Falmouth Road Race
Falmouth Road Race | |
---|---|
Location | Woods Hole to Falmouth, Massachusetts |
Distance | 7 miles (11 km) |
Primary sponsor | New Balance |
Established | August 15, 1973 |
Official site |
www |
Participants | 12,800[1] |
The Falmouth Road Race is an annual 7-mile (11 km) road race on Cape Cod from Woods Hole, a village in the town of Falmouth, Massachusetts, to Falmouth Heights.
The race organizer is the Falmouth Road Race, Inc., a 501(c)(3) organization who puts on the race each year with proceeds to benefit local charities. It has its own logo as well. The race director is Dave McGillivray of DMSE Sports, Inc.
New Balance, an athletic footwear and apparel company, became the title sponsor of the race in 2011.
History
The race was the idea of Tommy Leonard, an avid runner and popular bartender in Boston and Falmouth. During the 1972 Summer Olympics Leonard closed his bar in order to watch Frank Shorter win the first Olympic marathon for the United States since 1908. After Shorter won the marathon Leonard was quoted as saying "Wouldn't it be fantastic if we could get Frank Shorter to run in a race on Cape Cod?" One year later, in the summer of 1973, with the help of a local high school track coach John Carroll, and the town's recreation director Rich Sherman, the first Falmouth Road Race was run by approximately 100 people. The next year there were 445 runners, and the year after that Frank Shorter joined 850 other runners in the race, bringing Leonard's wish true. Today the New Balance Falmouth Road Race is considered one of the premier non-marathon races in the country, if not the world, attracting over 10,000 runners each year.[2] The field of runners typically includes many of the best American and international runners, including both past and future Olympic athletes.
Entry
More people apply for places than can be accommodated in the race, so a random selection process is held to select the field of runners. The application period is a short window of time during the first half of May. Applications must be submitted online at the race web site. A number of places are specially reserved for Falmouth residents. Five runners, Mike Bennett, Tom Brannelly, Don Delinks, Ron Pokraka and Brian Salzberg, have officially completed every Falmouth Road Race.
Course
The beginning of the course is extremely hilly, with a starting line by the Captain Kidd Restaurant & Bar in Woods Hole, and a finish by the Falmouth Heights beach. From the start corral, one races up a gradually steepening incline and into a narrow wooded road, emerging onto a long curved coastal stretch that runs by Nobska Light, along a hot beach on Martha's Vineyard Sound, and past the estates of Belvidere Plains, before turning inland toward the center of Falmouth town, finally looping back to the shore route for one last 1⁄4-mile (400 m) hill that crests just before the finish.
Before 2006, promotional materials usually described the New Balance Falmouth Road Race as a 7.1-mile (11.4 km) event. In 2006 it was measured and certified to be 7 miles (11 km).[3]
Winners
Key: Course record
Edition | Year | Men's winner | Time (m:s) | Women's winner | Time (m:s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
44th | 2016 | Stephen Sambu (KEN)[4] | 32:10 | Caroline Chepkoech (KEN)[4] | 36:25 |
43rd | 2015 | Stephen Sambu (KEN) | 32:17 | Diane Nukuri (BDI)[5] | 36:47 |
42nd | 2014[6] | Stephen Sambu (KEN)[1] | 31:46 | Betsy Saina (KEN)[1] | 35:56 |
41st | 2013 | Micah Kogo (KEN)[1] | 32:10 | Joyce Chepkirui (KEN)[1] | 36:43 |
40th | 2012 | Stanley Biwott (KEN) | 31:59 | Margaret Wangari Muriuki (KEN) | 36:54 |
39th | 2011 | Lucas Rotich (KEN) | 31:37 | Magdalena Lewy-Boulet (USA) | 36:58 |
38th | 2010 | Gebregziabher Gebremariam (ETH) | 32:20 | Wude Ayalew (ETH) | 35:46 |
37th | 2009 | Tilahun Regassa (ETH) | 31:41 | Mamitu Daska (ETH) | 36:23 |
