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Valencia Half Marathon

Sunday October 26th, 2025
Valencia, Spain
Distance: Half Marathon
Offical Race Web Site

The Trinidad Alfonso Valencia Half Marathon has become one of the top running events in the world. Valencia is one of the fastest half marathon in the world. The race, organized by SD Correcaminos Athletics Club, celebrated its silver anniversary in style with record participation, record crowd numbers, Silver label IAAF accreditation and an atmosphere that you will not find anywhere else in the world.

The Trinidad Alfonso Foundation is supporting the event in which many of the world’s best athletes and thousands of members of the public will run on a fast, unique course with the finishing line in the City of Arts and Sciences.

The Trinidad Alfonso Foundation, a non-profit foundation chaired by Juan Roig, has the aim of promoting values such as a strong work ethic through sports projects that take place in the Valencia region.








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Bob Anderson
There have been lots of amazing times run on this course and at this location.
Valencia Half Marathon, Race Date: 2024-10-27, Distance: Half Marathon
Division Time Name Age Home
Male 57:30 Yomif Kejelcha ethi
2nd Male 58:17 Daniel Mateiko ken
3rd Male 58:21 Isaia Lasoi ken
4th Male 58:39 Gamechu Dida ethi
Female 63:04 Agnes Ngetich ken
2nd Female 63:21 Tesfay Fotyen ethi
3rd Female 63:32 Lilian Kasait ken
4th Female 64:14 Taye Ejyehu ethi
Division Time Name Age Home
M 40-49 1:01:50 GUERRA POLO, JAVIER esp
M 50-59 1:11:37 VERDU CALABUIG, EDUARDO esp
M 60-69 1:20:09 Watmough, Stephen esp
M 70+ 1:24:56 Rico Jimenez, Rafael esp
F 40-49 1:11:37 Silva, Mónica esp
F 50-59 1:25:35 Hensen, Ciska esp
F 60-69 1:33:44 María Eugenia esp
F 70+ 1:58:48 Gonzalvo Perez esp

Valencia Half Marathon

The Valencia Half Marathon becomes the fastest in 2023

22 October, 2023

The Valencia Half MarathonTrinidad Alfonso Zurichhas become the fastest of 2023 in a spectacular finish that has seen three men enter almost at the same time. In the end, the first to cross the finish line was, as he did in 2020 and 2022,Kibiwott Kandie, who clocked 57:40, the fastest in 2023 and the fourth fastest time in history.

In perfect weather conditions, the city of running saw the world record come close again, although in the end Kandie was unable to achieve the same feat as he did in the Elite Edition in 2020. After the Kenyan, the second to cross the finish line was Yomif Kejelcha with a time of 57:41, followed by Hagost Gebrhiwet with 57:41.

In the women’s race, the winner wasMargaret Chelimowith a great time of 1:04:46. She was followed by Irine Cheptai in second place with 1:04:53 and Janet Chepngetich in third place with 1:05:15.

Two Spanish records are broken

The happiest moment of the morning saw the breaking of two Spanish records over the distance. The first was Carlos Mayo, who with a time of 59:39 managed to beat the Spanish half marathon record that Fabián Roncero had held for 22 years (59:52). Behind him, Laura Luengo made a surprise by achieving the second Spanish record of the day by finishing in a spectacular 1:09:41.

Mayo had already warned that he was coming very strong and that, despite preparing for his debut in the 42K at the Valencia Marathon, his objective was the half and he has not disappointed. The Spaniard already had the second best Spanish time (1:00:06) of all time, achieved in Valencia in the Elite Edition in 2020, but he wanted more and today he took what seemed almost unattainable, as the Spanish record.

For her part, Luengo had said she was feeling good but was the big surprise of the day, improving by 10 seconds on the previous record that had been held by Trihas Gebre with 1:09:51 since 2008.

In addition to Carlos Mayo’s good performance, the rest of the Spanish team also did very well. Hamid Ben Daoud came in second with 1:00:41 and Jorge Blanco was third with 1:02:02. In women, the second female classified was Esther Navarrete with a time of 1:09:58 and the third was Marta Galimany with 1:10:45.

2021 Race Highlights

Gidey smashes world half marathon record in Valencia

Ethiopia’s Letesenbet Gidey smashed the world record* at the Valencia Half Marathon Trinidad Alfonso EDP, clocking 1:02:52 on her debut at the distance at theWorld Athletics Elite Labelroad race on Sunday (24).

