Author: The Author
Finlay Wild: Running Career Overview
Finlay Wild is a name known almost exclusively to the hill running fraternity although it should be well known to all endurance runners in Scotland at the very least. After this look at some of his running achievements, we will have a page done following an extended conversation that Denis Bell had with Finlay.
He was born on 8 September 1984 in Thurso. It was maybe inevitable that he would be an enthusiast for the great outdoors right from the start: his father Roger Wild, was a mountain guide, and his mother Fiona (née Hinde) was an accomplished hill runner who won the Three Peaks Race in 1981 and the Carnethy 5 in both 1981 and 1982. Finlay was educated at Fort William primary and Lochaber High School before heading to the University of Aberdeen where he graduated with a medical degree and he now works as a GP in Lochaber. So much for his background which all (where he has always lived, parents occupation and involvement) point to a love of the hills. We can go on from there to have a look at his career as a hill runner.
His first hill race is said to be at Ben Rinnes at the age of 21. Held in conjunction with the Dufftown Highland Games, it is really three hills – there are the two tops of Little and Meikle Conval before the Ben Rinnes summit with the return via the same trail making it a total of 22 kilometres with 1500m of ascent. It is however through his superb running on Ben Nevis that his hill running talents have been shown to best advantage. Winning the race once is an achievement, to win it as often has he has is however a wonderful almost incomparable achievement. He first won it in 2010 and every year since! The ‘Press & Journal began its report in 2019 as follows:
“A doctor made it 10 in a row when he won a gruelling race up and down the UK’s highest mountain. Fort William GP Finlay Wild fought off competition from 450 other athletes to win the Ben Nevis race for the 10th time on Saturday. He conquered the 4,411ft mountain in 1 hour, 32 minutes and five seconds.
Despite falling on part of the route, Dr Wild was 17 minutes and 47 seconds ahead of his nearest challenger, fellow Lochaber Athletic Club member John Yells. The 35-year-old said: “When I won it the first time I was absolutely shocked so I never thought this would happen and I would be here with 10. I feel quite shocked really as it was very unexpected.
“It is a great local event that attracts people from all over and it is great to see so many people. “I am sure I will be back next year.”
Unfortunately he was not able to go back in 2020 because there was no race due to the Covid crisis – and as a GP he was probably working flat out at the time anyway.
There are some, many, runners who favour a particular event and run better there than anywhere else but that does not apply to Finlay Wild. He has the same high standards and displays them on short hill races, long hill races, the various ’rounds and, in short, in any event in which he takes part. Note the following:
- In 2012, he set a new course record for the Glamaig Hill Race, breaking the previous best set by top class internationalist Mark Rigby in 1997. He improved his own record by a further five seconds in 2018.
- Wild’s other wins include the Carnethy 5, Goatfell races 2013–2015, the Isle of Jura 2015-2017, Stuc a Chroin, the Ennerdale Horseshoe and the Langdale Horseshoe. He won the British Fell Running Championship in 2015. The heights and distances tend to be on the long side – Langdale is 21 km in distance and 4760 ft of ascent, Stuc a Chroin is 24 km and 5000 feet of ascent, Isle of Jura is 28 km and 2370 m of ascent and Ennerdale is 36.8 km and 2290 feet. As an indication 21 km is 13 miles and 36.8 km is over 22 miles.
- He also has the fastest known time for the Cuillin Ridge traverse on Skye, completing the crossing in 2:59:22 in 2013. In February 2016, Wild and Tim Gomersall made a winter crossing of the Cuillin Ridge in a time of 6:14. There is an excellent report on his record in the UK Climbing website which sums the feat up in this quote: “On Saturday 12th October Finlay Wild broke the speed record for the Cuillin Ridge traverse for the second time in a year, knocking a hefty 15 minutes from his previous record to log the first sub-three-hour completion of Britain’s greatest mountaineering route. So how on earth did he manage to get from the summit of Gars-bheinn at the south end of the ridge to the top of Sgurr nan Gillean in the north, in just 2hrs 59mins 22secs”?
- In 2016, Wild’s results in the Tromso Sky Race (Norway: 33 km and 2000m of ascent) and the Glen Coe Skyline gave him third place in the Extreme section of the Skyrunner World Series.
- In October 2016, he set a record time of 10:15:30 for Tranter’s Round in the mountains around Glen Nevis. He further reduced the record to 9:00:05 in July 2020. Note that the second record was 75 minutes faster than the first – a huge lump off the time. Often, almost always, a runner going for a record round has pacers, guides or companions assisting but not this time for Finlay Wild. This quote about the run from the following link Finlay Wild breaks his own Tranter’s Round record – FionaOutdoors says “Finlay ran the Tranter’s Round solo and unsupported. He said: “Only a few people knew I was out for a record attempt against myself, so there didn’t feel like there was much pressure. This keeps stress levels low and makes it just an enjoyable big day out in the hills.” Finlay thoroughly enjoyed the run, He said: “It was a high watching the weather improve into the afternoon, just as I had hoped it would from an optimistic interpretation of the forecast. “It was great to take an hour and 15 minutes off my previous record, too. Even missing a sub-nine-hours wasn’t disappointing because I feel I made a concerted push to try for it over many hours, so I ran as well as I could have hoped.”
- In May 2019, Wild ran the Welsh 3000s in a time of 4:10:48 which broke the long-standing record of 4:19 held by fellow Scot Colin Donnelly since 1988.
