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The Army Ten-Miler is the second largest (after the Philadelphia Broad Street Run) ten-mile race in the United States. It is held every October in Arlington, Virginia and Washington, D.C., sponsored by the U.S. Army Military District of Washington.
Army Ten-Miler | |
---|---|
Date | October |
Location | Washington, D.C., Arlington County, Virginia, U.S. |
Event type | Road |
Distance | 10 miles (16 km) |
Established | 1985 |
Official site | www.armytenmiler.com/ |
The annual race weekend events also include a youth run, a youth activity fair, and a pre-race pasta dinner. The race draws a large number of civilian and military running teams. The most recent race was held on Sunday, October 13, 2024.
History
editThe race started in 1985 by fitness officials connected with the Army Headquarters staff in the Pentagon. In the early years, it was led by staff assigned to the Pentagon with the logistic support of the Military District of Washington. Subsequently, the program was reassigned to the Military District, where it is headed by a year-round, full-time professional staff. The race course is USA Track and Field certified and is mostly flat, fast and picturesque.
Notable field sizes
editThe 2007 race was held on Sunday, October 7, 2007 with 26,000 runners entered, and a record 17,000 finishing the 10 mile route.[citation needed] That record lasted only one year until October 6, 2008, when there were a total of 18,789 finishers.[1][2] The 2009 race was held on Sunday, October 4, 2009. There were course records set for both the men and women's race. Alene Reta, from Ethiopia, captured the men's race in 46:59 and Samia Akbar, from Herndon, Virginia, won the women's race in 55:25. 21,256 runners finished the race, making it the largest ten mile run in the United States.[3] On the same day, nine-hundred runners from fifteen nations participated in a "shadow" run held on Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan.[4]
The 2010 race set Army Ten Miler registration records, with 30,000 runner slots being sold in only 35 hours.[5] 21,636 runners finished the race,[6] with Alene Reta, from Ethiopia, defending the men's title in 47:10 and Aziza Abate, from Ellicott City, Maryland, winning the women's race in 55:54.[7] During race week, deployed servicemembers and civilians participated in "shadow" runs at six bases in Afghanistan, five bases in Iraq, and one camp in Djibouti, Africa.[4]
By 2018, the race had grown to 35,000 entrants.[8]
Champions
editYear | Field | Male | Female | Master Male | Master Female |
1995 | 7,110 | Ronnie Harris, 48:59 | Susan Molloy, 56:20 | Chuck Moeser, 53:29 | Patricia Donohue, 1:06:20 |
1996 | 7,579 | Michael Berstein, 47:59 | Chris Udovich, 58:35 | David Wannewurf, 52:24 | Linda Wack, 1:03:16 |
1997 | 9,404 | Dan Browne, 47:44 | Chris Udovich, 56:58 | Tom Borschel, 52:44 | Cathy Ventura-Merkel, 1:03:33 |
1998 | 11,472 | Dan Browne, 48:52 | Alisa Harvey, 58:56 | Chuck Moeser, 53:14 | Patti Shull, 1:00:10 |
1999 | 11,453 | Chris Graff, 48:21 | Alisa Harvey, 57:47 | Sammy Ngatia, 50:46 | Patti Shull, 1:03:11 |
2000 | 11,935 | Sammy Ngatia, 48:50 | Naoko Ishibe, 56:40 | Sammy Ngatia, 48:50 (Event Record) | Patricia Clifford, 1:05:17 |
2002 | 11,904 | Ryan Kirkpatrick, 48:35 | Casey Smith, 58:21 | Sammy Ngatia, 51:17 | Martha Merz, 59:49 |
2003 | 13,198 | John Henwood, 48:49 | Alisa Harvey, 59:29 | John Colpeck, 53:14 | Martha Merz, 1:00:36 |
2004 | 13,071 | Dan Browne 47:32 | Casey Smith 57:32 | Sammy Ngatia, 52:47 | Martha Merz, 1:00:57 |
2006 | 15,589 | Jared Nyamboki, 48:24 | Alisa Harvey, 59:00 | Marty Muchow, 53:25 | Alisa Harvey, 59:00 |
2007 | 17,641 | Jose Ferreira, 49:21 | Firaya Zhdanova, 58:31 | Mike Scannell, 54:31 | Firaya Zhdanova, 58:31 (Event Record) |
2008 | 18,789 | Reginaldo Campos Jr., 48:59 | Veena Reddy, 58:08 | Mike Scannell, 53:01 | Alisa Harvey, 1:00:57 |
2009 | 21,256 | Alene Reta, 46:59 (Event Record) | Samia Akbar, 55:25 (Event Record) | Sergey Kaledin, 52:34 | Elena Kaledina, 1:00:35 |
2010 | 21,636 | Alene Reta, 47:10 | Aziza Abate, 55:54 | ||
2018 | 24,659[9] | Franline Tonui, 50.23 | Susan Tanui, 56.33 | ||
2019 | 35,000 | Lawi Lalang,48.38 | Elvin Kibet,54.05[10] | ||
2022 | Luke Peterson, 49:59 | Jenny Simpson, 54.15[11] | |||
2023 | Michael Jordan, 49:23 | Elvin Kibet, 54:51 |
References
edit- ^ Hage, Jim (2008-10-06). "Motivated Campos Wins Army 10-Miler". Washington Post. pp. E3. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
- ^ Nearman, Steve (2008-10-07). "Campos, Reddy Top Fields at Army Ten-Miler". Running USA Wire. Archived from the original on 9 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
- ^ Hage, Jim (October 4, 2009). "New Records All Around at Army Ten-Miler". Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-10-04.
- ^ a b "Army Ten-Miler Shadow Runs". Archived from the original on 7 December 2008. Retrieved 27 December 2009.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-05. Retrieved 2010-10-26.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Army Ten-Miler Home". Armytenmiler.com. 2015-10-11. Archived from the original on 2011-12-11. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ Video by Rick Vasquez, Jeff Schogol. "Reta defends his championship in annual Army Ten-Miler - Sports". Stripes. Retrieved 2016-10-09.
- ^ Domen, John (2018-10-07). "Thousands turn out for Army Ten-Miler". WTOP News. Retrieved 2022-11-07.
- ^ Jacob, Jay. "Army Ten Miler results". Retrieved 2022-11-07.
- ^ "Winners crowned at the 35th Annual Army Ten-Miler in DC". WJLA. 2019-10-13. Retrieved 2022-11-07.
- ^ Metzler, Brian (2022-10-10). "Emily Sisson Breaks American Marathon Record, Jenny Simpson Wins Army Ten Miler and More". Women's Running. Retrieved 2022-11-07.