Athletics at the 2005 Summer Universiade – Men's half marathon
The men's half marathon event at the 2005 Summer Universiade was held on 20 August in Izmir, Turkey.
Results
Rank | Athlete | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Wilson Busienei | ![]() | 1:03:47 | |
![]() | Takayuki Tagami | ![]() | 1:03:48 | |
![]() | Fadil Mohamed | ![]() | 1:03:52 | SB |
4 | Kosaku Hoshina | ![]() | 1:03:59 | |
5 | Takeshi Kumamoto | ![]() | 1:04:35 | |
6 | Karim El Mabchour | ![]() | 1:04:55 | |
7 | Han Gang | ![]() | 1:04:58 | PB |
8 | Joseph Nsubuga | ![]() | 1:04:59 | PB |
9 | Francis Yiga | ![]() | 1:05:18 | SB |
10 | Brahim Chettah | ![]() | 1:05:29 | PB |
11 | Keizo Maruyama | ![]() | 1:05:36 | |
12 | Heo Jong-Kyu | ![]() | 1:05:59 | |
13 | Abdil Ceylan | ![]() | 1:06:13 | |
14 | Abdelaziz Azzouzi | ![]() | 1:06:24 | |
15 | Dmytro Baranovskyy | ![]() | 1:06:30 | |
16 | Jonnatan Morales | ![]() | 1:06:37 | PB |
17 | Francis Kasagule | ![]() | 1:06:54 | PB |
18 | Selahattin Selçuk | ![]() | 1:07:13 | |
19 | Lajos Berec | ![]() | 1:07:16 | |
20 | Samuel Kosgei | ![]() | 1:07:33 | |
21 | Vinny Mulvey | ![]() | 1:07:46 | |
22 | Lusapho April | ![]() | 1:07:51 | |
23 | Reto Dietiker | ![]() | 1:08:00 | |
24 | Eom Hyo-Seok | ![]() | 1:08:28 | |
25 | Jonathan Monje | ![]() | 1:08:33 | |
26 | Bekir Karayel | ![]() | 1:09:22 | |
27 | Entaifa Farat | ![]() | 1:10:20 | |
28 | Jussi Utriainen | ![]() | 1:10:51 | |
29 | David Kim Møller | ![]() | 1:10:55 | |
30 | Vesa Erojärvi | ![]() | 1:11:19 | |
31 | David Valterio | ![]() | 1:13:38 | |
32 | Geofrey Wamaniala | ![]() | 1:19:10 | |
33 | Joakim Fayiah | ![]() | 1:22:13 | |
34 | Georgi Georgiev | ![]() | 1:23:07 | |
35 | Vishant Kumar | ![]() | 1:23:20 | |
Léopold Gahungu | ![]() | DNS | ||
Leonard Halerimana | ![]() | DNS |
gollark: Also the thing where if you interact with a problem in any way you immediately become ethically responsible for it.
gollark: In any case, I think it's a good *description* of part of human behavior, because people often really like motivated reasoning.
gollark: Well, John Searle's Chinese Room Experiment proved that no computer could understand Chinese, meaning they can't be sentient. Since humans are implemented in physics, like computers, we are also computers, and so not sentient. QED.
gollark: I assume they have a workaround for the finals and you can delegate someone else to get the plotter.
gollark: It's the part of the Copenhagen interpretation of ethics. If you aren't *sure* you're doing a bad thing, you aren't.
References
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