36th | 2008 | Tadese Tola (ETH) | 32:01 | Edith Masai (KEN) | 37:02 |
35th | 2007 | Micah Kipkemboi Kogo (KEN) | 31:53 | Catherine Ndereba (KEN) | 36:31 |
34th | 2006 | Gilbert Okari (KEN) | 31:53 | Alevtina Ivanova (RUS) | 35:43 |
33rd | 2005 | Gilbert Okari (KEN) | 31:59 | Lornah Kiplagat (NED) | 36:13 |
32nd | 2004 | Gilbert Okari (KEN) | 31:08 | Alevtina Ivanova (RUS) | 36:13 |
31st | 2003 | John Kipsang Korir (KEN) | 31:59 | Jennifer Rhines (USA) | 37:08 |
30th | 2002 | James Koskei (KEN) | 32:10 | Lornah Kiplagat (KEN) | 35:13 |
29th | 2001 | John Kipsang Korir (KEN) | 32:26 | Lornah Kiplagat (KEN) | 36:26 |
28th | 2000 | Mark Yatich (KEN) | 31:43 | Lornah Kiplagat (KEN) | 35:02 |
27th | 1999 | John Kipsang Korir (KEN) | 32:06 | Catherine Ndereba (KEN) | 36:32 |
26th | 1998 | Khalid Khannouchi (MAR) | 31:48 | Catherine Ndereba (KEN) | 36:10 |
25th | 1997 | Khalid Khannouchi (MAR) | 31:58 | Colleen De Reuck (USA) | 36:19 |
24th | 1996 | Joseph Kimani (KEN) | 31:36 | Catherine Ndereba (KEN) | 35:37 |
23rd | 1995 | Joseph Kamau (KEN) | 32:10 | Delilah Asiago (KEN) | 36:23 |
22nd | 1994 | Benson Masya (KEN) | 31:59 | Laura Mykytok (USA) | 37:01 |
21st | 1993 | Simon Karori (KEN) | 32:30 | Colleen De Reuck (USA) | 36:42 |
20th | 1992 | Benson Masya (KEN) | 31:52 | Lynn Jennings (USA) | 36:13 |
19th | 1991 | Steve Kogo (KEN) | 32:14 | Sabrina Dornhoefer (USA) | 37:32 |
18th | 1990 | Salvatore Bettiol (ITA) | 32:55 | Aurora Cunha (POR) | 36:39 |
17th | 1989 | Salvatore Bettiol (ITA) | 32:14 | Aurora Cunha (POR) | 36:21 |
16th | 1988 | Mark Curp (USA) | 32:22 | Anne Hannam (NZL) | 36:36 |
15th | 1987 | Rolando Vera (ECU) | 32:19 | Aurora Cunha (POR) | 36:59 |
14th | 1986 | Arturo Barrios (MEX) | 32:17 | Lorraine Moller (NZL) | 36:54 |
13th | 1985 | David Murphy (USA) | 32:02.3 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 36:17.7 |
12th | 1984 | David Murphy (USA) | 32:17 | Joan Nesbit (USA) | 37:00 |
11th | 1983 | Joseph Nzau (KEN) | 32:20 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 36:21 |
10th | 1982 | Alberto Salazar (USA) | 31:53.3 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 36:33.7 |
9th | 1981 | Alberto Salazar (USA) | 31:55.6 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 38:15.5 |
8th | 1980 | Rod Dixon (NZL) | 32:20.4 | Grete Waitz (NOR) | 37:12.3 |
7th | 1979 | Craig Virgin (USA) | 32:19.7 | Ellison Goodall (USA) | 38:16 |
6th | 1978 | Bill Rodgers (USA) | 32:21 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 39:07 |
5th | 1977 | Bill Rodgers (USA) | 32:23 | Kim Merritt (USA) | 38:40 |
4th | 1976 | Frank Shorter (USA) | 33:14 | Joan Benoit (USA) | 43:08 |
3rd | 1975 | Frank Shorter (USA) | 33:24 | Jennifer Tuthill (USA) | 44:23 |
2nd | 1974 | Bill Rodgers (USA) | 34:16 | Debbie Richie (USA) | 44:31 |
1st | 1973 | Dave Duba (USA) | 39:16 | Jennifer Tuthill (USA) | 47:23 |
Wheelchair division
The race also has a wheelchair division with course records held by James Senbeta, USA, at 23:32 and Tatyana McFadden, USA, at 26:27.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Gambaccini, Peter (2013-08-12). "Micah Kogo Edges Ben True at Falmouth Road Race". Runner's World. Rodale Inc. Retrieved 2013-08-14.
- ↑ http://www.falmouthroadrace.com
- ↑ http://www.usatf.org/events/courses/certification/measurement_news/MN121Sept03.pdf
- 1 2 Lotsbom, Chris (2016-08-22). "Kenyans Sweep at Sunday's Falmouth Road Race". Runner's World. Retrieved 2016-10-07.
- 1 2 Springer, Shira (2015-08-17). "Kenyan Stephen Sambu beats the heat to win Falmouth Road Race". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
- ↑ Cassidy, Patrick (2014-08-17). "Saina, Sambu, Senbeta and McFadden win Falmouth Road Race". Cape Cod Times. Local Media Group, Inc. Retrieved 2014-08-17.
- List of winners
- Monti, Dave (2009-08-10). Falmouth Road Race 7 miles. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2010-04-06.