Boulogne-Billancourt Half Marathon
The Boulogne-Billancourt Half Marathon (French: Semi-marathon de Boulogne-Billancourt) is an annual road running event over the half marathon distance which takes place in November in Boulogne-Billancourt, France.
Boulogne-Billancourt Half Marathon | |
---|---|
Date | November |
Location | Boulogne-Billancourt, France |
Event type | Road |
Distance | Half marathon |
Primary sponsor | New Balance |
Established | 1997 |
Course records | Men: 1:00:11 (2013) Women: 1:08:24 (2019) |
Official site | Boulogne-Billancourt Half Marathon |
Participants | 8,108 (2019) 7,873 (2018) |
The event was first organised in 1997 by the Athletic Club de Boulogne-Billancourt. The race steadily increased in size in its first years, attaining 1000 entrants by 2000 and doubling this number three years later. The Fédération française d'athlétisme classed it as a national level race in 2006 and following the participation of 4000 runners from 26 countries, it was raised to international race status the following year.[1]
At the 2008 edition, Kenyan Nicholas Manza ran a race record time of 1:00:12 hours. A year later, Ethiopia's Firehiwot Dado became the first woman to complete the distance in under one hour and ten minutes, setting the women's course record of 1:09:26 hours.[1] The 2011 race was the first run with IAAF Bronze Label Road Race status, marking it as one of the foremost races of its kind.[2]
The course for the race is a looped circuit that starts and finishes at the town hall. It follows a clockwise route along the river Seine, passing the Sèvres - Cité de la céramique, Pont de Saint-Cloud. It heads north towards the Longchamp Racecourse and has a short loop through the Bois de Boulogne, where it reaches the halfway mark. At this point the course loops back on itself and follows the Seine in a southerly direction until it finally ends up at the town hall finish point.[3]
Past winners
Key: Course record
Edition | Year | Men's winner | Time (h:m:s) | Women's winner | Time (h:m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 1997 | 1:08:00 | 1:19:41 | ||
2nd | 1998 | 1:07:38 | 1:21:03 | ||
3rd | 1999 | 1:04:25 | 1:15:45 | ||
4th | 2000 | 1:04:55 | 1:15:15 | ||
5th | 2001 | 1:02:42 | 1:13:29 | ||
6th | 2002 | 1:02:46 | 1:12:53 | ||
7th | 2003 | 1:02:22 | 1:16:47 | ||
8th | 2004 | 1:01:51 | 1:14:16 | ||
9th | 2005 | 1:00:47 | 1:12:00 | ||
10th | 2006 | 1:04:25 | 1:15:18 | ||
11th | 2007 | 1:02:37 | 1:13:27 | ||
12th | 2008 | 1:00:12 | 1:10:53 | ||
13th | 2009 | 1:02:50 | 1:09:26 | ||
14th | 2010 | 1:03:01 | 1:11:01 | ||
15th | 2011 | 1:01:38 | 1:10:57 | ||
16th | 2012 | 1:01:07 | 1:11:11 | ||
17th | 2013 | 1:00:11 | 1:10:33 | ||
18th | 2014 | 1:01:03 | 1:11:10 | ||
2015 | Cancelled due to November 2015 Paris attacks[4] | ||||
19th | 2016 | 1:02:04 | 1:10:21 | ||
20th | 2017 | 1:01:13 | 1:08:29 | ||
21st | 2018 | 1:00:55 | 1:10:48 | ||
22nd | 2019 | 1:00:12 | 1:08:24 |
References
- Boulogne-Billancourt Half-Marathon History (archived). Semi-marathon de Boulogne-Billancourt. Retrieved on 2011-11-22.
- Vazel, Pierre-Jean (2011-11-21). Merga and Tesema prevail in Boulogne-Billancourt Half. IAAF. Retrieved on 2011-11-22.
- Course Archived November 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Semi-marathon de Boulogne-Billancourt. Retrieved on 2011-11-22.
- Semi-Marathon de Boulogne-Billancourt cancelled due to terrorist outrage