The Hannover Marathon is an annual road running event featuring races over the marathon, half marathon and 10 km distance that is held in May in the city of Hannover, Germany. Over 15,000 people took part in the day's races at the 2011 edition of the event.[1] The half marathon attracts the highest number of entries from the public (over 5000) while the marathon race typically features up to 2000 runners annually.
Hannover Marathon | |
---|---|
Date | April |
Location | Hannover, Germany |
Event type | Road |
Distance | Marathon, Half marathon, 10K run |
Primary sponsor | Hannover Airport |
Established | 1991 |
Course records | Men's: 2:06:05 (2024) Amanal Petros Women's: 2:23:50 (2024) Domenika Mayer |
Official site | Hannover Marathon |
Participants | 2,130 finishers (2022) 2,222 (2019) |
The marathon race holds IAAF Silver Label status and it is part of the German Road Races group.[2] The race is officially known as the HAJ Hannover Marathon, as Hannover Airport is the current title sponsor.[3] Previous race names include the Energie Hannover Marathon (1999 to 2001) and the Spielbanken Niedersachsen Marathon (2002 to 2007).[4]
The marathon has elite level participants and German, East African and Eastern European runners have been the most successful in this category. The course records were both broken in 2013: South Africa's Lusapho April has the men's best of 2:08:32 hours while Olena Burkovska holds the women's record of 2:27:07 hours. Natalia Galushko has won the race the most times, with three straight wins from 1995 to 1997, while Stephan Freigang and Andrey Gordayev are the most successful male runners, having both had two back-to-back wins.[4]
The 2020 and 2021 editions of the race were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][6]
Winners
editKey: Course record
Edition | Year | Men's winner | Time (h:m:s) | Women's winner | Time (h:m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 1991 | Marek Adamski (POL) | 2:15:04 | Elena Yegorova (URS) | 2:36:29 |
2nd | 1992 | Sergey Sokov (BLR) | 2:13:03 | Birgit Jerschabek (GER) | 2:31:42 |
3rd | 1993 | Kurt Stenzel (GER) | 2:13:25 | Birgit Jerschabek (GER) | 2:30:34 |
4th | 1994 | Simon Qamunga (TAN) | 2:14:48 | Suzana Ćirić (YUG) | 2:33:00 |
5th | 1995 | Rainer Wachenbrunner (GER) | 2:14:41 | Natalya Galushko (BLR) | 2:35:13 |
6th | 1996 | Khristo Stefanov (BUL) | 2:12:45 | Natalya Galushko (BLR) | 2:38:02 |
7th | 1997 | Česlovas Kundrotas (LTU) | 2:13:40 | Natalya Galushko (BLR) | 2:33:24 |
8th | 1998 | Stephan Freigang (GER) | 2:12:16 | Volha Yudenkova (BLR) | 2:32:53 |
9th | 1999 | Stephan Freigang (GER) | 2:13:48 | Claudia Dreher (GER) | 2:27:55 |
10th | 2000 | Waldemar Glinka (POL) | 2:12:55 | Birgit Behrend (GER) | 2:54:30 |
11th | 2001 | Andrey Gordayev (BLR) | 2:11:44 | Anja Carlsohn (GER) | 2:37:29 |
12th | 2002 | Andrey Gordayev (BLR) | 2:11:57 | Ines Cronjäger (GER) | 2:42:50 |
13th | 2003 | David Simukwo (KEN) | 2:15:27 | Tadelesh Birra (ETH) | 2:33:42 |
14th | 2004 | Moses Kimutai (KEN) | 2:12:28 | Tadelesh Birra (ETH) | 2:37:32 |
15th | 2005 | Simon Lopuyet (KEN) | 2:15:36 | Evelyne Kimuria (KEN) | 2:48:21 |
16th | 2006 | David Chepkwony (KEN) | 2:14:13 | Keneli Chala (ETH) | 2:47:43 |
17th | 2007 | Daniel Mbogo (KEN) | 2:14:46 | Monica Muthoni (KEN) | 2:46:19 |
18th | 2008 | Duncan Koech (KEN) | 2:14:29 | Petra Oberli (SUI) | 2:52:01 |
19th | 2009 | Evans Kipkosgei Ruto (KEN) | 2:10:48 | Fridah Lodepa (KEN) | 2:35:48 |
20th | 2010 | Yusuf Songoka (KEN) | 2:08:55 | Yekatarina Stetsenko (UKR) | 2:31:37 |
21st | 2011 | Lusapho April (RSA) | 2:09:25 | Georgina Rono (KEN) | 2:31:19 |
22nd | 2012 | Joseph Kiptum (KEN) | 2:09:56 | Nataliya Puchkova (RUS) | 2:30:17 |
23rd | 2013 | Lusapho April (RSA) | 2:08:32 | Olena Burkovska (UKR) | 2:27:07 |
24th | 2014 | Henry Chirchir (KEN) | 2:11:30 | Souad Aït Salem (ALG) | 2:33:09 |
25th | 2015 | Jacob Cheshari (KEN) | 2:09:32 | Souad Aït Salem (ALG) | 2:27:21 |
26th | 2016 | Lusapho April (RSA) | 2:11:27 | Anna Hahner (GER) | 2:30:35 |
27th | 2017 | Allan Kiprono (KEN) | 2:09:52 | Fate Tola (GER) | 2:27:48 |
28th | 2018 | Seboka Negusse (ETH) | 2:09:44 | Agnes Kiprop (KEN) | 2:32:35 |
29th | 2019 | Silas Mwetich (KEN) | 2:09:37 | Racheal Mutgaa (KEN) | 2:26:15 |
— | — | cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic[5][6] | |||
30th | 2022 | Hendrik Pfeiffer (GER) | 2:10:59 | Domenika Mayer (GER) | 2:26:50 |
31st | 2023 | Amanal Petros (GER) | 2:07:02 | Matea Parlov Koštro (CRO) | 2:25:45 |
32nd | 2024 | Amanal Petros (GER) | 2:06:05 | Domenika Mayer (GER) | 2:23:50 |
Multiple wins
edit
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By country
editCountry | Total | Men's | Women's |
---|---|---|---|
Kenya | 19 | 13 | 6 |
Germany | 17 | 7 | 10 |
Belarus | 7 | 3 | 4 |
Ethiopia | 4 | 1 | 3 |
South Africa | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Poland | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Russia | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Ukraine | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Algeria | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Bulgaria | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Croatia | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Lithuania | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Serbia | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Switzerland | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Tanzania | 1 | 1 | 0 |
References
edit- ^ April und Rono gewinnen 21. Hannover-Marathon. Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung (2011-05-08). Retrieved on 2012-05-20.
- ^ Members list. German Road Races. Retrieved on 2012-05-20.
- ^ With thrilling finishes, Kiptum and Puchkova take Hannover titles. IAAF (2012-05-06). Retrieved on 2012-05-20.
- ^ a b Hannover Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians (2012-05-07). Retrieved on 2012-05-20.
- ^ a b "Meldung". Archived from the original on 2020-11-10. Retrieved 2020-04-07.
- ^ a b "HAJ Hannover Marathon 2021 abgesagt! - HAJ Hannover Marathon". Archived from the original on 14 May 2021.
- List of winners
- Hannover Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians (2012-05-07). Retrieved on 2012-05-20.