- Wild set a record for the Ramsay Round in August 2020, completing the route solo and unsupported in a time of 14:42:40. Note that like the Tranter Round a month earlier it was a solo and unsupported run over some of the most difficult terrain the United Kingdom. It was also a huge chunk off the previous record – a massive 90 minutes. And it was done as a solo attempt with scarcely one month between the two. We should maybe look at the two Rounds. The photograph below is of Finlay after setting the Ramsay Round record and you can read about it at Finlay Wild sets new Ramsay Round record – FionaOutdoors
Hill Runners from all countries and of all standards seem to collect ’rounds’ with every country having its own tough round of hill, tops, peaks to be completed against the clock. And the various countries have other rounds. The two Scottish ones mentioned above are worth a look. The Tranter Round first. Described by the Gofar website as follows – “Named after Philip Tranter, who first completed it in 1964, this is considered to be Scotland’s original 24 hour challenge, before being extended by Charlie Ramsay in 1978. It is a round of some 36 miles and over 20,000′ taking in 19 Munros in the Mamores, Grey Corries and Aonachs together with Carn Mor Dearg and Ben Nevis. It still remains a creditable and rewarding challenge in its own right. ” Note the reference to the Ramsay Round which is the big challenge for Scottish Hill Runners. For a description of the Ramsay Round we go to the appropriate website of https://www.ramsaysround.co.uk/tranters-round which reads
Ramsay’s Round is an extension of Tranter’s round which started in Glen Nevis. Travelling anticlockwise he completed all of the Mamores, (10 munros) thereafter he crossed the valley and onto the Grey corries (4 munros) before ascending onto the Aonachs (2 munros) and onwards towards Carn Mor Dearg, culminating on Ben Nevis, (2 munros) Great Britain’s highest mountain, finishing back at Glen Nevis. Following the completion of the Mamores at Sgurr Eilde Mor continue eastwards towards the South end of Loch Treig, continue onto the summit of Beinn na Lap, thereafter head for Chno Dearg then onto the summit of Stob Coire Sgriodain, before descending to the north end of Loch Treig, thereafter start the steady climb onto the Easains, before descending down to the Lairig Leacach, finally start the ascent onto the summit of Stob Ban joining up and continuing onto Tranter’s Round.”
To set records for both within a month and break the previous best time by so much indicates a runner of tremendous talent and determination.
And the hill and fell running is not quite enough for the full display of Wild’s talents. He has also competed in ski mountaineering and was the British champion in that sport in 2016 as well as the Scottish Skimo series winner in the 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 seasons.
We have a record of his running career from 2006 to 2020 at this link – Finlay’s Racing Record
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Some Post 1945 Track Programmes
Programmes loom large in the life of athletes – in championships they are scrutinised to find out who the opposition is and who is in their heat, in Highland |Gatherings it is to see who is in their heat but maybe more importantly to see what the handicaps are – the opposition’s as well as your own. During the cross country season the map of the trail is the thing as well as the timing of the other age group races scheduled. Looking back at old programmes is informative on all these fronts and are also a font of information on social and sporting history. At a personal level, athletes often keep the main programmes in which they themselves feature. We have a small number available here – just click on the name of the meeting that you you are interested in. The Bute programme is part of the profile of the Games. We can add to these programmes, depending on the interest shown.
SAAA Championships 1956 Glasgow Police Sports, 1956 SAAA Championships 1958
Scottish Universities Championships 1959 Scottish Universities Championships 1961
Bute Highland Games Cowal Highland Games, 1971
We also have some very old programmes –
Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Celtic Park 1905 Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Celtic Park 1906 Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Ibrox Park, 1909 Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Kilbowie Park, 1914 . Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Dunoon 1905 Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Dunoon 1907
Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Ibrox Park, 1921 Clydesdale Harriers Sports at Clydeholm Park, 1927
Clydesdale Harriers Championships at Ibrox Park 1914: May and August
John Brown’s Welfare Sports, 1949 Motherwell YMCA Sports, 1949
Scottish Marathon Miscellany
The Scottish Marathon Championship was first run in 1946 and in the almost 75 years since then it has seen small fields, large fields, it has been contested by runners of all sizes and had its share of incidents many of which were dramatic, some of which were funny but the event has never been colourless. Scotsmen were running, racing and winning British and Commonwealth Games marathons for two decades before the first national championship was held. The champions and championships receive coverage and homage elsewhere on the website: this page notes some of the lesser known facts and points out some of the personages who have taken part
- There were marathons run in Scotland for the first part of the 20th century but the distances were often of various distance with the word marathon meaning simply a long road race.
- The proper marathon distance was covered at Powderhall in 1909 after the London Olympics of 1908
- Before the Second World War there were no Scottish marathon championships but the AAA’s Championships were held from 1925 when Dunky Wright was third and second in 1928. The 1930’s were the best decade for Scots in terms of success at British level. Dunky Wright won in 1930 and 1931 and his Maryhill Harriers team mate Donald McNab Robertson won in 1932, ’33, ’34, 36, ’37 and ’39. Wright also had a second place in 1932 and Robertson was second in ’46 and third in ’47. They won 8 out of 10 AAA’s championships between 1930 and 1939.
- In the period from 1925 to 2019 McNab Robertson won the British event more than any other runner and Wright was the fourth most prolific winner.
- Scottish winners since McNab Robertson in’39 were Jim Alder in 1967, Allister Hutton in 1990, Andrew Lemoncello in 2010, Derek Hawkins in 2013 and Calum Hawkins in 2016.
- Scots filled the first three places in the AAA’s in 1967 – Alder (2:16:08), A Wood (2:16:21 and D Macgregor (2:17:19), and again in 2016 – C Hawkins (2:10:52), T Tewelde (2:12:23) and D Hawkins (2:12:51).
- The most prolific winner of the SAAA Championship was Alastair Wood (Aberdeen AAC) with 6 wins between 1962 and 1972, followed by Fraser Clyne (Aberdeen) with 5 victories between 1992 and 1997.
- The Aberdeen record in the event has been remarkable with Wood and Clyne followed by Colin Youngson with 3, and Peter Wilson, Graham Laing and George Reynolds all with a victory apiece. Club total: 17 gold medals.
- Colin Youngson won 10 medals in 13 starts in the event between 1972 and 1985 – 3 gold, 3 silver and 4 bronze and Don Macgregor won 3 golds and 6 silvers over 21 years between 1965 and 1986. Don Ritchie (Aberdeen AAC/Forres Harriers) also won Scottish Marathon silver medals 21 years apart: between 1967 and 1988.
- Next best club performance was that of Shettleston for whom Joe McGhee ( won 3 golds in a row between 1954 and 1956); and Hugo Fox (2), Harry Howard (1), Brian Carty, John Duffy and Brian Scally all won once. Club total: 9 titles.
- Two runners have won three-in-a-row. Joe McGhee in 1954, 55 and 56 and Fraser Clyne who performed the feat in 1992, 93 and 94 and then ‘did the double’ in 1996 and 97.
