2004 London Marathon

The 2004 London Marathon was the 24th running of the annual marathon race in London, United Kingdom, which took place on Sunday 18 April. The race was the coldest London Marathon in history, and the wettest race in history until it was surpassed in 2020.

24th London Marathon
VenueLondon, United Kingdom
Date18 April 2004
Champions
MenEvans Rutto (2:06:18)
WomenMargaret Okayo (2:22:35)
Wheelchair menSaúl Mendoza (1:36:56)
Wheelchair womenFrancesca Porcellato (2:04:58)
← 2003
2005 →

The elite men's race was won by Kenya's Evans Rutto in a time of 2:06:18 and the women's race was won in 2:22:35 by Margaret Okayo, also of Kenya. In the wheelchair races, Mexico's Saúl Mendoza (1:36:56) and Italy's Francesca Porcellato (2:04:58) won the men's and women's divisions, respectively. In the mass-participation race, a total of 31,659 runners, 23,265 men and 8,394 women, finished the race.

Competitors

The men's race featured 2003 winner Gezahegne Abera and Evans Rutto, whose debut time at the 2003 Chicago Marathon was the fastest first race time by anyone,[1] and was enough to win the event.[2] Sammy Korir, who had recorded the second fastest marathon of all-time also competed,[1] as did Moroccan world champion Jaouad Gharib.[3] Paul Tergat, the world record holder in the men's marathon, did not compete due to an injury.[4]

The women's race featured Margaret Okayo, who had won two New York City Marathons, and Sun Yingjie was a favourite for the race.[5] Sun had set the third fastest time ever at the 2003 Beijing Marathon. Paula Radcliffe, who won the 2003 race did not compete;[6] she had set the women's marathon world record at that event.[7]

Race summary

Margaret Okayo won the elite women's race.
Francesca Porcellato won the women's wheelchair race

The elite and wheelchair races started in dry conditions, though the course became wet later on.[8] It was the coldest London Marathon in history, as the temperature was 5.3 °C (41.5 °F) at the start of the races.[9] There was 12.4 millimetres (0.49 in) of rain during the race, making it at the time the wettest London Marathon event in history;[10] the 2020 London Marathon later surpassed the 2004 race for amount of rain, as it was run during Storm Alex.[9]

The men's race was won by Kenyan Evans Rutto. Sammy Korir finished second and Jaouad Gharib finished third.[1] Gezahegne Abera withdrew from the race after about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi).[1] Rutto, Korir and John Yuda Msuri broke away from the pack around 25 kilometres (16 mi) into the race, and Yuda was distanced from the pair about 6 miles (9.7 km) from the finish line.[1] During the race, Rutto fell on a cobblestone section near to the Tower of London and brought down Korir;[1] the 2005 race was rerouted to avoid these cobblestones.[11][12] At the time, Rutto's time of 2:06:18 was the best finishing time for a marathon that year. Rutto was not selected in the Kenyan team for the 2004 Summer Olympics, as Korir was chosen instead.[2] Jon Brown was the highest place British finisher, and he finished faster than the Olympic qualifying time.[1]

The women's race was won by Kenyan Margaret Okayo,[5] ahead of Lyudmila Petrova in second,[2] and Constantina Diță in third.[5] It was the first time that Kenyan athletes had won both the men's and women's London Marathon events in the same year.[2] Okayo fell behind the leading pack containing Diță after around 10 miles (16 km) of the race, but caught and passed the leaders around 20 miles (32 km) into the race.[5] Diță was overtaken in the closing stages of the race.[5] Tracey Morris was the highest finishing Briton in the race;[5] as a result, she was selected for the British marathon team for the 2004 Summer Olympics, alongside Paula Radcliffe and Liz Yelling.[13]

The men's wheelchair race was won by Mexican Saúl Mendoza, with David Weir finishing second.[14] During the race, Mendoza accidentally followed a police motorbike which diverted him away from the course.[15]

The women's wheelchair race was won by Italian Francesca Porcellato for the second successive year. Briton Paula Craig finished second, with Swedish debutant Gunilla Wallengren finishing third.[14]

Non-elite race

Tony Audenshaw, pictured here in 2011, was the first celebrity to finish.

