Macau Marathon
The Macau International Marathon (Chinese: 澳门国际马拉松; Portuguese: Maratona Internacional de Macau) is an annual road running event over the marathon distance (42.195 km) which is held the special administrative region of Macau adjacent to the People's Republic of China. The event is sponsored by Galaxy Entertainment Group, a casino and hotel investment company.[1]
Macau Marathon | |
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The Macau Olympic Complex is the start and end point for the race | |
Date | Early December |
Location | Macau, China |
Event type | Road |
Distance | Marathon |
Primary sponsor | Galaxy Entertainment |
Established | 1981 |
Course records | Men: 2:10:01 (2017) Women: 2:29:12 (2017) |
Official site | Macau Marathon |
Participants | 1,057 (2019) 1,048 (2018) |
The event was first held in 1981 under the organisation of the Panda Running Club and was the first international marathon to be held in the region. The Macau Athletic Association took over organisational duties in 1987 and the race was accepted as a member of the AIMS Racing Group in 1990. The annual marathon race was suspended in 1997 due to the opening of the Macau Olympic Stadium, but a half marathon was held for the first time in its place that year, maintaining the race continuity.[2]
The course takes in both Taipa and Coloane (the islands which make up the region) and begins and ends at the Macau Olympic Complex stadium. Since 1998, three races have been held at each edition: the full marathon, a half marathon, and a shorter mini-marathon (roughly 6.5 km).[3]
The marathon race attracts a majority of overseas runners, with average yearly totals of around 500 entrants and 400 finishers. The marathon's participation record was achieved in 1984, with 1121 runners starting the race and 932 of them finishing. The shorter distances are more popular with both Macau and foreign athletes. Since its introduction in 1997, the half marathon has gone from 348 finishers to a record high of 1279 finishers in 2006. The mini-marathon was inaugurated a year after the half marathon and instantly gained high participation (1111 runners took part in 1997 and a high of 1767 participants was reached in 2009).[4]
In addition to the large numbers of amateur runners who take part in the event, the marathon features elite level runners from East Asia, Africa and Europe.[5] The men's and women's race records were both set in 2011 by Kenyan athletes: Stephen Kwelio Chemlany won the men's title in a time of 2:12:49 hours, while Rose Jepkemboi Chesire took the women's honours in 2:31:28 hours.[6]
Past winners
Key: Course record Held as half marathon
Edition | Year | Men's winner | Time (h:m:s) | Women's winner | Time (h:m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 1981 | 2:41:42 | 3:12:42 | ||
2nd | 1982 | 2:21:54 | 3:17:18 | ||
3rd | 1983 | 2:25:00 | 2:58:26 | ||
4th | 1984 | 2:24:29 | 3:00:04 | ||
5th | 1985 | 2:20:18 | 2:48:18 | ||
6th | 1986 | 2:26:47 | 3:41:16 | ||
7th | 1987 | 2:16:21 | 2:58:24 | ||
8th | 1988 | 2:19:18 | 2:57:03 | ||
9th | 1989 | 2:18:37 | 3:07:11 | ||
10th | 1990 | 2:17:37 | 2:58:25 | ||
11th | 1991 | 2:17:58 | 2:52:54 | ||
12th | 1992 | 2:18:31 | 2:51:18 | ||
13th | 1993 | 2:19:12 | 2:39:20 | ||
14th | 1994 | 2:15:28 | 2:38:18 | ||
15th | 1995 | 2:15:39 | 2:40:47 | ||
16th | 1996 | 2:16:30 | 2:40:13 | ||
– | 1997 | 1:02:55 | 1:15:31 | ||
17th | 1998 | 2:19:44 | 2:37:55 | ||
18th | 1999 | 2:15:21 | 2:34:57 | ||
19th | 2000 | 2:19:25 | 2:47:15 | ||
20th | 2001 | 2:18:58 | 2:42:11 | ||
21st | 2002 | 2:19:09 | 3:20:49 | ||
22nd | 2003 | 2:15:58 | 3:16:25 | ||
23rd | 2004 | 2:16:30 | 2:37:27 | ||
24th | 2005 | 2:19:49 | 2:40:59 | ||
25th | 2006 | 2:18:56 | 2:38:27 | ||
26th | 2007 | 2:17:40 | 2:38:27 | ||
27th | 2008 | 2:15:06 | 2:36:40 | ||
28th | 2009 | 2:17:45 | 2:37:08 | ||
29th | 2010 | 2:16:15 | 2:37:37 | ||
30th | 2011 | 2:12:49 | 2:31:48 | ||
31st | 2012 | 2:23:56+ | 2:50:10+ | ||
32nd | 2013 | 2:12:43 | 2:36:32 | ||
33rd | 2014 | 2:14:45 | 2:33:24 | ||
34th | 2015 | 2:14:44 | 2:33:24 | ||
35th[7] | 2016 | 2:12:52 | 2:36:16 | ||
36th | 2017 | 2:10:01 | 2:29:12 | ||
37th | 2018 | 2:15:18 | 2:35:16 | ||
38th | 2019 | 2:12:53 | 2:31:17 |
- The course was 3 km too long due to a marshalling error on the course.
Wins by country
Country | Men's race | Women's race | Total |
---|---|---|---|
5 | 9 | 14 | |
9 | 4 | 13 | |
1 | 11 | 12 | |
4 | 3 | 7 | |
2 | 5 | 7 | |
6 | 0 | 6 | |
5 | 0 | 5 | |
2 | 1 | 3 | |
0 | 2 | 2 | |
2 | 0 | 2 | |
2 | 0 | 2 | |
0 | 1 | 1 | |
0 | 1 | 1 | |
1 | 0 | 1 |
References
- December 2011 AIMS Results. AIMS. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- Event History. Macau Marathon. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- Course Map. Macau Marathon. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- Statistics. Macau Marathon. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- 6,000 runners vie in Macau tilt. The Philippine Star (2011-11-12). Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- Gasparovic, Juraj (2011-12-05). Macau Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- "Kenyan and North Korean win marathon". Macau Daily Times. 2016-12-05.
- List of winners
- Gasparovic, Juraj (2011-12-05). Macau Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2011-12-24.
- Former Winners. Macau Marathon (2011). Retrieved on 2011-12-24.