- Only one club has produced the first three in the race in the same year. Maryhill Harriers had McNab Robertson first, Dunky Wright second and Andy Burnside third in 1946.
- First runner inside 2:30 was Joe McGhee in 2:25:50 in 1955. First inside 2:20 was Jim Alder in 1970 in 2:17:11 and the only runner inside 2:15 was the Mexican Espinosa in 1999 in 2:14:31.
- Although it was the official Scottish Scottish championship, it has often been won by ‘foreigners’ : in 1989 Ian Bloomfield from England won from Terry Mitchell (Fife) who himself won in 1987 and 1991..
- The first three all came from outwith Scotland twice: in 1990, Chris Tall won from Stan Markley and Brian McEvoy and in 1999 the first three came from outwith Britain: Mexico (Espinosa), Poland (Mokaya) and Kenya (Chelanga).
- The most unlucky (?) runner to run in the SAAA Championship was probably Tommy Rewcastle of Plebeian Harriers on 25th June, 1956. The standard award was for all runners inside 3 hours for the distance that year. 15 men had been inside the time and won the award when Tommy came into the stadium and as he approached the tape, the standard gun, which indicated that time limit for standards had been reached, was fired almost in his face as he crossed the line in 3:00:01 He was denied the standard for the sake of one single second after running for three hours. The feeling among runners on the day was that it was a deliberate attempt to deny him the award because so many had been inside the three hour limit. Incidentally among those unplaced ahead of him were Eddie Campbell of Fort William St Mary’s AC, Harry Haughie and Adam Reid of Springburn, David Anderson of Greenock Wellpark and David Bowman of Clydesdale Harriers.
- For a race that lasts for at least two hours there have been some very dramatic finishes. In 1958 Hugo Fox of Shettleston arrived at Meadowbank to find that the groundsman had not yet opened the entrance. Didn’t faze Hugo though – he climbed the gates, which had spikes on top, and won the race in 2:31:22.
- One of the closest finishes ever anywhere was at the AAA’s championships in 1932 when Dunky Wright led Donald McNab Robertson on to the track at the White City and after a torrid battle between the two Maryhill Harriers, Robertson won by 1.4 seconds.
- Another close finish was in the 1966 British Empire Games when Jim Alder, who had been leading by 15 seconds in the approach to the stadium, was misdirected and the lead went to Bill Adcocks of England. Redirected by Dunky Wright, Jim chased and caught Adcocks on the track to win comfortably in 2:22:07.
- And although they were not Scottish, remember these finishes? Dorando Pietri? The original – Pheidippides? Remember Joe McGhee defeating Jim Peters in Canada? which brings us to
- The Scots runners who have won the British Empire and Commonwealth Games three times. The first games were held in Canada in 1930 and Dunky Wright won that race, Joe McGhee in 1954 and Jim Alder in 1966. There were also two Scots who won medals in the marathon in major Games for other countries – Mike Ryan in Mexico Olympics and Paul Bannon for Canada. Click on their name for the story. Alex Breckenridge formerly of VPAAC, ran for the USA in the Olympics as did Jimmy Duffy for Canada in the 1912 Olympic Marathon.
- There have been many families where two members have run good times for the distance. Just a few: Father and Son: Allan Adams snr (2:23:03) and Allan jnr (2:22:12); Bill Scally (2:24:05) and Brian (2:27:32); Father and Daughter: Alan Partridge (2:22:30) and Susan (2:30:46); Mother and Daughter: Deborah Macdonald and her daughter Katie Husband and Wife/Partner: Allan Adams (2:22:12) and Lynne (2:36:19; Brother and Sister: Doug Gunstone (2:19:07) and Penny Rother (2:53:00); Brothers: Callum Hawkins (2:08:14) and Derek (2:12:49) so far in their marathon running careers; Stuart Easton (2:23:33) and Derek (2:26:53); Jim Spence (2:39:42) and Lawrie (2:16:01). Sisters: Karen Macleod (2:33) and her sister Deborah MacDonald (3:20). Cousins Charlie Haskett (2:18:29) and Gordy (2:23:57).
- Not content with mother/daughter marathons one mother and daughter combination (both Garscube Harriers) has enjoyed considerable success in events including an ultra. Anne White has twice won the W65 category of the prestigious annual British and Irish International Masters Cross-Country, as well as leading her Scottish Masters W65 team to victory. In addition, Anne has completed the Manchester Marathon and is particularly pleased to have finished first W60 in the 2017 Kintyre Way Ultra-Marathon.
Her daughter Katie won the W35 category of the 2017 British and Irish Masters XC; and, also in 2017 set a marathon personal best of 2.40.31 in Frankfurt. Then, on the sixth of October 2019, she finished First Woman in the Loch Ness Marathon, recording 2.42.03. Both mother and daughter won Half-Marathon silver medals in the 2018 World Masters Championships in Malaga, Spain
- The numbers in the early days were low but the numbers in the 1970’s and 80’s were huge with tens of thousands of Scots running marathons the length and breadth of Scotland in times ranging from under 2:15 to outside 6 hours. There were also huge numbers of runners inside 2:30, 2:40 and 2:50 with many women running times that a decade or so earlier were beyond all but the fastest men.
- A Scottish marathon runner set a British record time for the marathon but was not credited with a Scottish best time. The man in question is Alastair Wood who set a British and European best marathon tine in 1966 of 2:13:45 on the Forres course. The time was however not ratified by the SAAA although it was ratified by the GB Board and by the internationally recognised ARRS website. Read about it here.
- Many of the runners raised money for charity and one of the most prolific was Gus Campbell of Clydesdale Harriers who raised tens of thousands of pound for charity. There are many stories about Gus but one of the best which shows the spirit of the time was this one. Running in the Glasgow Marathon he would push a pram and encourage spectators to throw money in to it. It was also where he kept his rolls, sandwiches and drinks. The night before the race he told his workmates that if any of them gave him money on his way round he’d give them a drink of champagne. On the day he was making his way sedately round Bellahouston Park pushing his pram when he met a young lady walking along and crying. He asked what was wrong and she said that she had promises of money but she would never make it to the finish. She was so disappointed. Gus told her that she was like him, just aiming to get to the finish, if she came with him she’d make it. She agreed and he asked if she’d like something to eat. He then asked her what she would like on her roll – cheese or ham? And of course it was washed down with champagne. They made their way to Glasgow Green where her husband was patiently waiting for her. She’d done it! Gus was introduced to her husband as the man who gave her a roll in Bellahouston Park.
