Istanbul Half Marathon

Istanbul Half Marathon
Date April
Location Istanbul, Turkey
Event type Road
Distance Half marathon
Primary sponsor N Kolay
Established 2014
Course records Men's: 59:15 (2022)
Rodgers Kwemoi
Women's: 1:04:02 WR (2021)
Ruth Chepngetich
Official site Istanbul Half Marathon
Participants 3,389 finishers (2022)
2,410 (2021)
1,638 (2020)
2,606 (2019)

The Istanbul Half Marathon (Turkish: İstanbul Yarı Maratonu) is an annual road running event over the half marathon distance (21.1 km) that takes place on the streets of Istanbul, Turkey in April. The event is sponsored by Vodafone. It was promoted to the IAAF Gold Label status for 2017.

History

The event was established in 1987 under the name "Haliç Yarı Maratonu" ("Golden Horn Half Marathon"), and continued to run until 1993. After a break of 17 years, it revived in 2010 under the name "8th International Golden Horn Half Marathon" with participation of around 1,500 athletes from 22 nations.

The organization of the half marathon took afour-year break until 2015 when the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality re-established the road running event under the name "Istanbul Half Marathon", and Vodafon took over the sponsorship. The start-finish line of the event was relocated to Balat on the coast of Golden Horn.

The first edition immediately attracted high caliber elite runners, resulting in quick winning times of 1:00:13 minutes in the men's category and 1:06:38 minutes in the women's race. A total of 2,095 runners finished the inaugural mass race in Istanbul.

The event was organized by Istanbul Sports Events – the organizer of the long-running Istanbul Marathon event. The half marathon course begins and ends in Eyüp in the central-western part of the city, following a route south to the seafront area of Eminönü. Among other sights, it passes the Golden Horn, Yenikapı square and Kadir Has University. A 10K run is also hosted for amateur runners and this section had over 1500 finishers in 2016.

The 2016 edition of the race gained IAAF Bronze Label status and the field included world record breakers Zersenay Tadese and Leonard Patrick Komon. That year, the event was staged on the same weekend as the Presidential Cycling Tour of Turkey.

In December 2016, it was announced that the event was promoted to IAAF Gold Label status for 2017.

The race in 2021 ended with a course record in 59:32 by Kenyan Kibiwott Kandie| and a world record for women in 1:04:02 by Kenyan Ruth Chepngetich.

Past winners

Legend:

  • CR: Course record
  • WR: World record
Year Men's winner Time (h:m:s) Women's winner Time (h:m:s)
2014 Fetene Regasa (ETH) 1:05:20 Bahar Doğan (TUR) 1:16:33
2015 Evans Kiplagat (KEN) 1:00:13 Gladys Cherono (KEN) 1:06:37
2016 Ali Kaya (TUR) 1:00:16 Violah Jepchumba (KEN) 1:08:18
2017 Ismail Juma (TAN) 1:00:09 Ruth Chepngetich (KEN) 1:06:19
2018 Amedework Walelegn (ETH) 59:50
CR
Ababel Yeshaneh (ETH) 1:06:22
2019 Benard Ngeno (KEN) 59:56 Ruth Chepngetich (KEN) 1:05:30
CR
2020 Sezgin Ataç (TUR) 1:03:16 Fatma Demir (TUR) 1:13:17
2021 Kibiwott Kandie (KEN) 59:35
CR
Ruth Chepngetich (KEN) 1:04:02
WR
2022 Rodgers Kwemoi (KEN) 59:15
CR
Hellen Obiri (KEN) 1:04:48