Competing in the same Spanish city where she broke the world 5000m record last year, Gidey took 70 seconds off the previous world record of 1:04:02 set by world marathon champion Ruth Chepngetich earlier this year.

In doing so, 23-year-old Gidey becomes the first woman to officially break the 64 and 63-minute barriers. She’s also the first debutante to set a world record for the distance.

Perfectly paced by her compatriot Mebrahtu Kiros, Gidey went through the opening 5km in 15:00, well inside world record pace, with her compatriot Yalemzerf Yehualaw running five metres down. Yehualaw, whose recent 1:03:44 clocking in Larne could not be ratified as a world record due to the course being too short, drifted further back over the next few kilometres as Gidey reached 10km in 29:45 – the third-fastest clocking in history for the distance and just seven seconds shy of the world record set just a few weeks ago by Kalkidan Gezahegne.

While Yehualaw began to lose ground shortly afterwards, Gidey maintained her relentless rhythm to cover the next 5km segment in 14:44, reaching the 15km point in 44:29, barely nine seconds slower than her own world best for the distance.

Although her pace dropped very slightly in the last quarter of the race, Gidey had done more than enough to ensure victory in a world record time. She crossed the line in 1:02:52, adding a third world record to her name to go alongside the marks she owns for 5000m (14:06.62) and 10,000m (29:01.03).

Underscoring the quality of Gidey’s performance, she crossed the finish line alongside Spain’s Javier Guerra, a 2:07:27 marathon runner.

“I knew I could run this kind of time as my training sessions in the altitude of Addis Abeba have gone very well,” said an ecstatic Gidey, the Olympic bronze medallist and world silver medallist over 10,000m. “In future I’m thinking of competing at the marathon distance but I’m not sure that will come before the Paris 2024 Olympic Games or later.”

Yehualaw finished second in 1:03:51, also inside the previous world record. Kenya’s Sheila Chepkirui bettered her lifetime best by 45 seconds to complete the podium in 1:04:54.

The men’s race may not have witnessed a world record, but it still had record depth with an unprecedented seven men covering the distance within 59 minutes.

The leading group went through the opening 5km in 13:45, right on schedule for a 58-minute finishing time. Kenya’s world 10km record holder Rhonex Kipruto ran comfortably close to the pacemakers alongside compatriots Abel Kipchumba, Philemon Kiplimo, Felix Kipkoech, Daniel Mateiko and Kennedy Kimutai plus Ethiopia’s world 5000m champion Muktar Edris.

Surprisingly, the three pacemakers – Josphat Kiptoo Chumo, Emmanuel Maru and Evans Kipkemei Kurui – dropped out before the seventh kilometre and from then on the main favourites took turns in the lead to keep a swift pace. The 10km checkpoint was reached in 27:35, slightly outside their target, with Kipruto and 58:48 world leader Kipchumba making most of the pacing duties alongside the surprise package Mateiko, whose career best was 59:25 set in Copenhagen last month. At that point, 10 men still remained in the lead pack.

The first serious move came in the 12th kilometre when Mateiko, a training partner of Eliud Kipchoge, tried to break away from the rest but he was soon reeled in by the main contenders, who were now running in single file.

Shortly after reaching 15km in 41:16, Kipchumba moved to the front and only Kipruto could live with his pace. With about half a kilometre to go, Kipruto surged and gained a few metres on Kipchumba, but the latter never gave up and overtook Kipruto in the closing stages to win in a world-leading 58:07 with Kipruto taking second place in 58:09.

Kipchumba’s winning time elevates him to sixth on the world all-time list. Mateiko set a huge PB of 58:24 to secure a Kenyan sweep of the podium places.

2020 Race highlights

(2020) On Sunday morning December 6 in Valencia, Kenya’s Kibiwott Kandies smashed thehalf-marathon world record, becoming the first person ever to break 58 minutes. Kandie ran 57:32, breaking Geoffrey Kamworor previous record (58:01) which he set in 2019, by 29 seconds.

The top five men remained in a tight pack through 19K, all on world record pace. Around 20K, Kandie and eventual second-place finisher (and current world champion)Jacob Kiplimo broke away, trading leads until Kandie took the race and the world record. The top four men all ran under the previous world best, with third place Rhonex Kiptruto finishing in 57:49 and fourth place Alexander Mutiso in 57:59. To make matters even more impressive, it was Kipruto’s half-marathon debut (making it the fastest debut in history).
Earlier this year Kandies was disappointed at the half-marathon championships, after kilometres of strong running, Kandie lost the race to Kiplimo who took the title. Today, Kandie becomes the first person to run four sub-59 half-marathons in one year and owns his first world record.