- Tommy the Clown from Inverclyde ran many road races including marathons dressed up as a clown and carrying a bucket for spectators to make their donation. And these two men were not alone in using the distance to raise money.
- Now, in the 21st century, marathons are being organised which would have been unrecognisable as such just a few years ago. For instance the RunMhor marathon from Callander to Balquhidder is run mainly on the road but also incorporates some trail running but the finish is what really makes it different: the runners come over a couple of paths through fields and down to a river which is usually 30+ metres wide. There they have to get into a boat to be transported across before running the last half mile to the finish. At the finish they receive a voucher for a free pint of beer. When they get into the boat they are offered a glass of Pimm’s. During the race the seven feeding stations offer peanuts and raisins as well as the usual drinks. The boat has on occasions been held back a minute so that someone else can get in. To be fair, it is described as a Fitness Event and not a race.
- During the period of the ‘running boom’ there were marathons held all over Scotland. In the big cities of Glasgow, Aberdeen, Dundee and Edinburgh there were marathons, in other towns such as Motherwell and Forres, in areas such as Inverclyde, the Black Isle, Loch Rannock, Lochaber, Caithness, Benbecula, Galloway, Shettleston and Dumfries. In one year there were no fewer than 14 marathons held in Scotland from the Borders to Caithness, from Benbecula to the Black Isle.
- The Glasgow Marathon was the biggest and the biggest number to enter the Glasgow Marathon was for the race on 22nd September, 1985 – 11,492. It was won by David Lowes in 2:15:31 with first Scot being Mike Carroll in 2:18:24. First woman was Angie Pain in 2:37:06 while Sandra Branney was first Scotswoman in 2:45:06. There were 55 runners inside 2:30 and 877 inside 3 hours.
- It was also a time when Scottish marathon runners of all standards travelled to Europe, the USA and even further afield to race. Note the following venues visited by some of the top men: Jim Dingwall ran in Enschede, Edmonton, Boston, Bermuda (twice), Israel, China, Spain, Hong Kong, New York and all over the British Isles. Dave Clark: Finland, New York, Essonne, Boston (twice), Tullamore, Chemnitz, Berlin (twice), St Hilaire de Riez (France), Rome, Beijing, Marseilles, Barcelona, Geneva, Montreal, New York, Florence, Rio de Janiero, Tel Aviv and Honolulu as well as all over the British Isles. Note that these were in addition to running in many domestic races. The full list for all the Scos can be seen at http://www.scottishdistancerunninghistory.scot/career-lists-for-some-scottish-marathoners/ . The list includes such as Don Macgregor, Jim Alder, Fergus Murray, Colin Youngson, Fraser Clyne, Andy Daly, Lindsay Robertson, Allister Hutton and others.
Airdrie Highland Games
Coatbridge and Airdrie hosted many very attractive meetings in the 1970’s and 1980’s – many were cross-country championships in Coatbridge and there was the excellently organised Highland Games at Rawyards cinder track in Airdrie. All were well sponsored which helped but the events were what the athletes wanted and very good competitors were always to be seen across the programme. Joe Small has provided the following information about the meetings. He comments that the road race, billed as 13 miles, was possibly under distance: all that can be said on that front is that the trail used for it included 4 mammoth hills which made it 13 miles worth of effort!
Airdrie Highland Games
The town of Airdrie in central Scotland might seem an odd place to hold a `highland games’, but it followed in a tradition of other similarly located places hosting such events, e.g. Shotts, Kirkintilloch, Kilsyth, Bathgate etc. The forerunner of the games was an Airdrie Town Council open sports day held on the 3rd June 1967 at the newly opened Rawyards track. The principal organiser for the games was Neil Taylor, secretary of Airdrie Harriers who almost single handedly made sure that the event carried on. The new 440 yard cinder track was constructed at Rawyards on the outskirts of the town, previously a brickworks and area of waste ground, although it did have some sporting history as a site of a race course in the mid 1850’s. The horse racing only lasted for some 25 years before disappearing, seemingly due to lack of local interest.
The first sports meeting in 1967 included the usual mixture of mens and womens scratch and handicap races, heavy events and schools relay races. The best performance noted at that meeting was a 2 mile win by Bert MacKay of Motherwell YMCA in 9min. 23sec., 15 yards ahead of of clubmate Alex Brown. For the record, the Glasgow Herald report and results are below.
1968 saw another open sports meeting on the 1st June. The star of the meeting being Ian McCafferty, competing for Law & District, who won both the handicap mile (off scratch) in 4min. 11sec. together with the 2 miles in 8min 42.4sec, this time was only 0.2sec outside of his own National record. Hugh Barrow of Victoria Park won the invitation 3/4mile race in 3min 0.5sec. This equalled his own Scottish record. The complete results were
Among the notable athletes other than the two already mentioned above are sprinter Derek Parker of Paisley who went on to become a level 4 middle distance coach with Kilbarcham AAC and Jack Brown of Dumbarton AAC but the women’s winners included internationalists, SWAAA champions and record holders and Commonwealth Games athletes Moira Walls, Pat Pennycook and Christine Sprigg.
Start of the invitation three quarter mile in 1968: K Ballantyne, H Barrow, R McDonald, R Knox, H Gorman
Putting on rarely run events appears to have been something of an Airdrie speciality. Invitation races over distances such as 3/4 mile, 1000 and 2000m, with the intention of producing fast times and possibly records were always part of the days programme. The organisers were quite successful with this strategy, the 2000m time of 5min. 12.8sec. by Lawrie Spence in 1976 still stands as a Scottish native record for the distance. Other records set were a Scottish All Comers and Native record of 2min. 23.3sec. for the 1000m by Graeme Grant in 1971 and an earlier 2000m record of 5min. 20.8sec. again by Lawrie Spence in 1975.
