Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Marathon

Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Marathon
Date January
Location Phoenix, Tempe, AZ, Scottsdale, AZ
Event type Road
Distance Marathon and half marathon
Established 2004
Official site Arizona Marathon

The Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Marathon is a marathon and half-marathon race, held annually in Arizona on the Sunday before Martin Luther King, Jr. Day and linking three cities of the Phoenix Metropolitan Area: (Phoenix, Scottsdale and Tempe). Like the original Rock 'n' Roll Marathon in San Diego, it is organized by Competitor Group, Inc.. It was sponsored until 2015 by P. F. Chang's China Bistro. The marathon race can be used to obtain a qualifying time for the Boston Marathon.

The race finish line is near Sun Devil Stadium.

The competition attracts tens of thousands of runners each year; more than 32,000 competed in 2010. The prize money for winning the men's and women's marathon races is US$1,000.[1]

Course

Haile Gebrselassie set a world record on the course in 2006.

In prior years, both race courses started in Phoenix, however, in 2012 the courses were split. The start of the marathon is located in downtown Phoenix near the CityScape Plaza. The half marathon (and newly added mini-marathon) starts in Tempe. Both courses finish in the city of Tempe on Packard Drive between Arizona State University's Sun Devil and Sun Angel stadiums. The event also includes wheelchair races starting 10 minutes and 5 minutes before the marathon and half-marathon races. The average start line temperature is around 40 °F (4 °C), and the average daily high temperature is between 50 °F and 70 °F (10 °C-21 °C).[2]

Along the route are over 40 high school cheerleading teams and 70 bands who perform for the runners.[2] Later in the evening there is a concert held in Tempe for all the runners and volunteers.

World record

The event is noted for the half-marathon world record set by Haile Gebrselassie on January 15, 2006, who ran the second half of the marathon course in 58 minutes and 55 seconds. This part of the marathon course is slightly downhill, but is still within IAAF requirements for world record status. Gebrselassie's record stood for a year, until it was lowered by two seconds on February 9, 2007 by Samuel Wanjiru at Ras al-Khaimah.

Race records

Simon Bairu set a new men's race record for the half marathon, on January 17, 2010, with a time of 1 hour, 2 minutes, 47 seconds which was well under the previous race record of 1 hour, 4 minutes, 35 seconds set by the late Ryan Shay in 2004.[3]

Deena Kastor set a new women's race record for the half marathon, also on January 17, 2010, with a time of 1 hour, 9 minutes, 43 seconds which also broke the state record.[3]

Winners

Key:       Course record

Marathon

Men's marathon race
Date Athlete Country Time (h:m:s)
January 16, 2011 Josh Cox  United States 2:17:32
January 17, 2010 Terefe Yae  Ethiopia 2:12:41
January 18, 2009 Moses Kigen  Kenya 2:10:36
January 13, 2008 Mike Aish  New Zealand 2:13:21
January 14, 2007 Terefe Yae  Ethiopia 2:14:13
January 15, 2006 Shimelis Mola  Ethiopia 2:13:08
January 9, 2005 Terefe Yae  Ethiopia 2:14:24
January 11, 2004 Haron Toroitich  Kenya 2:10:33

Women's marathon race
Date Athlete Country Time (h:m:s)
January 16, 2011 Sally Meyerhoff  United States 2:37:56
January 17, 2010 Teyba Naser  Ethiopia 2:30:39
January 18, 2009 Olena Shurkhno  Ukraine 2:31:22
January 13, 2008 Adanech Zekiros  Ethiopia 2:31:15
January 14, 2007 Adanech Zekiros  Ethiopia 2:31:43
January 15, 2006 Shitaye Gemechu  Ethiopia 2:31:44
January 13, 2008 Adanech Zekiros  Ethiopia 2:31:14
January 11, 2004 Shitaye Gemechu  Ethiopia 2:31:33'

Half marathon

Men's half marathon race
Date Athlete Country Time
2011 Shawn Forrest  Australia 1:03:07
2010 Simon Bairu  Canada 1:02:47
2009 Kristopher Houghton  United States 1:08:22
2008 Austin Baillie  United States 1:07:12
2007 Mårten Boström  Finland 1:06:33
2006 Joe Munoz  United States 1:09:47
2005 Thomas Lentz  United States 1:10:53
2004 Ryan Shay  United States 1:04:35

Women's half marathon race
Date Athlete Country Time
2011 Madaí Pérez  Mexico 1:11:49
2010 Deena Kastor  United States 1:09:43
2009 Nicky Archer  United Kingdom 1:20:23
2008 Bridget Duffy  United States 1:21:46
2007 Liz Wilson  United States 1:18:34
2006 Heather Hanston  United States 1:16:38
2005 Miho Ichikawa  Japan 1:15:07
2004 Erica Larson  United States 1:17:51

Wheelchair race

Men's wheelchair race
Date Athlete Country Time
January 18, 2009
January 13, 2008 Tyler Byers United States Sterling, VA, USA 1:45:07
January 14, 2007 Tyler Byers United States Reston, VA, USA 1:57:28
January 15, 2006 Bradley Ray United States Albuquerque, NM, USA 2:18:30
January 9, 2005 Peter Hawkins United States Malverne, NY, USA 2:22:03
January 11, 2004 Peter Hawkins United States Malverne, NY, USA 2:09:14

Women's wheelchair race
Date Athlete Country Time
January 18, 2009
January 13, 2008
January 14, 2007
January 15, 2006
January 9, 2005
January 11, 2004 Tricia Downing United States Denver, CO, USA 2:55:45

See also

References

  1. Cruz, Dan (2010-01-18). Kastor back with sub-1:10 in Phoenix. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-01-18.
  2. 1 2 "Race Information". www.rnraz.com. Archived from the original on 2007-12-03. Retrieved 2008-02-04.
  3. 1 2 "Records fall in P.F. Chang's Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Half Marathon". AZ Central.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.