Women’s race

In the women’s race,Genzebe Dibaba won the event in her debut over the distance. She ran a 1:05:18 to become the 12th-fastest woman to ever cover 21.1K. After running most of the race solo, with only her pacers accompanying her, she comfortably took the win. Second place went to Sheila Chepkurui in 1:05:39 and third place to Senbere Teferiin 1:05:51.

NAIROBI MARATHON

Sunday October 26th, 2025
Nairobi, KE
Distance: Marathon · Half Marathon
Offical Race Web Site

Nairobi Marathon is an annual road running competition over the marathon distance held in October in Nairobi, Kenya. First held in 2003, the competition expanded and now includes a half marathon race along with the main race.

It was part of "The Greatest Race on Earth", fully sponsored by Standard Chartered Bank.



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Godfrey salano
I enjoyed so much..the weather was so supporting ..and I Lyke the arrangements was so organized I had no excuse but to run ..and now I know how to work on my self in my work outs
Davidpower
I fill good hope with in your cloth \\r\\nI am competitive in full marathon in standard charter Nairobi marathon, in Oct. 30,2022 \\r\\nBest regards
Munyao peter
Encouranging and good progras ,from my first time
NAIROBI MARATHON, Race Date: 2024-10-27, Distance: Marathon
Division Time Name Age Home
Male 2:13:05 Ronald Kurgat ken
2nd Male 2:13:13 Dominic Kipkurui ken
3rd Male 2:13:14 Peter Ndorobo ken
4th Male 2:13:21 Richard Rop ken
Female 2:31:52 Gladys Chemutai ken
2nd Female 2:35:00 Caroline Koech ken
3rd Female 2:36:06 Joy Kemuma ken
4th Female 2:37:49 Ruth Wakabu ken
Division Time Name Age Home
NAIROBI MARATHON


Mainova Frankfurt Marathon

Sunday October 26th, 2025
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Distance: Marathon
Offical Race Web Site

Frankfurt is an unexpectedly traditional and charming city, with half-timbered buildings huddled in its quaint medieval Altstadt (old city), cosy apple wine taverns serving hearty regional food, village-like neighbourhoods filled with outdoor cafes, boutiques and street art, and beautiful parks, gardens and riverside paths.

The city's cache of museums is second in Germany only to Berlin’s, and its nightlife and entertainment scenes are bolstered by a spirited student population. Franfurt am Main, home of the Franfurt Marathon.

The Frankfurt Marathon is a marathon which has taken place every year in Frankfurt am Main since its inception in 1981. It is the longest-established city marathon in Germany and in terms of the number of finishers, Germany's second-largest. It is organized by the agency motion events.

Course OVERVIEW

The route can be run easily and quickly and has resulted in last year in new track records for both men and women - it has a total elevation gain of only 27.8 meters, spread over the entire route length of 42.195 meters. The route is set up circular and runs along both sides of the river Main.

The first part of the route leads the runners through the city of Frankfurt with itsfascinating skyline, then to the district of Sachsenhausen, towards the residential area of Höchst and back along the Mainzer Landstrasse through the city center and the trade fair tower into the Festhalle with its red carpet.







2023

2023

2023
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Mainova Frankfurt Marathon, Race Date: 2024-10-27, Distance: Marathon
Division Time Name Age Home
Male 2:05:54 Biwott, Benard ken
2nd Male 2:07:35 Challa, Gossa Ambelu ethi
3rd Male 2:08:02 Anbesa, Lencho Tesfaye ethi
4th Male 2:09:03 Dibaba, Gerba Beyata ethi
Female 2:17:25 Gejia, Hawi Feysa ethi
2nd Female 2:18:58 Masai, Magdalyne ken
3rd Female 2:22:37 Shuko Wote ethi
4th Female 2:22:42 Agnes Keino ethi
Division Time Name Age Home
Mainova Frankfurt Marathon


KBC Dublin Marathon

Sunday October 26th, 2025
Dublin, Ireland
Distance: Marathon · Half Marathon
Offical Race Web Site

The KBC Dublin Marathon, which is run through the historic Georgian streets of Dublin, Ireland's largest and capital city.

The course is largely flat and is a single lap, starting and finishing close to the City Centre. Conditions formarathon running are ideal.








