April 2012.
- ^ British Road Race Championships – Great South Run winners. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ "O'Sullivan carves up World 10 Mile best in Portsmouth | NEWS | World Athletics". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
- ^ Superb Radcliffe wins Great South. BBC Sport (26 October 2008). Retrieved 25 October 2009.
- ^ Martin, Dave (24 October 2010). Ebuya clocks the fastest ever 10 Miles in UK. IAAF. Retrieved 24 October 2010.
- ^ https://www.itv.com/news/meridian/2024-10-19/great-south-run-cancelled-due-to-high-winds-and-rain