The mass-participation event had three start points.[3] The races from those locations were started by former runner Roger Bannister, rugby union player Jonny Wilkinson and then IAAF president Lamine Diack respectively.[8] A total of 108,000 people applied to enter the race: 45,219 had their applications accepted and 32,746 started the race.[16] A total of 31,659 runners, 23,265 men and 8,394 women, finished the race.[17] Finishers included Fauja Singh, who was aged 93,[8] and finished in a time of 6:07:13.[18] Singh was the oldest finisher at any London Marathon.[19]

Emmerdale star Tony Audenshaw was the first celebrity to finish, and other notable celebrity participants included chefs Gordon Ramsay and Michel Roux, as well as jockey Richard Dunwoody, former cricketer Graham Gooch, former swimmer Adrian Moorhouse, former England football manager Graham Taylor,[8] former leader of the Conservative Party Iain Duncan Smith and politician Jeffrey Archer.[15]

Results

Note: Only the top 20 finishers are listed.

Men

Elite men's top 20 finishers[20]
PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Evans Rutto  Kenya2:06:20
Sammy Korir  Kenya2:06:48
Jaouad Gharib  Morocco2:07:12
4Stefano Baldini  Italy2:08:37
5Tesfaye Tola  Ethiopia2:09:07
6Benoît Zwierzchiewski  France2:09:35
7Abdelkader El Mouaziz  Morocco2:09:42
8Lee Troop  Australia2:09:42
9John Yuda Msuri  Tanzania2:10:13
10Joseph Kadon  Kenya2:11:30
11Joseph Ngolepus  Kenya2:12:02
12William Kiplagat  Kenya2:12:04
13Sisay Bezabeh  Australia2:12:05
14Scott Westcott  Australia2:13:30
15Jon Brown  United Kingdom2:13:39
16Dan Robinson  United Kingdom2:13:53
17Nikolaos Polias  Greece2:15:02
18Chris Cariss  United Kingdom2:15:08
19Huw Lobb  United Kingdom2:15:49
20Mark Hudspith  United Kingdom2:16:15

Women

Elite women's top 20 finishers[20]
PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Margaret Okayo  Kenya2:22:35
Lyudmila Petrova  Russia2:26:02
Constantina Diță  Romania2:26:52
4Albina Mayorova  Russia2:27:25
5Joyce Chepchumba  Kenya2:28:01
6Svetlana Zakharova  Russia2:28:10
7Yingjie Sun  China2:28:32
8Alina Ivanova  Russia2:28:48
9Svetlana Demidenko  Russia2:33:06
10Tracey Morris  United Kingdom2:33:52
11Birhan Dagne  United Kingdom2:34:45
12Jackie Gallagher  Australia2:34:48
13Jo Lodge  United Kingdom2:34:49
14Michelle Lee  United Kingdom2:35:51
15Sue Harrison  United Kingdom2:38:20
16Michaela McCullum  United Kingdom2:39:10
17Mara Yamauchi  United Kingdom2:39:15
18Spyridoula Souma  Greece2:40:34
19Valerie Young  Ireland2:41:32
20Susan Partridge  United Kingdom2:41:44

Wheelchair men

Wheelchair men's finishers[20]
PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Saúl Mendoza  Mexico1:36:56
David Weir  United Kingdom1:42:50
Alain Fuss  France1:45:25
4Tushar Patel  United Kingdom1:51:03
5Jeff Adams  Canada1:59:07
6Jason Richards  United Kingdom2:00:11
7Andrew Cheek  United Kingdom2:03:31
8Daniel Kukla  Slovenia2:05:02
9Steve Williamson  United Kingdom2:18:42
10Geof Allen  United Kingdom2:21:44

Wheelchair women

Wheelchair women's finishers[20]
PositionAthleteNationalityTime
Francesca Porcellato  Italy2:04:58
Paula Craig  United Kingdom2:07:52
Gunilla Wallengren  Sweden2:14:13
4Michelle Lewis  United Kingdom2:52:27

References

Results