IAU 24 Hour World Championship
The IAU 24 Hour World Championship is an annual international 24-hour run competition organised by the International Association of Ultrarunners (IAU).[1]
Preceded in 2001 by the IAU World 24 Hours Track Championships, as a track running event, this competition became the IAU World 24 Hours Challenge proper in 2003.[2] The road running event was later upgraded to World Championships status after 2006. It is one of the IAU's four main world championship events (alongside the 100 km World Championships, 50 km World Championships, and Trial World Championships) and is the only one with a limited time format, rather than a distance-based one.[3]
The competition has often incorporated the IAU 24 Hour European Championships – a continental event which pre-dates the global competition, having first been held in 1992.[2] The annual schedule has twice been broken: first in 2011, with Brugg, Switzerland failing to proceed as host,[4] and again in 2014, with the agreed host (Pilzen, Czech Republic) being unable to hold the eleventh edition of the competition.[5] The event has mainly been held in Europe: in 2006, Taipei became the first Asian city to hold the races and Drummondville, Quebec followed as the first North American host in 2007.[4]
The championships record are 277.543 kilometres for men, set by Michael Morton of the United States in 2012, and 252.205 kilometres for women, set by Japan's Mami Kudo in 2013.[4] A total of 302 athletes from 40 countries competed at the 2015 edition of the competition.[6]
Editions
Ed. | Year | City | Country | Dates | No. of nations |
No. of athletes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | 2001 | San Giovanni Lupatoto[2] | Italy | 22–23 September[4] | ||
1st | 2003 | Uden[2] | Netherlands | 11–12 October[4] | ||
2nd | 2004 | Brno[2] | Czech Republic | 23–24 October[4] | ||
3rd | 2005 | Wörschach[2] | Austria | 16–17 July[4] | ||
4th | 2006 | Taipei[2] | Republic of China | 25–26 February[7] | ||
5th | 2007 | Drummondville, Quebec | Canada | 28-29 July[8] | ||
6th | 2008 | Seoul | South Korea | 18–19 October[9] | ||
7th | 2009 | Bergamo | Italy | 2–3 May[10] | ||
8th | 2010 | Brive-la-Gaillarde | France | 13–14 May[11] | ||
— | 2011 | Cancelled[12] | ||||
9th | 2012 | Katowice | Poland | 8–9 September[13][14] | ||
10th | 2013 | Steenbergen | Netherlands | 11–12 May[15] | 22 | 261 |
— | 2014 | Cancelled[16] | ||||
11th | 2015 | Turin | Italy | 11–12 April[17][18] | 40 | 302 |
Medallists
Men's individual
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | Yiannis Kouros (GRE) | 275.828 | Lubomír Hrmo (SVK) | 270.337 | Alain Prual (FRA) | 259.778 |
2003 | Paul Beckers (BEL) | 270.087 | Ryōichi Sekiya (JPN) | 267.223 | Étienne Van Acker (BEL) | 264.967 |
2004 | Ryōichi Sekiya (JPN) | 269.085 | Lubomír Hrmo (SVK) | 259.064 | Mohamed Magroun (FRA) | 257.881 |
2005 | Anatoliy Kruglikov (RUS) | 268.065 | Ewald Eder (AUT) | 263.810 | Jens Lukas (GER) | 256.368 |
2006 | Ryōichi Sekiya (JPN) | 272.936 | Mohamed Magroun (FRA) | 248.563 | Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) | 246.098 |
2007 | Ryōichi Sekiya (JPN) | 263.562 | Mohamed Magroun (FRA) | 257.018 | Masayuki Otaki (JPN) | 253.814 |
2008 | Ryōichi Sekiya (JPN) | 273.366 | Fabian Hoblea (FRA) | 267.174 | Yuji Sakai (JPN) | 264.389 |
2009 | Henrik Olsson (SWE) | 257.042 | Ralf Weiss (GER) | 244.492 | Yuji Sakai (JPN) | 242.713 |
2010 | Shingo Inoue (JPN) | 273.708 | Scott Jurek (USA) | 266.577 | Ivan Cudin (ITA) | 263.841 |
2012 | Michael Morton (USA) | 277.543 CR | Florian Reus (GER) | 261.718 | Ludovic Dilmi (FRA) | 257.819 |
2013 | Jon Olsen (USA) | 269.675 | John Dennis (USA) | 262.734 | Florian Reus (GER) | 259.939 |
2015 | Florian Reus (GER) | 263.899 | Paweł Szynal (POL) | 261.181 | Robbie Britton (GBR) | 261.140 |
Men's team
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Belgium | 791.901 CR | Russia | 739.569 | Japan | 729.956 |
2004 | France | 745.725 | Japan | 740.396 | Russia | 704.876 |
2005 | Japan | 734.498 | Russia | 731.299 | Italy | 725.897 |
2006 | Japan | 755.569 | France | 724.412 | Italy | 709.677 |
2007 | Japan | 761.842 | France | 742.206 | Germany | 673.092 |
2008 | Japan | 785.432 | France | 773.635 | Russia | 723.287 |
2009 | Japan | 706.984 | Russia | 693.445 | Germany | 689.111 |
2010 | Japan | 778.678 | Italy | 758.932 | United States | 757.468 |
2012 | Germany | 759.457 | France | 756.710 | United States | 754.786 |
2013 | United States | 780.552 | Japan | 752.567 | Germany | 752.007 |
2015 | United Kingdom | 770.777 | Australia | 752.665 | Germany | 745.075 |
Women's individual
