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Giro al Sas

Coordinates: 46°04′04″N 11°07′17″E / 46.06778°N 11.12139°E / 46.06778; 11.12139
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Giro al Sas
The Piazza del Duomo is the race start and finish point
DateMid-October
LocationTrento, Italy Italy
Event typeRoad
Distance10 km
Established1907
Official siteGiro al Sas

The Giro al Sas, also known as the Giro Podistico di Trento and the Giro Internazionale Città di Trento, is an annual 10-kilometre road running competition for men which takes place in October in the city of Trento, Italy.

First held as a part of celebrations for Saint Vigilius of Trent in 1907, the competition was interrupted by World Wars but has been held virtually every year since 1945. This makes it one of Europe's longest-running competitions of its type. The race has been won by some of Italy's most successful long-distance runners, including Stefano Baldini, as well as elite foreign athletes such as Paul Tergat and Kenenisa Bekele.

The race is held within the city centre and starts and finishes at Piazza del Duomo. The name of the race, roughly translated as the Sas Circuit, derives from the fact that the course features ten kilometre-long loops on the main city streets – which are locally referred to as al Sas.

The running event should not be confused with the similarly named Giro del Trentino – a road cycling competition which the city has hosted since 1963.[1]

History

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The history of the competition can be traced back to 1907 when a community group organised a race on the city streets of roughly 6 km as part of the festival of Saint Vigilius of Trent. Domenico Gottin, a runner from Veneto, was the first to cross the line but he was later disqualified for taking a short cut, leaving Isidoro Trenner (a member of the local sports club) as the winner of the inaugural race. The race became an annual tradition, although it ceased during World War I.[2]

Trento Cathedral is central to the race circuit.

It re-emerged in the post-war period and gained its current moniker of the Giro al Sas at this point – a name roughly meaning the Sas Circuit, which derived from the race's looped course on the city's main streets which were known as the Sas. The running competition was placed on hiatus from 1940–44 due to World War II. The Giro al Sas returned to the streets in November 1945, just months after the Italy's surrender to the Allied Forces.[2]

After the wars, the race entered a new, uninterrupted era (with the exception of 1991 and 1996) and gradually became international in nature with elite athlete competition. Alongside other Italian races, such as the Giro di Castelbuono, it is among the oldest road running competitions which continue to the present day. The current race director is Gianni Demadonna, a former athlete and athletics manager who won the race three times in his running career.[3] Among the prominent competitors of the race's history is Stefano Baldini, the 2004 Olympic marathon champion, who competed in 18 editions and won on three occasions.[4] He set the 2010 race as his final outing of his successful career, although an injury forced him to miss of the competition.[5] Other significant winners include Franjo Mihalić, Francesco Panetta, Paul Tergat, and Kenenisa Bekele.[6]

Course and records

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An overview of the city and the streets where the race takes place

The course of the race has varied through its history: it was a 15 km race in the 1960s, before existing as a 12 km circuit from 1970 to the mid-1990s. From 1997 to 2004, the race typically featured ten laps spanning 10.9 km. It has been a 10 km race from 2005 to present.[7] The current course of ten 1 km laps features many twists and bends as it traces a circular loop around the central city streets,[8] making fast times difficult to achieve in the Trento race.[9]

Paul Kimaiyo Kimugul of Kenya holds the fastest time for the 10 km distance via his winning run of 28:00 minutes from 2005. Over the 10.9 km circuit, another Kenyan – Paul Kosgei Malakwen – has the course record with 30:46 minutes.[7] Although it has almost exclusively been a men's race only for its entire history, a women's competition was added to the programme for the 2005 edition – this 10 km race was won in 33:15 minutes by Bruna Genovese, an Italian professional marathon runner.[9]

Past winners

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Little information about the race (or its winners) in its early history is available and the modern competition regards its post-war rebirth in 1945 as the start of its modern, continuous lineage.[7]

Italy's Stefano Baldini is a three-time winner of the race.
Former world record holder Paul Tergat was victorious at the 1997 race.
Kenenisa Bekele, a multiple Olympic champion on the track, won in 2001.
A one-off women's race in 2005 was won by Bruna Genovese.

