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Lausanne Marathon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lausanne Marathon
The start of the Lausanne Marathon in 2008
DateOctober
LocationLausanne, Switzerland
Event typeRoad
DistanceMarathon
Primary sponsorRetraites populaires, Groupe mutuel
Established1993 (31 years ago) (1993)
Course recordsMen's: 2:10:05 (2003)
Ethiopia Tesfaye Eticha
Women's: 2:29:03 (2002)
Kenya Tegla Loroupe
Official siteLausanne Marathon
Participants1,207 (2019)
1,356 (2018)

The Lausanne Marathon is an annual marathon race held in the Swiss city of Lausanne since 1993. The road race generally takes place in October, while the 20 km of Lausanne takes place in April. A half marathon and multiple 10-kilometre (6.2 mi) races (run, walk, and Nordic walk) are also held.

The Lausanne Marathon is one of the largest annual sporting events of the Canton de Vaud,[citation needed] and attracts up to 2,500 tourists each year.

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Transcription

History

The first edition was held in 1993, with the inauguration of the Olympic Museum.

In 2005, Ethiopia's Tesfaye Eticha won the men's competition for a record seventh time.

In 2009, a record 10,658 runners participated.

The 2020 edition of the race was cancelled, three days before its scheduled date, due to a spike of coronavirus cases during the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, with all registrants given the option of obtaining a refund.[1][2]

Course

Finish location: In front of the fountain (foreground right) of the Olympic Museum in Ouchy

The race starts in Lausanne, Place de Milan (next to the Parc de Milan), and then follows the road along the Lake Léman until La Tour-de-Peilz, before returning to Lausanne via the same route. The finish is located in front of the Olympic Museum fountain.

The half-marathon (21 km) starts from La Tour-de-Peilz (since 2000) and ends in Lausanne.

Winners

Key:    Course record (in bold)

Ed. Date Male Winner Time[a] Female Winner Time[a] Rf.
1 1993.06.26  Nikolay Tabak (UKR) 2:19:51  Franziska Rochat-Moser (SUI) 2:42:06
2 1994.10.16  Nada Saktay (TAN) 2:16:10  Nataliya Galushko (BLR) 2:41:38
3 1995.10.15  Jacob Ngunzu (KEN) 2:18:37  Valentina Enachi (MDA) 2:33:35
4 1996.10.13  Becho Tadesse (ETH) 2:15:40  Fabiola Oppliger (SUI) 2:42:31
5 1997.10.19  Becho Tadesse (ETH) 2:16:04  Kore Alemu (ETH) 2:42:39
6 1998.10.18  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:16:34  Kore Alemu (ETH) 2:38:08
7 1999.10.24  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:12:48  Irina Kazakova (FRA) 2:37:35
8 2000.10.22  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:16:25  Irina Kazakova (FRA) 2:38:42
9 2001.10.21  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:12:38.6  Valentina Enachi (MDA) 2:39:42.7
10 2002.10.20  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:11:22.8  Tegla Loroupe (KEN) 2:29:03.2
11 2003.10.26  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:10:04.7  Emebet Abossa (ETH) 2:34:39.7
12 2004.10.24  David Kipkorir (KEN) 2:13:37.8  Tsige Worku (ETH) 2:37:25.3
13 2005.10.23  Tesfaye Eticha (ETH) 2:12:41.0  Sandra Annen-Lamard (SUI) 3:01:02.8
14 2006.10.22  Sammy Rotich (KEN) 2:14:39.0  Meseret Koru (ETH) 2:39:42.8
15 2007.10.21  William Kipchumba (KEN) 2:12:17.9  Zhanna Malkova (RUS) 2:47:10.8
16 2008.10.26  Berhe Zeremariam (ERI) 2:16:04.9  Pauline Atondoyang (KEN) 2:46:22.6
17 2009.10.25  Urguessa Weyessa (ETH) 2:21:00.2  Joanna Chmiel (POL) 2:54:59.0
18 2010.10.31  Hailu Begashaw (ETH) 2:20:02.4  Magali Di Marco (SUI) 2:54:10.0
19 2011.10.30  Hamed Mehamednor (ERI) 2:19:37  Imaculate Chemutai (UGA) 2:47:36
20 2012.10.28  Bartosz Olszewski (POL) 2:32:07  Laura Hrebec (SUI) 2:41:37
21 2013.10.27  Maciej Miereczko (POL) 2:29:02  Emma Pooley (GBR) 2:44:29
22 2014.10.26  Jacob Yator (KEN) 2:18:38  Naomy Chebonai (KEN) 2:51:54
23 2015.10.25  Yeshigeta Tamiru (ETH) 2:17:08  Helen Bekele (ETH) 2:31:24
24 2016.10.30  Youssef Sbaai (MAR) 2:17:06  Alemitu Bekele (BEL) 2:42:41
25 2017.10.22  Fikru Dadi (ETH) 2:22:58  Laura Hrebec (SUI) 2:40:28
26 2018.10.28  Alaa Hrioued (MAR) 2:22:16  Aline Camboulives (FRA) 2:43:14
27 2019.10.27  Ayele Woldesemayat (ETH) 2:22:11  Simone Troxler (SUI) 2:42:30
2020 cancelled due to coronavirus pandemic [1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b h:m:s

References

  1. ^ a b "LausanneMarathon on Instagram: "Chers toutes et tous, C'est avec beau…". Archived from the original on 26 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Covid-19: Annulation du Lausanne Marathon". Archived from the original on 26 October 2020.
List of winners

External links

This page was last edited on 4 January 2022, at 06:06
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