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | Edit Bérces (HUN) | 235.029 | Irina Reutovich (RUS) | 226.781 | Irina Koval (RUS) | 222.445 |
2003 | Irina Reutovich (RUS) | 237.052 | Galina Yeremina (RUS) | 232.050 | Joëlle Semur (FRA) | 227.279 |
2004 | Sumie Inagaki (JPN) | 237.154 | Galina Yeremina (RUS) | 235.012 | Stephanie Ehret (USA) | 225.573 |
2005 | Lyudmila Kalinina (RUS) | 242.228 | Galina Yeremina (RUS) | 239.874 | Sumie Inagaki (JPN) | 234.803 |
2006 | Sumie Inagaki (JPN) | 237.144 | Lyudmila Kalinina (RUS) | 231.356 | Kimie Noto (JPN) | 229.146 |
2007 | Lyudmila Kalinina (RUS) | 236.848 | Brigitte Bec (FRA) | 233.137 | Galina Yeremina (RUS) | 230.288 |
2008 | Anne-Marie Vernet (FRA) | 239.685 | Anne-Cecile Fontaine (FRA) | 239.252 | Brigitte Bec (FRA) | 229.818 |
2009 | Anne-Cecile Fontaine (FRA) | 243.644 | Brigitte Bec (FRA) | 234.977 | Monica Casiraghi (ITA) | 223.848 |
2010 | Anne-Cecile Fontaine (FRA) | 239.797 | Monica Casiraghi (ITA) | 231.390 | Julia Alter (GER) | 230.258 |
2012 | Michaela Dimitriadu (CZE) | 244.232 | Connie Gardner (USA) | 240.385 | Emily Gelder (GBR) | 238.875 |
2013 | Mami Kudo (JPN) | 252.205 CR WR | Sabrina Little (USA) | 244.669 | Suzanna Bon (USA) | 236.228 |
2015[19] | Katalin Nagy (USA) | 244.495 | Traci Falbo (USA) | 239.740 | Maria Jansson (SWE) | 238.964 |
Women's team
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Russia | 684.858 | France | 649.303 | Japan | 628.440 |
2004 | Russia | 661.558 | Japan | 657.610 | United States | 635.932 |
2005 | Russia | 709.573 | Japan | 654.385 | United States | 604.514 |
2006 | Russia | 671.477 | Japan | 654.555 | France | 596.172 |
2007 | Russia | 671.329 | Japan | 641.207 | France | 614.488 |
2008 | France | 708.755 | Japan | 650.257 | Germany | 629.868 |
2009 | France | 684.078 | United States | 636.159 | Italy | 626.386 |
2010 | France | 685.800 | Italy | 658.112 | Australia | 654.863 |
2012 | United States | 694.620 | France | 666.503 | Great Britain | 666.461 |
2013 | United States | 710.599 | Japan | 705.582 | France | 670.698 |
2015 | United States | 720.046 CR | Sweden | 684.981 | Poland | 678.468 |
References
- ↑ IAU 24H WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 IAU World 24 Hours Challenge. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ IAU Championships. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Michiels, Paul & Milroy, Andy (2013-05-07). IAU 24 Hour Championships. Association of Road Running Statisticians. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ 2014 World 24-Hour Run Championships. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Reus and Nagy win at the IAU 24 Hour World Championships. IAAF (2015-04-12). Retrieved on 2015-04-16.
- ↑ 2006 IAU 24 Hour World Challenge. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Mountain/Ultra/Trail 2007 Annual Report. USATF (2007-10-08). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ RECAP: IAU RACES 2008 . International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Olsson and Fontaine take IAU 24hr World Challenge titles in Bergamo. IAAF (2009-05-05). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Inoue and Fontaine take 24 Hour IAU World Championship titles. IAAF (2010-05-19). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ International Ultrarunners Without a World Championship Race For The Second Time This Year. Ultra Running Magazine (2014-07-24). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Katowice to host IAU 24 Hour World champs this weekend. IAAF (2012-09-05). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Morton and Dimitriadu take IAU World 24 Hour titles. IAAF (2012-09-11). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ IAU - Olsen and Kudo take 24 Hour IAU World Championship titles. IAAF (2013-05-28). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ International Ultrarunners Without a World Championship Race For The Second Time This Year. Ultra Running Magazine (2014-07-24). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ 2015 IAU World 24 Hour Championships Selection Procedures. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- ↑ Pięć medali Polaków na MŚ i ME w biegu 24-godzinnym (Polish). Maratony Polskie (2015-04-15). Retrieved on 2015-04-16.
- ↑ http://www.iau-ultramarathon.org/images/file/Turijn%202015%2024H/MONDIALEFEMMINILEgenerale.pdf
- Medalists
- Michiels, Paul & Milroy, Andy (2013-05-07). IAU 24 Hour Championships. Association of Road Running Statisticians. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
- All-Time Winners. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.