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KBC Dublin Marathon, Race Date: 2024-10-27, Distance: Marathon
Division Time Name Age Home
Male 2:08:47 Moses Kemei ken
2nd Male 2:09:24 Abebaw Desalew ethi
3rd Male 2:09:42 Hiko Tonosa ire
4th Male 2:09:44 Abraraw Misganaw ethi
Female 2:24:13 Asmirach Nega ethi
2nd Female 2:24:45 Sorome Negash ethi
3rd Female 2:28:29 Grete Dukale ethi
4th Female 2:29:15 Genet Abdurkadir ethi
Division Time Name Age Home
KBC Dublin Marathon

A Long and Winding Road . . .

The race has come a long way since its birth in 1980. Its birth is due mainly to the vision of Noel Carroll and his ability to persuade the BHAA to take on his idea. The first race had a total of 1,420 finishers from an entry of 2,100. The first winner was Dick Hooper in a time of 2:16:14 , Dick as went on to be the only person to win the race three times. The ladies were lead home by Carey May who ran a word class 2:42:11, she was the first of 40 lady finishers in the inaugural event. Second man home in 1980 was Neil Cusack who was to return in 1981 to post a winning time of 2:13:59 just 20 slower than his Boston win in ’74.

In 1982, which coincided with the running boom of the early 80’s had an entry of 11,076 that remains our highest entry. 1982 is in the history books for another reason, in that race was won by Jerry Kiernan in a time that still has not been surpassed in Dublin when he ran 2:13:45. 1983 with 8,688 finishers and 1884 with 7,365 finishers produced the first of our foreign men’s winners in Ronnie Agten and Sven Kristensen.

Dick was back for 85 and 86. 1985 also saw our ladies course record go to Julie Gates who posted 2:41:24 this was to be the top time until Moira O’Neill’s time of 2:37:06 in 1988. 5,410 crossed the finish line in 1985 but this had fallen to under 4,000 by 1987.

In 1988 we celebrated Dublin’s Millennium with an entry again of 8,700. John Griffen recorded the first of his two successive victories.

1989 was a very difficult year for the Dublin Marathon as the race was run without a tile sponsor for the first time and the City owes great credit to Marion Kavanagh, Alex Sweeney and Bill Kennedy for holding it all together that year. Just over 3,000 runners finished in 1989. Liz Bullen (twin sister of John Treacy) finished 2 minutes down on the afoor mentioned Moria O’Neill.

CDL came on board in 1990 as the saw it as a very good vehicle to promote the smoke less fuel to help rid the city of the smog that struck us in the late 80’s. This year also saw a local Dubliner win the men’s event when John Bolger crossed the line in 2:17:17. In the women’s Christine Kennedy won the first of her back to back titles when winning in 2:41:27, a time she was to lower a year later to 2:35:56.

1991 saw the race double as the Olympic trail for Barcelona and it saw the men’s title go north for the for the first time when Tommy Hughes beat off Jerry Kiernan and John Griffen to the tape. It would be great to see the race double as the national championship’s each year, an idea I think would go down very well with all club runners. Finishers now totalled 2,751.

The 13th running of the event in 1992 was luckey for our winners Jerry Kiernan and Karen Cornwall but it also stands as the lowest finishing field bar 1980 when 2,414 were recorded to have finished.

Moving on to 1993 saw a new sponsor in Golden Pages take over. Our Olympic Silver medals, John Treacy lead a home double with Cathy Shum as they finished in front of 2,617 others. Cathy also took the honours in the last year of Golden Pages sponsorship when winning again in 1996.

1995 saw the first in a series of 5 Kenyan men’s winners in William Musyoki. The finishers between 1994 and 1996 stabilised at just over 2,700.

Since 1997 we had a new sponsor with the association of 98fm.

In 1996 we made a decision to promote the event outside Ireland and decided to travel to the USA. We targeted the major charities that fundraise for diverse causes. It produced almost instant success as the entries from the charities came flooding in and by 1998 we had an entry of 5,751. 1999 saw a further increase of 3.6% in all entries but the interesting point now was that the female entries in Dublin had grown to such an extent that we now have over 39% of the entries coming from the fairer sex. No other Marathon outside the US has such a high % female entry.

1999 also saw our ladies course record drop to 2:34:24 when Ester Kiplagat had almost 6 minutes to spare over Carol Galea of Malta.

Last year another of our Olympic silver medallists, Sonia O’Sullivan, won in Dublin. In 2000 our entries rose by 44% on the total for 1999 to a high of 8,900. The Canada and US accounted for 3,579 (43%) of the total entries this included circa 600 entries from the Us that were not with any charity. By now we have entries coming in from over 40 countries which is a large increase from 28 in 1997.