In 1968 Local lad Ian Scales (Airdrie Academy) won the youths 880 yards from scratch in 2min 2.2 seconds. Ian went on to be a good class 800m runner, finishing 3rd in the S.A.A.A. championships over that distance in both 1971 & 1972. He was one of the few top runners Airdrie Harriers managed to produce.
The road race was also a feature. Billed as a 13 mile event, I don’t think it measured much more than 12 miles, so the times always looked much faster than they actually were. The trophy presented to the winner was named in honour of J.M. Kerr, a former Scottish marathon champion & member of Airdrie Harriers. The race always attracted a good field, with winners such as Jim Dingwall, Willie Day, Colin Martin, Sandy Keith, Alex Wight (and myself!) There was only one mishap in all the runnings of the race on what could be in places quite busy and that was in 1969 when Peter Duffy was involved.
The Games were a very good advert for the new Law & District AAC when they were held on 7th June in 1969 The report from the Wishaw Press the following Friday read as follows.
If the 1969 meeting was a triumph for one club, the results on 30th May, 1970 showed a wider share of the spoils with the calibre of athlete on show very high indeed. The headlines were grabbed by Lachie Stewart who won not only the 3000 metres race but also the Invitation Mile. In the former he defeated Shettleston clubmate Dick Wedlock when he won in 8:26.2 with Monklands Harrier Jim Brown third (8:40.0). He led from start to finish in the Mile, coming through the half in 2:13.5 and again defeated Wedlock in a winning time of 4:18.4. Ian McCafferty conceded 120 yards to John Graham (Airdrie Harriers) – it was a bit too much and he had to finish second (3:53.4) to Graham’s 3:44.0. Results:
Among the other results, Les Piggott won the 100 yards and the 13 miles road race, which had almost 60 starters, was won by Edinburgh AC’s Alex Wight in 60:20 from his brother Jim Wight (60:59) with Ian Leggett of Clydesdale third 63:24
5th June 1971: was the date for the next meeting which had two invitation events on the programme. Both were middle distance races and both had really top class athletes contesting them. All of the prize winners were Scottish and British international athletes. In the 1000m, Graeme Grant of Dumbarton running for Heriot Watt University was a late entry but won the race in 2:23.3 which equalled the national record for the distance with Frank Clement second (2:24.4) and Dave McMeekin third (2:25.3). In the Mile local runner Ron McDonald of Monkland Harriers won in 4:04 from Adrian Weatherhead of Octavians (4:04.6) and Hugh Barrow of Victoria Park (4:11.7).
In the other events, Shettleston won the 5000m team race with Wedlock 2nd, Bannon 3rd and Summerhill 6th from Clydesdale (Dolan 5th, Gemmell 7th and McAusland 15th, with Bellahouston 3rd. A high quality race with 10 teams of four taking part. In addition, Willie Day of Falkirk Victoria won his third road race of the season in 61:49. The results below indicate that this was a well supported meeting with top class athletes all the way through the programme.
The first Saturday in June in 1972 was the 2nd of the month and the report in the local paper was brief.
1973 Invitation Events:
There were three invitation events and all attracted good fields with current internationals winning each of them. 1000m: 1. David McMeekin 2:26; 2. Ian Scales. 2000m: RL Spence 5:20; 3000m: P Dolan 8:39.4
The 1973 Games were held on 2nd June and Les Piggot of Garscube won both 100 and 200m quite comfortably having overhauled the field from scratch by halfway in both races. Given that it was a fast track if we go by the times recorded in all the races, it is maybe a pity that there were not as many invitation sprints as there were invitation middle distance races.
The road race was of the by-now usual high quality. The first six were Colin Martin of Dumbarton, Colin Youngson of Victoria Park, Willie Sharp of Falkirk Victoria, Ron Paton of Clydesdale Harriers, George Brown of Edinburgh Southern and David Simpson of Law. Willie Sharp was always a an astute pacer of a race and this course with its long uphill drags and sharp descents had many ‘graveyards’ that could spell the end of a runner’s hopes: Willie not only placed third but was also winner of the handicap. Willie McBrinn of Monkland won the veterans race. The results as published by the Glasgow |Herald were as follows.
Invitation 1000: D McMeekin (VPAAC) 2:26; Invitation 2000m: RL Spence (GGH) 5:26; 3000m: P Dolan (Clydesdale) 8:39.4.
Open Handicap events: 100m: L Piggot (Garscube scr) 10.5; 200m: Piggot (scr) 22.2; 800m: A Law (GGH 56m) 1:52.8; 1500m: W Parker (Beith 140m) 3:56; 13 mile Road Race: 1 C Martin 1:02.4; 2. C Youngson 1:02.34; 3. W Sharp. Long jump: C Watson (VP 0.78) 7.26m; Shot putt: W Weir (Falkirk 1.15) 14.56m); Hammer: R Ferguson (Coatbridge 4.80) 36.42; Caber: R Ferguson. Junior 200m: A Laird (Ayr Seaforth ; 800: W Sheridan (VP) 1:57.3 Youths: 200m: D McPhail (Clydesdale H 4.0) 11.1; 800m: M Watt (Shettleston H 2.0) 1:58; Women: 100: M Munro (ESH 4.5) 12.2; 200:scratch: AK Robertson (Grangemouth) 25.6; 800: J Kane (ESH 26.0)2:12.7. Intermediate 100: AK Robertson (Grangemouth) 12.7
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In 1974 Airdrie Highland Games were held on 1st June and the short report in the Wishaw Press of Friday 7th June, indicated the successes of the local athletes in the article below but there was no long report on the event at either the local or national press. .
The meeting may have been slightly upstaged by a meeting held exactly one week later – the Coatbridge Highland Games were held just a few miles down the road in Dunbeth Park with a promise of a grant meeting a year later at a new all-weather track at Langloan, just a short jog away. See the extract from the Herald report below.
7th June 1975: was the date for the next Airdie meeting and the invitation 2000m was the event of the day. Les Piggot missed the meeting because of illness but the presence of the Stuart Hogg trained Drew Harley meant that the sprints again had some real class. The Glasgow Herald repost is below.
The Games were again held on the first Saturday in 1978 and the short report in the Wishaw Press covered only the Law & District AAC runners.
