2016 London Marathon

36th London Marathon
Venue London, England, United Kingdom
Date 24 April 2016 (2016-04-24)
Champions
Men Eliud Kipchoge (2:03:05) (Elite)
Marcel Hug (1:35:19) (Wheelchair)
Women Jemima Sumgong (2:22:58) (Elite)
Tatyana McFadden (1:44:14) (Wheelchair)

The 2016 London Marathon was held on 24 April 2016. It was the 36th running of the annual mass-participation marathon race and the third World Marathon Major of the year.[1]

The men's elite race was won by Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge and the women's race was won by Kenyan Jemima Sumgong. The men's wheelchair race was won by Marcel Hug from Switzerland and the women's wheelchair race was won by American Tatyana McFadden.

Course

Male runners Antonio Uribe (23rd), Lee Merrien (19th), Mathew Bond (17th) and Sean Hehir.

The London Marathon is run over a largely flat course around the River Thames, and spans 42.195 kilometres (26 miles and 385 yards). The route has markers at one mile and five kilometre intervals.[2]

The course begins at three separate points: the 'red start' in southern Greenwich Park on Charlton Way, the 'green start' in St John's Park, and the 'blue start' on Shooter's Hill Road. From these points around Blackheath at 35 m (115 ft) above sea level, south of the River Thames, the route heads east through Charlton. The three courses converge after 4.5 km (2.8 miles) in Woolwich, close to the Royal Artillery Barracks.[3]

As the runners reach the 10 km mark (6.2-mile), they pass by the Old Royal Naval College and head towards Cutty Sark drydocked in Greenwich. Heading next into Deptford and Surrey Quays in the Docklands, and out towards Bermondsey, competitors race along Jamaica Road before reaching the half-way point as they cross Tower Bridge. Running east again along The Highway through Wapping, competitors head up towards Limehouse and into Mudchute in the Isle of Dogs via Westferry Road, before heading into Canary Wharf.[3]

As the route leads away from Canary Wharf into Poplar, competitors run west down Poplar High Street back towards Limehouse and on through Commercial Road. They then move back onto The Highway, onto Lower and Upper Thames Streets. Heading into the final leg of the race, competitors pass The Tower of London on Tower Hill. In the penultimate mile along The Embankment, the London Eye comes into view, before the athletes turn right into Birdcage Walk to complete the final 352 m (385 yards), catching the sights of Big Ben and Buckingham Palace, and finishing in The Mall alongside St. James's Palace.[3]

Race summary

Women's elite runners Charlotte Purdue (16th), Sonia Samuels (14th) and Alyson Dixon (13th).

The men's race was won by Kenyan Eliud Kipchoge in a new course record, eight seconds shy of the world record. Kipchoge, after running alongside Stanley Biwott for most of the race, broke off to defend the title he won the previous year.[4][5] The women's race was won by Kenyan Jemima Sumgong, who fell along with two-time winner Mary Keitany and 2010 winner Aselefech Mergia in the latter stages of the race. Sumgong recovered to take the finish line, in front of 2015 winner Tigist Tufa.[6][5]

Coming less than a week after the Boston Marathon, the same winners won the London wheelchair races. Marcel Hug from Switzerland won the men's wheelchair division and the women's wheelchair division was won by American Tatyana McFadden. Hug won ahead of course record holder Kurt Fearnley and six-time winner David Weir, with the top three finishers each separated by a second. McFadden held off Manuela Schär by a single second to claim her fourth consecutive title, with 2010 winner Wakako Tsuchida coming in third.[7][8]

Astronaut Tim Peake ran the London Marathon from the International Space Station's treadmill, timed to begin just as the race did. Peake became the first man to run a marathon from space, and the second person after Sunita Williams ran the 2007 Boston Marathon from the ISS.[9]

Results table

Results:[10]

Elite races

Men
Place Athlete NationalityTime
1 Eliud Kipchoge  Kenya 2:03:05
2 Stanley Biwott  Kenya 2:03:51
3 Kenenisa Bekele  Ethiopia 2:06:36
4 Ghirmay Ghebreslassie  Eritrea 2:07:46
5 Wilson Kipsang  Kenya 2:07:52
6 Tilahun Regassa  Ethiopia 2:09:47
7 Sisay Lemma  Ethiopia 2:10:45
8 Callum Hawkins  United Kingdom 2:10:52
9 Dennis Kimetto  Kenya 2:11:44
10 Ghebre Kibrom  Eritrea 2:11:56
Women
Place Athlete NationalityTime
1 Jemima Sumgong  Kenya 2:22:58
2 Tigist Tufa  Ethiopia 2:23:03
3 Florence Kiplagat  Kenya 2:23:39
4 Volha Mazuronak  Belarus 2:23:54
5 Aselefech Mergia  Ethiopia 2:23:57
6 Mare Dibaba  Ethiopia 2:24:09
7 Feyse Tadese  Ethiopia 2:25:03
8 Priscah Jeptoo  Kenya 2:27:27
9 Mary Keitany  Kenya 2:28:30
10 Jéssica Augusto  Portugal 2:28:53

Wheelchair races

Men
Place Athlete NationalityTime
1 Marcel Hug   Switzerland 1:35:19
2 Kurt Fearnley  Australia 1:35:20
3 David Weir  United Kingdom 1:35:21
4 Ernst van Dyk  South Africa 1:35:23
5 James Senbeta  United States 1:35:24
Women
Place Athlete NationalityTime
1 Tatyana McFadden  United States 1:44:14
2 Manuela Schär   Switzerland 1:44:15
3 Wakako Tsuchida  Japan 1:45:28
4 Amanda McGrory  United States 1:47:41
5 Zou Lihong  China 1:52:42

References

  1. "London Marathon 2016". BBC Sport. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  2. "2016 VMLM Road Closure Leaflet" (PDF). London Marathon. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 Storey, Peter; Onanuga, Tola; Murphy, Sam; Ashdown, John (23 April 2009). "London Marathon 2009: Mile-by-mile route map". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 May 2009.
  4. Dennehy, Cathal (24 April 2016). "Kipchoge Narrowly Misses World Record In London Marathon Win". Runner's World. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  5. 1 2 "London Marathon: Jemima Sumgong & Eliud Kipchoge win elite races". BBC Sport. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  6. Dennehy, Cathal (24 April 2016). "Sumgong Overcomes Late-Race Fall to Win London Marathon". Runner's World. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  7. "London Marathon: David Weir beaten by Marcel Hug in men's wheelchair race". BBC Sport. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  8. Ingle, Sean (24 April 2016). "London Marathon 2016: Eliud Kipchoge and Jemima Sumgong win". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  9. Tim Peake 'runs' London Marathon from space
  10. "Leaderboard". London Marathon. Retrieved 25 April 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.