Since its inception we have seen 12 Irish lady winners, with Christine Kennedy (1990 + 1991) and Cathy Shum (1993 + 1996) leading the way. In that time we have had 11 Irish Mens’ winners lead of course by Dick Hooper.

2001 saw a new chapter in the live of the marathon being opened as the Dublin Marathon joins an elite band of marathons by being part of the adidas marathon series for 2001.

This sponsorship confirmed Dublin as one of the major Marathons world-wide. As we start 2001 Dublin is ahead of a number of high profile European City Marathons and closing on Rotterdam and Madrid in terms of numbers. Europe continues to be lead by London, Paris and Berlin. Dublin in fact leads all other marathons in Europe with the number of foreign competitors taking part.

2002 saw Frederick Cherono became the sixth Kenyan winner of the race when he finished strongly to take the title in a time of 2:14:25. Lidia Vassilevskaia from Russia led from the start to smash the three year old course record by two minutes, winning in 2:32:58.

Ruth Kutol, made the headlines in 2003 with a new women’s course record. The 30-year-old Kutol knocked over five minutes from the previous best when finishing 14th overall in 2:27:22.

In 2004 a near-record entry, an ideal, sun shine filled autumn day and a record in the men’s race made it a happy 25th anniversary for the Dublin Marathon. Lezan Kimutai of Kenya finally bettering Jerry Kiernan’s 1982 race record by 37 seconds.

African dominance was broken in 2005 with both titles going to Eastern Europe. Dmytro Osadchy of the Ukraine was just six seconds outside the race record as he crossed the line in a time of 2:13:14.

The trend which started in 2005 was maintained, with both winners hailing from the former Soviet Union. Russian Aleksey Sokolov won the men’s race in a new course record of 2:11:39 – the first time a sub-2:12 has been achieved in Dublin – while Alina Ivanova from Russia became the third woman to break 2:30 by winning in 2:29:49.

In 2007 the marathon attained a world-class status as Aleksey Sokolov set a course record of 2:09:07, a time that could have been even faster if the Russian had been pushed over the closing stages. As it was, the 27-year-old army sergeant from St Petersburg won his second Dublin title by a margin of a minute-and-a-half from Thomas Abyu, who set a personal best of 2:10:37.

Lifestyle Sports and adidas signed up as joint title sponsors in 2008, and it saw a record entry of over 11,300 taking to the streets. Another record entry in 2009 with the 12,000 mark passed for the 30th anniversary. Feyisa Lilesa became the first Ethiopian to triumph in Dublin, winning in the second fastest time of 2:09:12. Kateryna Stetsenko from the Ukraine won a competitive women’s race in 2:32:45.

Over 13,000 entered in 2010 which also saw records tumble. Kenyan Moses Kangogo Kibet beat the course record of 2.09.07 held since 2007 by Russian Aleksey Sokolov, with a PB time of 2.08.58. The first woman to cross the finish line, Tatiana Aryasova of Russia, also smashed the course record (2.27.22) held since 2003 by Ruth Kutol of Kenya, when crossing the finish line in 2.26.13.

The last number of years have shown that the entries can be increased and so our target over the next four years is to grow the home market and continue the work done over the past two decades to restore the Dublin Marathon to one of the nations sporting spectaculars. The introduction of the race series in 2002 has also been a great success, they not only have increased entries to the 13,000 mark now but they also helped boost the Irish entry in the marathon to over 8,000 now.

Dublin may not be the biggest but it has gained a reputation as being the best value Marathon in Europe. Each runner when picking up their race number receives a T-shirt and goodie bags.

The EXPO has improved in quality over the past number of years.

We also have a breakfast run on the Sunday morning that has grown from a field of 150 five years ago to an entry of over 1,200 last year. After the run our International friend’s receive a second T-Shirt followed by Breakfast to the backdrop of Irish music.

Dublin City too is a big winner as we expect the large entry to exceed last years spend of 7.86 Million and to reach a new high of over 10 Million this year or next.

The route for the Marathon over the last number of years has remained the same with only small changes to the start and finish areas.

The prize fund is extended further last year and will have a top prize of 15,000 EURO for the Woman’s and Men’s winners. To help encourage some more Irish winners we are extending the bonuses to the home grow runner, while also extending the time bonus’s that we introduced in 2004 for the first time.

