Siberian Ice Half Marathon

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Dateearly January
LocationOmsk, Russia
Event typeRoad running
Distance21.098 km
Siberian Ice Half Marathon
Dateearly January
LocationOmsk, Russia
Event typeRoad running
Distance21.098 km
Established1991
Official siteSiberian Ice Half Marathon
Participants277 finishers (2022)
415 (2020)

Siberian Ice Half Marathon (Russian: Рождественский полумарафон, Christmas Half Marathon) is a recurring athletic (road race) competition. Siberian Ice Half Marathon is held most every year on January 7 in Omsk (Russia).

Siberian Ice Half Marathon in its current format includes running competitions on half marathon distance, as well as a non-competitive 7 km distance and ekiden on a half-marathon distance (where each of 6 team members runs only 3.5 km). According to the official Web site of the non-for-profit partnership Marathon, Siberian Ice Half Marathon is the only mass-participation long-distance race in Russia in the winter season.[1] The race course is encompassing the historical center of Omsk making a 3.5 km loop.[2]

Any competitors 14 years old or older can take part in the race. Every participants receives a toque and a Christmas souvenir, and every one who manages to finish the race gets a diploma and an original medal. Winners and medalists also receive monetary prizes (in 2014, the overall prize fund is 70 thousands rubles for the individual race and 54 thousands for the ekiden[3]). A separate prize is also awarded to a participant running the distance in the most extravagant costume.[2]

History

First Christmas half marathon in Omsk was held in 1991 when it was run at −10 degrees Celsius. Since 1993 the Christmas half marathon became an annual event held every year at the same date.[4]

The coldest edition of the competition was held in 2001 when the temperatures dropped to -39 degrees Celsius. The participants at that day were asked to run only 6 km irrespectively of what distance they registered to, but still 13 runners completed the entire half marathon distance.[1] This record temperature brought the competition an unofficial title of "the coldest marathon in the world".[5] The warmest temperature at the date of the race was registered in 2012, when it reached only 4 degrees below zero (with a wind speed of 3 m/s).[4] The speed record for the men's competition belongs to Murmansk representative Vadim Ulizhov (1:08:10 in 2011) while the women's record is held by the local runner Eugenia Danilova (1:17:36 in 2008).[1]

Although Siberian Ice Half Marathon historically attracts runners from abroad (e. g., in 2003 a Kazakh runner won the men's race,[6] and in 2011 competitors from 7 countries beside Russia took part in the competition[7]), only since 2012 it is officially recognized by the Association of International Marathons and Distance Races (AIMS) and included in its calendar of competitions.[8]

There was no race in 2021.

Winners

NOTE: not held in 2021.

YearHalf marathon — menHalf marathon — womenEkiden — menEkiden — women
2024Novosibirsk Petr Shvetsov — 1:14:20Chelyabinsk Tatiana Kuramshina — 1:24:18
2023Novosibirsk Valeriy Lukin — 1:16:59Novosibirsk Yelena Sedova — 1:31:04
2022Perm Krai Aleksey Patrakov — 1:16:32Omsk Oblast Marina Kovaleva — 1:20:05
2020Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug Mikhail Kulkov — 1:13:43Omsk Oblast Mariya Druzhina — 1:29:45
2019Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug Mikhail Kulkov — 1:13:34Ufa Leysan Yakhina — 1:23:20
2018Omsk Oblast Aleksandr Butrameyev — 1:11:42Novosibirsk Marina Kovaleva — 1:17:38
2017Bashkortostan Sergey Petrov — 1:08:16Novosibirsk Natalya Tarasova — 1:22:06
2016Krasnoyarsk Vasiliy Minayev — 1:09:12Novosibirsk Marina Kovaleva — 1:22:35
2015Omsk Oblast Aleksandr Butrameyev — 1:10:12Novosibirsk Marina Kovaleva — 1:21:02
2014Krasnoyarsk Vasiliy Minayev — 1:11:34Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:19:47
2013Khakassia Artem Ekimov — 1:08:29Omsk Oblast Eugenia Danilova — 1:22:07Omsk Oblast JSC Babylon Ltd. — 1:11:39Omsk Oblast SibGUFK — 1:33:49
2012Murmansk Oblast Vadim Ulizhov — 1:09.13Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:21.26
2011Murmansk Oblast Vadim Ulizhov — 1:08:10Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:22:14
2010Penza Oblast Alexandr Bolhovitin — 1:09:27Omsk Oblast Eugenia Danilova — 1:25:52
2009Murmansk Oblast Vadim Ulizhov — 1:08:25Omsk Oblast Eugenia Danilova — 1:25:57
2008Murmansk Oblast Vadim Ulizhov — 1:08:27Omsk Oblast Eugenia Danilova — 1:17:36
2007Omsk Oblast Alexandr Elunin — 1:08:19Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:17:45
2006Omsk Oblast Denis Rychkov — 1:08:26Omsk Oblast Eugenia Danilova — 1:26:01
2005Omsk Oblast Alexandr Elunin — 1:11:04Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:24:22
2004Omsk Oblast Igor Tyupin — 1:11:15Omsk Oblast Nina Podnebesnova — 1:23:56
2003Kazakhstan Pavel Broda — 1:10:41Omsk Oblast Irina Sukhorukova — 1:43:36
2002Kemerovo Oblast Evgeniy Lykov — 1:11:32Omsk Oblast Anastasiia Vershinina — 1:34:33

See also

References

External sources

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