IAU 24 Hour World Championship

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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

  Edition in gold was held as the IAU World 24 Hours Track Championships
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

  1. IAU 24H WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 IAU World 24 Hours Challenge. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  3. IAU Championships. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Michiels, Paul & Milroy, Andy (2013-05-07). IAU 24 Hour Championships. Association of Road Running Statisticians. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  5. 2014 World 24-Hour Run Championships. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  6. Reus and Nagy win at the IAU 24 Hour World Championships. IAAF (2015-04-12). Retrieved on 2015-04-16.
  7. 2006 IAU 24 Hour World Challenge. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  8. Mountain/Ultra/Trail 2007 Annual Report. USATF (2007-10-08). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  9. RECAP: IAU RACES 2008 . International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  10. Olsson and Fontaine take IAU 24hr World Challenge titles in Bergamo. IAAF (2009-05-05). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  11. Inoue and Fontaine take 24 Hour IAU World Championship titles. IAAF (2010-05-19). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  12. International Ultrarunners Without a World Championship Race For The Second Time This Year. Ultra Running Magazine (2014-07-24). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  13. Katowice to host IAU 24 Hour World champs this weekend. IAAF (2012-09-05). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  14. Morton and Dimitriadu take IAU World 24 Hour titles. IAAF (2012-09-11). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  15. IAU - Olsen and Kudo take 24 Hour IAU World Championship titles. IAAF (2013-05-28). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  16. International Ultrarunners Without a World Championship Race For The Second Time This Year. Ultra Running Magazine (2014-07-24). Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  17. 2015 IAU World 24 Hour Championships Selection Procedures. USATF. Retrieved on 2015-03-21.
  18. Pięć medali Polaków na MŚ i ME w biegu 24-godzinnym (Polish). Maratony Polskie (2015-04-15). Retrieved on 2015-04-16.
  19. http://www.iau-ultramarathon.org/images/file/Turijn%202015%2024H/MONDIALEFEMMINILEgenerale.pdf
Medalists

External links