Monday, February 27, 2012

The Pietermaritzburg-Durban Comrades Marathon in South Africa

COMRADES MARATHON ROUTE - June 3, 2012 & June 2, 2013

The "Down" route for the 2012 race is from Pietermaritzburg to Durban. The official race distance is 89 kms. All 18,000 entries are sold out!!! The June 2, 2013 "Up" route will be similar to the one shown below. All runners must qualify before applying in Sept-Nov, 2012.





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Start Seeding

Qualifying Race Distance
Batch42.2 km48 - 50 km52 - 54 km56 km60 km64 km80 km89km100 km
A3:00:003:40:003:55:004:05:004:30:005:00:006:20:007:30:008:15:00
B3:20:004:00:004:20:004:35:005:00:005:30:007:00:008:15:009:15:00
C3:40:004:25:004:45:005:00:005:30:006:00:007:40:009:00:0010:15:00
D4:00:004:50:005:10:005:30:006:05:006:40:008:30:009:45:0011:00:00
EGreen Number Club
F4:20:005:10:005:35:006:00:006:40:007:15:009:15:0010:30:0011:45:00
G4:40:005:35:006:05:006:30:007:10:007:50:0010:00:0011:15:0012:30:00
H5:00:006:00:006:30:007:00:007:40:008:20:0010:40:0012:00:0013:30:00

All entrants must qualify by completing an officially recognised race according to the table above during the period 29 May 2011 to 7 May 2012. All entrants will be seeded according to their qualifying times. Entrants qualifying for batches A and B are required to submit proof of qualifying time. Previous Gold Medalists and 2011 Silver Medalists automatically qualify for seeding in Batch A.

All entrants who completed the 2011 Comrades Marathon may use this as their qualifying race and will be seeded according to their finish time.

The Ironman seeding table is as follows:-

BatchMarathon Leg of Ironman
A03:30:00
B03:50:00
C04:15:00
D04:40:00
EGreen Number Club
F05:00:00
G05:20:00
HOfficial Finisher over 5:20:00

General awards

Medals will be awarded to all official finishers who complete the full distance within the 12-hour cut-off.

MedalsMen & women
GOLDPositions 1 - 10
WALLY HAYWARDPosition 11 to sub 6hrs 00min
SILVER6hrs 00min to sub 7hrs 30min
BILL ROWAN7hrs 30 min to sub 9hrs 00min
BRONZE9hrs 00 min to sub 11hrs 00min
VIC CLAPHAM11hrs 00 min to sub 12hrs 00min

Best time

The best times previously recorded are:
05:20:41 by Leonid Shvetsov in 2007
05:54:43 by Frith van der Merwe in 1989

2008 Comrades Marathon : Entry Statistics

EntrantsSouth AfricanRest of AfricaInternationalTotal
Male1017512735010652
Female2173201072300
Total1234814745712952
FinishersSouth AfricanRest of AfricaInternationalTotal
Male7887822878256
Female164017921749
Total95279937910005

HISTORY

Arguably the greatest ultra marathon in the world where athletes come from all over the world to combine muscle and sinew and mental strength to conquer the approx 90 kilometres between the cities of Pietermaritzburg and Durban, the event owes its beginnings to the vision of one man, World War I veteran Vic Clapham.

Vic Clapham was born in London on 16 November 1886 and emigrated as a youth to the Cape Colony in South Africa, with his parents. At the outbreak of the South African War (Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902) he enrolled as an ambulance man into the Cradock Town Guard at the age of 13. He later moved to Natal and worked as an engine driver with the South African Railways.

With the outbreak of the Great War 1914-1918, Vic Clapham signed up with the 8th South African Infantry, and fought and marched 1700 miles of the eastern savannahs of Africa in pursuit of Glen Paul Von Lettow-Vorbecks askari battalions.

The pain, agonies, death and hardships of his comrades which he witnessed during those awful days left a lasting impression on the battle-hardened soldier, especially the camaraderie engendered among the men in overcoming these privations. Thus when peace was declared in 1918, Clapham felt that all those who had fallen in this catastrophic war should be remembered and honoured in a unique way, where an individuals physical frailties could be put to the test and overcome. Remembering the searing heat and thirst of the parched veld through which he had campaigned, he settled on the idea of a marathon and he approached the athletic authorities of the day to sound their views. His enquiry led him to the doors of the League of Comrades of the Great War a corpus of ex-soldiers who had formed an association to foster the interests of their living companions who had survived the War.

Clapham asked for permission to stage a 56 mile race between Pietermaritzburg and Durban under the name of the Comrades Marathon and for it to become a living memorial to the spirit of the soldiers of the Great War This was strenuously resisted by the League, but Clapham persisted maintaining that if a sedentary living person could be taken off the street given a rifle and 60lb pack and marched all over Africa then surely a fit and able athlete could complete the distance. Applications in 1919 and 1920 were refused but in 1921 the League relented and gave permission and 1 for expenses, which was refundable.

The first Comrades Marathon took place on 24th May 1921, Empire Day, starting outside the City Hall in Pietermaritzburg with 34 runners. It has continued since then every year with the exception of the war years 1941-1945, with the direction alternating each year between Pietermaritzburg and Durban, the so called up & down runs.

The Comrades Marathon is a cherished national treasure and attracts thousands of runners, spectators and television viewers every year. We invite you to participate in this great event and experience the worlds greatest race.

(Disclaimer: All the above information are extracted from: http://www.comrades.com/ at time of posting. Readers are advised to contact the organizers of the Comrades Marathon in South Africa for more up-to-date and accurate text, figures, tables and data. This authour shall not be held responsible for any liabilities resulting from the use of information contained in this blog.)

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