The 1979 meeting was reported at some length as follows..
The Games were held again from time to time in the 1980’s but their heyday had been in the 1960’s and 1970’s – like the other athletics events held in the area at the time it had been well organised an popular and its demise was a loss to the Scottish athletics scene.
Career Lists for some Scottish Marathoners
Alastair Wood – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 23 June 1962 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:24:58 | CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD |
2 | 11 August 1962 | Welwyn Garden (AAA) | 2 | 2:26:35 | Brian Kilby (Coventry Godiva) 2:26:15 |
3 | 16 September 1962 | Belgrade (SER-Euro) | 4 | 2:25:58 | Brian Kilby (Great Britain) 2:23:19 |
4 | 29 November 1962 | Perth (AUS – Comm) | DNF | Brian Kilby (England) 2:21:17 | |
5 | 18 May 1963 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:25:50 | |
6 | 15 June 1963 | Windsor – Chiswick | DNF | Buddy Edelen (USA) 2:14:28 WR | |
7 | 16 May 1964 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:23:16 | |
8 | 27 June 1964 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:24:00 | CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD |
9 | 15 May 1965 | Shettleston | 2 | 2:19:03 | Fergus Murray (Edinburgh Univ) 2:18:30 |
10 | 12 June 1965 | Dumbarton (SAAA) | 1 | 2:20:46 | CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD |
11 | 10 July 1965 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:29:54 | |
12 | 21 August 1965 | Port Talbot (AAA) | 4 | 2:22:54 | Bill Adcocks (Coventry Godiva) 2:16:50 |
13 | 03 October 1965 | Kosice (SVK) | 5 | 2:29:59 | Aurele Vandendriessche (BEL) 2:23:47 |
14 | 23 April 1966 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:24:00 | |
15 | 11 June 1966 | Windsor – Chiswick | 9 | 2:28:29 | Graham Taylor (Cambridge) 2:19:04 |
16 | 09 July 1966 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:13:45 | |
17 | 13 May 1967 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:23:02 | |
18 | 24 June 1967 | Grangemouth (SAAA) | 1 | 2:21:26 | |
19 | 08 July 1967 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:16:16 | |
20 | 26 August 1967 | Nuneaton (AAA) | 2 | 2:16:21 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:16:08 |
21 | 11 May 1968 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:25:27 | |
22 | 22 June 1968 | Grangemouth (SAAA) | 1 | 2:21:18 | |
23 | 27 July 1968 | Cwmbran (AAA) | 6 | 2:20:29 | Tim Johnston (Portsmouth) 2:15:26 |
24 | 12 July 1969 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:27:44 | |
25 | 25 October 1969 | Harlow | 1 | 2:19:15 | |
26 | 10 May 1970 | Chemnitz (E.GER) | DNF | Jurgen Busch (East Germany) 2:14:42 | |
27 | 16 May 1970 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 5 | 2:19:17 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:17:11 |
28 | 13 June 1970 | Chiswick | 6 | 2:22:12 | Don Faircloth (Croydon) 2:18:15 |
29 | 04 July 1970 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:13:44 | |
30 | 23 August 1970 | Toronto (CAN) | 2 | 2:18:32 | Jack Foster (NZ) 2:16:24 |
31 | 24 October 1970 | Harlow | 1 | 2:17:59 | |
32 | 13 June 1971 | Manchester Maxol | 8 | 2:16:06 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:12:39 |
33 | 04 June 1972 | Manchester Maxol | 20 | 2:19:00 | Lutz Philipp (West Germany) 2:12:50 |
34 | 24 June 1972 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:21:02 | |
35 | 23 June 1973 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | DNF | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:17:50 | |
36 | 07 July 1973 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:22:29 | |
37 | 19 May 1974 | Draveil (FRA-World Vets) | 1 | 2:28:40 | WORLD VETERAN CHAMPION |
38 | 01 December 1974 | Barnsley | 2 | 2:26:15 | John Newsome (Wakefield) 2:24:25 |
39 | 28 June 1975 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:21:14 | Colin Youngson (Edinburgh SH) 2:16:50 |
40 | 15 August 1976 | Coventry (World Vets) | 4 | 2:28:34 | Eric Austin (Worcester) 2:20:51 |
41 | 23 September 1978 | Viareggio (ITA-World Vets) | 5 | 2:31:12 | Gianpaolo Pavanello (ITA) 2:27:31 |
42 | 26 May 1979 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 12 | 2:34:06 | Alastair MacFarlane (Springburn) 2:18:03 |
43 | 16 September 1979 | Aberdeen | 10 | 2:35:47 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:21:40 |
44 | 24 August 1980 | Glasgow (World Vets) | 15 | 2:28:35 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:19:23 |
45 | 27 September 1981 | Aberdeen | 16 | 2:36:20 | Max Coleby (England) 2:21:29 |
46 | 09 May 1982 | London | 249 | 2:33:35 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:09:24 |
47 | 15 August 1982 | Elgin | 2 | 2:35:02 | Don Ritchie (Forres) 2:29:36 |
48 | 19 September 1982 | Aberdeen | 25 | 2:36:59 | Gerry Helme (England) 2:15:16 |
49 | 14 August 1983 | Elgin | 2 | 2:39:33 | Don Ritchie (Forres) 2:36:11 |
50 | 18 September 1983 | Aberdeen | 13 | 2:31:48 | Kevin Johnson (England) 2:19:01 |
51 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 2:33:32 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 | |
52 | 12 August 1984 | Elgin | 3 | 2:39:00 | Don Ritchie (Forres) 2:29:17 |
Alastair Wood – Ultra Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Pos | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 23 August 1969 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 1 | 3:27:28 | EVENT RECORD |
