IAU 50 km World Championships

The IAU 50 km World Championships is an annual, global ultrarunning competition over 50 kilometres organized by the International Association of Ultrarunners (IAU).

IAU 50 km World Championships
SportUltramarathon
Inaugural season2005
CountryWorldwide
Official websitehttp://www.iau-ultramarathon.org/

The competition began life as the IAU 50 km World Trophy in 2005. It served as the final leg of the IAU 50 km Challenge circuit, with runners gaining qualification through performances on one of the nine preceding qualifying races. The winners of the men's and women's trophy were decided by the best aggregate time of their World Trophy race plus their best time from the qualifying round.[1][2] The race moved away from aggregate scoring, with the World Trophy race becoming a straight final, and it continued in this format up to 2014.[3][4] The 2008 and 2013 editions were cancelled due to the number of world championships the IAU was already organised that year.[5]

The inaugural World Championship event took place in Doha, Qatar in December 2015. This included men's and women's races with individual and team elements. The team titles were decided by the three best combined times set by a nation's runners at the competition.[6] For 2014 to 2017 it was agreed that the competition would be hosted in Doha for those years, moving the competition away from its tradition of changing host each year.[4] The competition signalled commitment to the sport in Qatar, with Doha hosting its first ultramarathon in the months preceding the 2014 championship.[7]

It is one of four world championships organised by the IAU, with the others being the IAU 100 km World Championships, IAU 24 Hour World Championship and the IAU Trail Running World Championships.[8]

The inaugural edition in 2005 incorporated a European Championship race. Oleg Kharitonov was the men's winner, with World Trophy winner Sandor Barcza as runner-up and Stefano Sartori in third. The European Championship and World Trophy places matched on the women's side, with Heather Foundling-Hawker winner of both. The European Championship was abandoned after the launch of the World Championships. It had only been held twice (Mario Ardemagni and Danielle Sanderson were the 2004 winners).[9]

Editions

  Editions in gold were held as IAU 50 km World Trophy Final
Edition Year City Country Date No. of athletes No. of nations
01st2005[10]PalermoItaly16 October
02nd2006[10]WinschotenNetherlands16 September
03rd2007[11]PalermoItaly14 October
04th2008[11]
05th2009[12]GibraltarUnited Kingdom31 October
06th2010[13]GalwayIreland29 August
07th2011[14]AssenNetherlands20 August
08th2012[15]VallecrosiaItaly20 October
09th2013[11]
010th2014[16]DohaQatar31 October
01st2015[17]DohaQatar4 December
02nd2016[18]DohaQatar11 November
03rd2017canceled[19]
04th2018cancelled[20]
05th2019[21]BrașovRomania1 September73
06th2020AqabaJordan27 November
07th 2021 Taipei Taiwan[22] 31 October

Medal summary

Men

Year Gold Silver Bronze
2005  Sandor Barcza (FRA)6:05:33  Oleg Kharitonov (RUS)6:15:40  Aleksandr Boltachev (RUS)6:21:56
2006  Dimitry Bula (BLR)3:06:52  Dominic Croft (GBR)3:08:25  Rod Harris (GBR)3:09:02
2007  Marc Papanikitas (BEL)3:06:36  Julian Rendall (GBR)3:09:39  Bernard Santner (AUT)3:12:44
2009  Lucas Nonyana (RSA)2:58:03  Paul Molyneux (GBR)3:00:15  Michael Wardian (USA)3:00:56
2010  Collen Makaza (ZIM)2:47:22  Sandile Ngunuza (RSA)2:53:06  Michael Wardian (USA)2:54:57
2011  Eliot Kiplagat Biwott (KEN)2:54:53  Pieter Vermeesch (BEL)2:57:23  Kaito Iwayama (JPN)2:59:12
2012  Steven Way (GBR)2:53:41  Collen Makaza (ZIM)2:57:49  Paul Martelletti (GBR)2:58:18
2014  Collen Makaza (ZIM)3:00:41  Phil Anthony (GBR)3:01:26  Harm Sengers (NED)3:05:01
2015[17]  Tony Migliozzi (USA)2:52:08  Arnold Kiptaoi (KEN)2:55:34  Samuel Ongaki (KEN)2:56:15
2016[18]  Tony Migliozzi (USA)2:54:02  Tyler Andrews (USA)2:56:04  Collen Makaza (ZIM)2:56:58
2017 Not held
2018
2019[21]  Iraitz Arrospide (ESP)2:47:42  Lungile Gongqa (RSA)2:48:26  Daniel Nash (GBR)2:49:01

Women

Year Gold Silver Bronze
2005  Heather Foundling-Hawker (GBR)7:20:46  Monica Casiraghi (ITA)7:32:45  Lorena Di Vito (ITA)7:35:14
2006  Zelah Morrall (GBR)3:31:19  Sarah Tucker (GBR)3:32:08  Fiona Davies (GBR)3:35:15
2007  Monica Carlin (ITA)3:32:17  June Petrie (AUS)3:35:38  Sabine Hofer (AUT)3:36:07
2009  Kami Semick (USA)3:29:48  Monica Carlin (ITA)3:37:10  Lesley Train-Austin (RSA)3:38:23
2010  Susan Harrison (GBR)3:15:43  Mary Coordt (USA)3:28:31  Irene Kalter (NED)3:34:22
2011  Emma Gooderham (GBR)3:17:30  Susan Harrison (GBR)3:25:05  Joasia Zakrzewski (GBR)3:26:37
2012  Helen Taranowski (GBR)3:30:43  Emma Gooderham (GBR)3:33:32  Michele Chiefari (ITA)3:37:45
2014  Emily Harrison (USA)3:32:30  Joanna Zakrzewski (GBR)3:33:23  Catrin Jones (CAN)3:37:57
2015[17]  Camille Herron (USA)3:20:59  Marija Vrajić (CRO)3:28:15  Catrin Jones (CAN)3:28:19
2016  Risper Kimaiyo (KEN)3:22:45  Nele Alder-Baerens (GER)3:25:53  Amy Clements (GBR)3:26:17
2017 Not held
2018
2019[21]  Alyson Dixon (GBR)3:07:20  Helen Davies (GBR)3:09:16  Alicia Pérez (ESP)3:15:09

Men's team

Year Gold Silver Bronze
2015  Kenya (KEN)8:49:09  United States (USA)8:57:52  Australia (AUS)9:37:51
2016  United States (USA)8:56:37  Great Britain (GBR)8:59:29  Germany (GER)9:45:58
2017 Not held
2018
2019  South Africa (RSA)8:28:38  Germany (GER)8:35:52  Great Britain (GBR)8:41:00

Women's team

Year Gold Silver Bronze
2015  Croatia (CRO)10:50:08  Canada (CAN)11:10:41  Australia (AUS)11:31:40
2016  Great Britain (GBR)10:36:01  United States (USA)10:40:00  Croatia (CRO)11:26:36
2017 Not held
2018
2019  Great Britain (GBR)9:39:33  United States (USA)10:03:18  Austria (AUT)10:19:58

See also

References

  1. IAU 50 km Trophy: Kharitonov wins in Palermo, overall title to Barzca, Foundling-Hawker women's winner. IAAF (2005-10-16). Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  2. IAU 50 Kilometres Trophy. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  3. Khan, Nadeem (2014-10-29). Anthony and Harrison the favourites for IAU 50km World Trophy Final. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  4. Mulkeen, Jon (2014-11-01). Makaza regains IAU world 50km title, Harrison takes women's crown. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  5. Dates announced by the IAU . Planet Ultramarahon (2008-01-12). Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  6. Minshull, Phil (2015-12-04). USA's Migliozzi and Herron take gold at the IAU 50km World Championships. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  7. Aspire Logistics to host IAU 50km final. Gulf Times (2014-03-06). Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  8. IAU Championships Archived 2019-09-03 at the Wayback Machine. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved on 2016-07-08.
  9. IAU EUropean 50 km Trophy. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2016-07-09.
  10. "IAU excited about 50km being recognized for records by World Athletics". iau-ultramarathon.org. 28 January 2022. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  11. "50KM WORLDS". aura. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  12. "Nonyana and Semick lead the fields for IAU 50 km Trophy Final". worldathletics.org. 29 October 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  13. "Makaza and Harrison crowned IAU 50km World Trophy Final winners". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  14. "World Trophy 50K Final". dumfriesrunningclub.org.uk. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  15. "Way and Taranowski take IAU 50K World Trophy titles in Vallecrosia". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  16. "Makaza regains IAU world 50km title, Harrison takes women's crown". worldathletics.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  17. "IAU 50KM World Championships". my.raceresult.com. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  18. "IAU 50K World Championships Final Results" (PDF). iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  19. "Cancellation WC 50k 2017". iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  20. "No IAU 50k c in 2018". iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  21. "IAU 50KM World Championships". my.raceresult.com. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  22. "50K IAU World Championships". iau-ultramarathon.org. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
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