Key:   12 km race   10.9 km race   10 km race

Year Men's winner Time (m:s)
1945  Elvio Schiavini (ITA) ?
1946  Giovanni Nocco (ITA) ?
1947  Giovanni Nocco (ITA) ?
1948  ? Roetzer (AUT) ?
1949  Giuseppe Beviacqua (ITA) ?
1950  Giovanni Nocco (ITA) ?
1951  ? Ceraj (YUG) ?
1952  ? Page (SUI) ?
1953  Walter Konrad (GER) ?
1954  D Stritof (YUG) ?
1955  Walter Konrad (GER) ?
1956  Giacomo Peppicelli (ITA) ?
1957  Franjo Mihalić (YUG) ?
1958  Silvio de Florentis (ITA) ?
1959  Franjo Mihalić (YUG) ?
1960  Franjo Mihalić (YUG) ?
1961  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1962  Franco Antonelli (ITA) ?
1963  Nedjalko Farcic (YUG) 48:0 (15 km)
1964  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1965  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1966  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1967  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1968  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1969  Antonio Ambu (ITA) ?
1970  Lutz Philipp (GER) 35:56
1971  Giuseppe Ardizzone (ITA) 36:36.2
1972  Werner Dössegger (SUI) 36:39.3
1973  Werner Dössegger (SUI) ?
1974  Luigi Lauro (ITA) ?
1975  Primo Gretter (ITA) 37:52.2
1976  Primo Gretter (ITA) 37:47
1977  Luigi Zarcone (ITA) ?
1978  Domingo Tibaduiza (COL) 36:47.9
1979  Luigi Zarcone (ITA) ?
1980  Gianni Demadonna (ITA) 36:45.2
1981  Venanzio Ortis (ITA) 36:50.1
1982  Robert McDonald (AUS) 36:42.9
1983  Gianni Demadonna (ITA) 36:18.4
1984  Mike McLeod (ENG) 37:13.3
1985  Gianni Demadonna (ITA) 37:00.1
1986  Andrew Masai (KEN) 36:55.3
1987  Francesco Panetta (ITA) 35:57.8
1988  Francesco Panetta (ITA) 35:43.7
1989  Said Ermili (MAR) 36:32.7
1990  Abderrahim Zitouna (MAR) 28:01.4
1991 Not held
1992  Eliud Barngetuny (KEN) 35:04
1993  Thierry Pantel (FRA) 36:04
1994  Jonah Koech Kimurgor (KEN) 35:53.2
1995  Andrew Masai (KEN) 35:58.5
1996 Not held
1997  Paul Tergat (KEN) 31:15
1998  Giuliano Battocletti (ITA) ?
1999  John Cheruiyot Korir (KEN) 31:05
2000  Paul Kosgei Malakwen (KEN) 30:46
2001  Kenenisa Bekele (ETH) 30:49
2002  Stefano Baldini (ITA) 30:50.6
2003  Martin Sulle (TAN) 28:34
2004  Stefano Baldini (ITA) 31:21.1
2005  Paul Kimaiyo Kimugul (KEN) 28:00
2006  Stefano Baldini (ITA) 28:43
2007  Moses Mosop (KEN) 29:59 (10.5 km)
2008  Moses Mosop (KEN) 28:29
2009  Edwin Soi (KEN) 29:25
2010  Edwin Soi (KEN) 28:45.9
2011  Edwin Soi (KEN) 29:16
2012  Edwin Soi (KEN) 28:43
2013  Edwin Soi (KEN) 29:01
2014  Muktar Edris (ETH) 28:52
2015  Muktar Edris (ETH) 28:46
2016  Abdallah Mande (UGA) 28:47
2017  Muktar Edris (ETH) 28:54
2018  Jacob Kiplimo (UGA) 28:17
2019  Telahun Bekele (ETH) 28:09
2021  Muktar Edris (ETH) 28:13

Statistics

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Albo d’oro dal 1962 al 2009 Archived 2010-12-07 at the Wayback Machine. Giro al Trentino. Retrieved on 2010-11-03.
  2. ^ a b Un balzo nel passato Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine (in Italian). Giro al Sas. Retrieved on 2010-11-03.
  3. ^ Olympic champion Baldini accelerates comfortably to Trento victory. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-11-03.
  4. ^ Baldini says goodbye at the Giro al Sas. European Athletics (2010-10-06). Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
  5. ^ Soi defends title at Giro Al Sas. IAAF (2010-10-10). Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
  6. ^ Albo d'Oro Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Giro al Sas. Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
  7. ^ a b c Malcolm Heyworth et al (2010-10-12). Giro al Sas 10 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
  8. ^ Mappa Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Giro al Sas. Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
  9. ^ a b Zorzi, Alberto (2005-10-10). Kimugul defeats Baldini. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-11-05.
List of winners
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46°04′04″N 11°07′17″E / 46.06778°N 11.12139°E / 46.06778; 11.12139