2 | 13 December 1969 | Pitreavie Track 40 miles | 1 | 3:49:49 | WORLD RECORD |
3 | 19 August 1972 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 3 | 3:25:49 | Alex Wight (Edinburgh AC) 3:24:07 |
4 | 01 October 1972 | London – Brighton 52.7m | 1 | 5:11:02 | EVENT RECORD |
5 | 01 June 1973 | Comrades Marathon (RSA) | DNF | 5:39:09 | Dave Levick (RSA) Down Route 88.2 |
6 | 24 August 1974 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 3 | 3:32:43 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh AC) 3:26:31 |
7 | 12 April 1975 | Two Oceans (RSA) 56 km | 2 | 3:24:36 | Derek Preiss (RSA) 3:22:01 |
8 | 17 April 1976 | Two Oceans (RSA) 56 km | 17 | 3:39:47 | Gabashane Rakabaele (RSA) 3:18:05 |
Jim Alder – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 22 June 1963 | Glasgow (SAAA) | 2 | 2:32:04 | Ian Harris (Beith) 2:25:32 |
2 | 30 March 1964 | Beverley | 5 | 2:23:12 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:19:37 |
3 | 13 June 1964 | Windsor-Chiswick | 4 | 2:17:46 | Basil Heatley (Coventry Godiva) 2:13:55 |
4 | 11 June 1966 | Windsor-Chiswick | 6 | 2:25:07 | Graham Taylor (Cambridge) 2:19:04 |
5 | 11 August 1966 | Kingston (JAM-Comm) | 1 | 2:22:08 | |
6 | 02 October 1966 | Kosice (SVK) | 2 | 2:21:07 | Gyula Toth (Hungary) 2:19:12 |
7 | 26 August 1967 | Nuneaton (AAA) | 1 | 2:16:08 | |
8 | 03 December 1967 | Fukuoka (JAP) | 5 | 2:14:45 | Derek Clayton (Australia) 2:09:37 WR |
9 | 19 May 1968 | Chemnitz (East Germany) | 4 | 2:14:15 | Bill Adcocks (Coventry Godiva) 2:15:32 |
10 | 27 July 1968 | Cwmbran (AAA) | 3 | 2:16:37 | Tim Johnston (Portsmouth) 2:15:26 |
11 | 20 October 1968 | Mexico City (Olympics) | DNF | Mamo Wolde (Ethiopia) 2:20:27 | |
12 | 30 May 1969 | Antwerp (BEL- ?distance) | 3 | 2:16:35 | Derek Clayton (Australia) 2:08:34 |
13 | 20 July 1969 | Manchester Maxol | 3 | 2:18:18 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:13:42 |
14 | 21 September 1969 | Athens (GRE – Euro) | 3 | 2:19:06 | Ron Hill (Great Britain) 2:16:48 |
15 | 16 May 1970 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:17:11 | |
16 | 23 July 1970 | Edinburgh (Comm) | 2 | 2:12:04 | Ron Hill (England) 2:09:28 |
17 | 13 June 1971 | Manchester Maxol | 6 | 2:15:43 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:12:39 |
18 | 04 June 1972 | Manchester Maxol | DNF | Lutz Philipp (West Germany) 2:12:50 | |
19 | 05 November 1972 | Blyth | 1 | 2:19:04 | |
20 | 18 August 1973 | Windsor | 11 | 2:29:50 | Bob Sercombe (Newport) 2:19:48 |
21 | 01 September 1973 | Enschede (NED) | 3 | 2:20:42 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:18:07 |
22 | 27 October 1973 | Harlow (AAA) | DNF | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:12:40 | |
23 | 15 June 1974 | Chiswick | 10 | 2:24:12 | Akio Usami (Japan) 2:15:16 |
24 | 16 September 1979 | Aberdeen | 15 | 2:43:45 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:21:40 |
25 | 18 October 1981 | Manchester | 8 | 2:24:32 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:54 |
Fergus Murray, Jim Alder and Don Macgregor
Fergus Murray – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 15 May 1965 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:18:30 | |
2 | 10 June 1967 | Windsor – Chiswick | 1 | 2:19:06 | |
3 | 08 February 1970 | Kyoto (JAP) | 2 | 2:18:04 | Kokichi Uchino (Japan) 2:16:55 |
4 | 16 May 1970 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:18:25 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:17:11 |
5 | 23 July 1970 | Edinburgh (Comm) | 7 | 2:15:32 | Ron Hill (England) 2:09:28 |
6 | 23 August 1970 | Toronto (CAN) | DNF | Jack Foster (New Zealand) 2:16:23 | |
7 | 06 April 1971 | Athens (GRE) | 4 | 2:25:05 | Akio Usami (Japan) 2:19:25 |
Don Macgregor – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 12 June 1965 | Dumbarton (SAAA) | 2 | 2:22:24 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:20:46 |
2 | 11 June 1966 | Windsor-Chiswick | DNF | Graham Taylor (Cambridge) 2:19:04 | |
3 | 26 August 1967 | Nuneaton (AAA) | 3 | 2:17:19 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:16:08 |
4 | 01 October 1967 | Kosice (SVK) | 11 | 2:24:55 | Nedjalko Farcic (SER) 2:20:54 |
5 | 10 May 1969 | Chemnitz (East Germany) | 5 | 2:18:51 | Tim Johnston (Portsmouth) 2:15:32 |
6 | 20 July 1969 | Manchester Maxol | 28 | 2:32:09 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:13:42 |
7 | 05 October 1969 | Kosice (SVK) | 2 | 2:17:34 | Demissie Wolde (ETH) 2:15:37 |
8 | 16 May 1970 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:17:14 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:17:11 |
9 | 23 July 1970 | Edinburgh (Comm) | 8 | 2:16:53 | Ron Hill (England) 2:09:28 |
10 | 06 April 1971 | Marathon – Athens | 5 | 2:26:02 | Akio Usami (Japan) 2:19:25 |
11 | 08 May 1971 | Edinburgh – North Berwick | 3 | 2:19:00 | Alex Wight (Edinburgh AC) 2:15:27 |
12 | 13 June 1971 | Manchester Maxol | 19 | 2:19:34 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:12:39 |
13 | 26 June 1971 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | DNF | Pat MacLagan (Victoria Park) 2:21:18 | |
14 | 30 October 1971 | Refrath (West Germany) | 1 | 2:19:01 | |
15 | 15 April 1972 | Waldniel (West Germany) | 3 | 2:25:18 | Manfred Steffny (West Germany) 2:20:39 |
16 | 04 June 1972 | Manchester Maxol | 3 | 2:15:06 | Lutz Philipp (West Germany) 2:12:50 |