The Dublin Marathon is also a member of the Association for International Marathons (AIMS). AIMS gives us profile in all major affiliated marathons world-wide. This will extend our reach well beyond the 9 marathon visits we are undertaking this year which include Turin, London, Paris, Rotterdam, Boston, L.A., Chicago, Berlin, Barcelona, Warsaw, Prague and New York.

Is a single lap, starting and finishing close to the City Centre. Conditions for marathon running are ideal.

The Irish climate is influenced by the prevailing light South Westerly winds of the Gulf Stream. The average temperatures for October are around 12 – 14°C (53 – 57°F). Dublin has only about 30 inches of rain annually–ideal for running.



Venice Marathon

Sunday October 26th, 2025
Venice, Italy
Distance: Marathon · 10K
Offical Race Web Site

The Venice Marathon is one of the most beautiful marathons known for the historical, artistic and picturesque surrounding in which it takes place.

It starts in Stra, a small village located at about 25 km west of Venice, at the beginning of the Riviera del Brenta, a beautiful area near the River Brenta, where the rich and noble Venetians built their summer homes for vacation in the eighteenth century.

In this area is the famous Villa Pisani at Stra, the "Queen of the Venetian Villas". In its rooms Doges, kings and emperors have been hosted in the past. Now is a national museum that exposes great art works of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries including masterpieces of Tiepolo.

The marathon runs through the center of Marghera and Mestre, continues for more than 2 km within the San Giuliano Park until Venice crossing the Ponte della Libertà..

Following the Canale della Giudecca till Punta della Dogana, across a floating bridge built specifically for the marathon, runners will arrive to Piazza San Marco, and finally running along the Laguna the race will finish at Riva Sette Martiri in Sestiere di Castello.




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Venice Marathon, Race Date: 2024-10-27, Distance: Marathon
Division Time Name Age Home
Male 2:09:08 TILAHUN ABEBE ETH
2nd Male 2:09:31 OZBILEN ILHAM TANUI TUR
3rd Male 2:09:41 KIMAKAL KIPSAMBU KEN
4th Male 2:11:28 CHERUIYOT ABDENEGO KEN
Female 2:32:40 ABERA BIRTUKAN ETH
2nd Female 2:33:23 CHEPKORIR BETTY KEN
3rd Female 2:39:01 TESFAHUN MELKAM ETH
4th Female 2:41:30 KORIR CAROLIN JEBET KEN
Division Time Name Age Home
Venice Marathon

Course overview

Start is located in Stra (a small country town about 25 kms west of Venice), along the Brenta Riviera, the beautiful riverside area where rich and noble Venetians built their vacation mansions in the 18th century.

The finish is in the historic centre of Venice, after passing through St. Mark’s square on to the Riva Sette Martiri, along the lagoon facing St George island.

The first part of the course, along the Riviera del Brenta, touches an environment rich with history, culture and beautiful landscapes, marked by the numerous Venetian villas facing the waters of the river.

The marathon moves through the centre of Marghera and Mestre, then runs for more than 2 kilometers inside the San Giuliano Park and moves on to Venice over the Liberty Bridge, for a little less than 4 kilometers.

The race then enters the city's renovated port area and reaches the city centre for the last kilometers, which are simply unique and unforgettable. The runners proceed alongside the Giudecca Canal to Punta della Dogana, where they cross the Grand Canal on a bridge, especially built for the race.

Passing through Piazza San Marco with the cathedral and the Palazzo Ducale, the marathon course continues on to the finish in Riva Sette Martiri.

Course difficulty

The Venice marathon course is basically flat and fast. There are just a few difficulties, represented by 3-4 short slopes (100 meters or so) between the 25th and 35th kilometer.

In the final part of the marathon course (last 3 kilometers), runners will face 14 little bridges over Venice's canals. Wooden ramps are put in place to prevent athletes from running on the steps.

There are no cobblestones on the course (apart from the last 100 meters before the finish line). In the final 3 kilometres the running surface will be mainly made of large rectangular stone slabs.
The course is entirely closed to traffic and every kilometer is marked.

Course highlights

Riviera del Brenta, with several 18th century mansions along the course (in particular the impressive "Villa Pisani" at the start). Zattere, a 2-km-long embankment next to the Giudecca Canal, where athletes run close to the water.

The Bridge over the Grand Canal, a 170-meters-long bridge which is built just before the marathon and dismantled the night after.

Piazza San Marco and Palazzo Ducale, historical Venice landmarks.
Finish line in Riva Sette Martiri, in the picturesque waterfront of St. Mark's Basin.



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