『#150 - Cape Town Marathon 2026 Review: Will It Become the 8th World Major?』のカバーアート

#150 - Cape Town Marathon 2026 Review: Will It Become the 8th World Major?

#150 - Cape Town Marathon 2026 Review: Will It Become the 8th World Major?

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
Fresh off the 2026 Sanlam Cape Town Marathon (held May 24), we deliver a full runner-focused debrief covering the stunning atmosphere, expo experience, safety lessons, and the big question: Is Cape Town ready to join the Abbott World Marathon Majors as Africa’s first? With ~27,000 runners, course records shattered, and Eliud Kipchoge on course, this was a landmark edition.1. Review of the 2026 Cape Town MarathonField & Results: ~27,000 runners. Ethiopian dominance with new course records — Mohamed Esa (men) 2:04:55 (African all-comers’ record, smashing the previous 2:08:16) and Dera Dida Yami (women) 2:23:18. Eliud Kipchoge finished 16th in 2:13:29, kicking off his World Tour.Atmosphere: Vibrant, scenic, and electric. Runners praised the Table Mountain views, city landmarks, supportive locals, and festive energy. A true “bucket-list” destination race with strong community spirit and cultural warmth. Some noted pro-Palestine chants and typical big-city buzz.Expo: Excellent feedback — well-organized at DHL Stadium with great flow, strong international + local brand presence (Adidas, Nike, etc.), good merchandise selection and sizing. Described as immersive and efficient.Course: Scenic and challenging elevation (~260m), well-supported water stations, and fast for many. cumulative -21 km uphill & 20km downhill First-timers enjoy the views.Organization: Resilient comeback from the 2025 wind cancellation. Strong safety focus, good logistics, and positive production quality.2. What Makes a Major?Abbott World Marathon Majors evaluate candidate races (like Cape Town) over multiple years on strict criteria:High organizational standards and reliabilityRunner safety and experienceElite fields and competitive depthSpectator engagement and global broadcast appealInclusivity, legacy impact, and consistent excellenceRaces must pass evaluation for two consecutive years. Cape Town is in the final stage (provisional stars issued for 2026 finishers — fully recognized if it passes). Sydney became the 7th Major recently; Cape Town is pushing hard to be the 8th (and Africa’s first).3. Final Verdict: Would We Run It & Should It Be the Next World Major?Would we run it? Absolutely yes. Stunning destination, strong organization, bucket-list scenery, and welcoming vibe make it a top recommendation — especially for runners seeking an African adventure with world-class execution. Great for tourism + racing combo.Should it be the next World Major? Strong yes. 2026 delivered record performances, solid numbers, and passed key tests after the 2025 weather challenge proved their safety-first approach. It has the heart, organization, and global appeal to join the elite group. Announcement likely late 2026/early 2027 if final criteria are met.Key Takeaways & Listener TipsPrioritize safety: Cape Town is beautiful but use standard big-city awareness (groups at night, popular areas).Expo strategy: Arrive mid-week for best selection.Training note: Prepare for rolling hills and potential wind.Why go: One of the most scenic marathons globally with genuine warmth.👟 Flying RuNR Reminder: Finish Lines. Not Finish TimesLove our music, check Out Your Pace & Gloryhttps://my.linkpod.site/YourPaceandGlory Read how CurraNz Blackcurrant extract improves performance. https://flyingrunr.com/2024/07/21/enhance-your-performance-with-curranz/ Special one-time code available to trial FLYINGRUN20Find all of our Links here - https://my.linkpod.site/flyingrunr Love our Music - Connect with Your Pace & Glory. Exciting new songs coming through. https://my.linkpod.site/YourPace-Glory This video contains no sponsored content or affiliate links.For business inquiries, please contact us at: happyrunning@flyingrunr.com
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません