African Half Marathon Championships

The African Half Marathon Championships was a biennial half marathon running competition between athletes from Africa. A short-lived event, it was held on three occasions from its inauguration in 1995 to its dissolution in 1999.

African Half Marathon Championships
SportHalf marathon running
Founded1995
ContinentAfrica (CAA)

The event contained both individual and nation team race elements. The creation of the competition followed on from the launch of a discrete African Marathon Championships in 1994. Abidjan – the host of the first marathon championships – staged the half marathon event the year after as a men's only race. The second tournament saw the introduction of women's races and was held in Djibouti in 1997. The final races were held in Jijel, Algeria, in 1999. [1]

South Africa's Ezael Thlobo became the first ever African half marathon champion. He was succeeded to the men's title by Ethiopia's Ayele Mezgebu and Kamel Kohil of Algeria was the final men's champion – his time of 1:04:38 was the fastest recorded at the tournament by a margin of 50 seconds. On the women's side, an Ethiopian, Meseret Kotu, became the first African women's half marathon champion and her winning time of 1:17:09 was never bettered. Nasria Azaïdj was the second and last champion.[1]

It was the second discrete continental half marathon championships to be launched, after the South American Half Marathon Championships which also debuted in 1995.[2][3] These two continental events were spurred by the creation of the IAAF World Half Marathon Championships two years earlier. After the African competition was abandoned, a new African-level half marathon was established as a result of the event's inclusion on the programme of the 2007 All-Africa Games, replacing the longer marathon.[4][5][6]

Medallists

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1995  Ezael Thlobo (RSA)1:06:00  Willy Kalombo Mwenze (ZAI)1:06:36  Nixon Nkodima (RSA)1:06:43
1997  Ayele Mezgebu (ETH)1:06:18  Berhanu Addane (ETH)1:06:21  Tesfaye Tola (ETH)1:06:38
1999  Kamel Kohil (ALG)1:04:38  Maxwell Zungu (RSA)1:05:28  Ahmed Boulahia (ALG)1:05:34

Women

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1995 Not held
1997  Meseret Kotu (ETH)1:17:09  Leila Aman (ETH)1:17:48  Abeba Tola (ETH)1:21:44
1999  Nasria Azaïdj (ALG)1:20:12  Sonia Agoun (TUN)1:20:42  Fatiha Hanika (ALG)1:25:40
gollark: Great!
gollark: I think they can boot from USB. It had to have its firmware updates from a working OS install on my 3, but maybe the 3+ has that preconfigured?
gollark: My Pi actually runs *Void* Linux.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> Arch Linux ARM's RPi 3 build is *designed* for the Pi 3 specifically.
gollark: I recommend getting a distro which actually supports aarch64 vs Raspbian's stupid armhf use.

References

  1. African Marathon Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
  2. South American Half Marathon Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
  3. 21 K DE BUENOS AIRES - CAMPEONATO SUDAMERICANO DE MEDIO MARATON 2011 Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish). Atletas SS (2011-09-13). Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
  4. Powell, David (2007-07-18). All-Africa Games - PREVIEW. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
  5. Powell, David (2007-07-21). Kaki surprises Mulaudzi in Algiers - All Africa Games Day 3. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
  6. Makori, Elias (2011-09-15). From Daegu to Maputo, Jeylan and Montsho rule! - All Africa Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.