17 | 10 September 1972 | Munich (GER Olympic) | 7 | 2:16:35 | Frank Shorter (USA) |
18 | 04 December 1972 | Fukuoka (JAP) | 6 | 2:16:43 | Frank Shorter (USA) 2:10:30 |
19 | 23 June 1973 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:17:50 | |
20 | 31 January 1974 | Christchurch NZ (Comm) | 6 | 2:14:16 | Ian Thompson (England) 2:09:12 |
21 | 22 June 1974 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:18:08 | |
22 | 26 October 1974 | Harlow | 3 | 2:17:46 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh) 2:16:28 |
23 | 01 June 1975 | Stoke (AAA) | 15 | 2:20:50 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:15:50 |
24 | 28 June 1975 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | DNF | Colin Youngson (Edinburgh SH) 2:16:50 | |
25 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 12 | 2:21:27 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
26 | 26 June 1976 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:24:12 | |
27 | 07 May 1978 | Sandbach (AAA) | 40 | 2:22:45 | Tony Simmons (Luton) 2:12:33 |
28 | 03 June 1978 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:23:33 | Ian MacIntosh (Ranelagh) 2:23:07 |
29 | 15 October 1978 | Middlesbrough | 2 | 2:19:19 | Malcolm Mountford (Stafford) 2:19:11 |
30 | 26 June 1979 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:19:15 | Alastair MacFarlane (Springburn) 2:18:03 |
31 | 02 August 1979 | Hannover (GER-World Vets) | 2 | 2:22:54 | John Robinson (New Zealand) 2:22:52 |
32 | 22 September 1979 | Milton Keynes | 6 | 2:18:30 | Gianpaolo Messina (ITA) 2:15:21 |
33 | 12 April 1980 | Maassluis (NED) | 4 | 2:22:33 | Jorn Lauenborg (Den) 2:17:30 |
34 | 24 August 1980 | Glasgow (World Vets) | 1 | 2:19:23 | |
35 | 28 September 1980 | Aberdeen | 7 | 2:26:48 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:19:33 |
36 | 11 April 1981 | Maassluis (NED) | 36 | 2:38:15 | Cor Vriend (Ned) 2:17:06 |
37 | 20 June 1981 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:21:31 | Colin Youngson (Aberdeen) 2:20:42 |
38 | 27 September 1981 | Aberdeen | 3 | 2:21:52 | Max Coleby (Gateshead) 2:21:29 |
39 | 14 March 1982 | Essonne (FRA) | 9 | 2:21:40 | Jong-Hyong Lee (PRK) 2:14:50 |
40 | 09 May 1982 | London | 36 | 2:20:42 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:09:24 |
41 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 10 | 2:22:06 | Glenn Forster (Sunderland) 2:17:16 |
42 | 17 April 1983 | Dundee | 1 | 2:17:24 | |
43 | 26 June 1983 | Loch Rannoch | 3 | 2:26:51 | George Reynolds (Elgin) 2:24:09 |
44 | 11 September 1983 | Glasgow | 7 | 2:19:34 | Peter Fleming (Bellahouston) 2:17:46 |
45 | 29 April 1984 | Dundee | 1 | 2:18:16 | |
46 | 30 September 1984 | Glasgow | 10 | 2:19:01 | John Boyes (Bournemouth) 2:14:54 |
47 | 31 March 1985 | Wolverhampton | 3 | 2:23:00 | Ian Corrin (South Liverpool) 2:21:43 |
48 | 23 June 1985 | Loch Rannoch | 1 | 2:25:00 | |
49 | 22 September 1985 | Glasgow | 10 | 2:19:36 | David Lowes (Chester le Street) 2:15:31 |
50 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 66 | 2:22:05 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
51 | 01 June 1986 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:27:30 | Brian Carty (Shettleston) 2:23:42 |
52 | 24 April 1988 | Dundee | DNF | Sam Graves (Fife) 2:27:50 | |
U | 24 August 1974 | Two Bridges | 8 | 3:40:45 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh AC) 3:26:31 |
Don Ritchie – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 23 April 1966 | Shettleston | 5 | 2:43:25 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:24:00 |
2 | 28 May 1966 | Glasgow (SAAA) | 5 | 2:45:58 | Charlie McAlinden (Babcock & Wilcox) 2:26:31 |
3 | 09 July 1966 | Inverness-Forres | 3 | 2:29:08 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:13:45 |
4 | 13 May 1967 | Shettleston | 3 | 2:29:59 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:23:02 |
5 | 24 June 1967 | Grangemouth (SAAA) | 2 | 2:27:48 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:21:26 |
6 | 08 July 1967 | Inverness-Forres | 2 | 2:35:00 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:16:16 |
7 | 11 May 1968 | Shettleston | 3 | 2:34:13 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:25:27 |
8 | 22 June 1968 | Grangemouth (SAAA) | 2 | 2:32:25 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:21:18 |
9 | 27 July 1968 | Cwmbran (AAA) | 33 | 2:44:23 | Tim Johnston (Portsmouth) 2:15:26 |
10 | 22 June 1969 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | DNF | Bill Stoddart (Greenock Wellpark) 2:27:25 | |
11 | 12 July 1969 | Inverness-Forres | DNF | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:27:44 | |
12 | 25 October 1969 | Harlow | 9 | 2:24:38 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:19:15 |
13 | 11 April 1970 | Shettleston | 2 | 2:25:44 | Pat Maclagan (Victoria Park) 2:22:03 |
14 | 16 May 1970 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 11 | 2:26:28 | Jim Alder (Morpeth) 2:17:11 |
15 | 24 October 1970 | Harlow | 16 | 2:30:52 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:17:59 |
16 | 08 May 1971 | Shettleston | 2 | 2:23:31 | Steve Taylor (Aberdeen) 2:23:25 |
17 | 26 June 1971 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 4 | 2:28:39 | Pat Maclagan (Victoria Park) 2:21:17 |
18 | 04 September 1971 | Enschede (NED) | 13 | 2:28:54 | Bernie Allen (Windsor) 2:16:54 |
19 | 23 October 1971 | Harlow | 6 | 2:29:13 | Dave Holt (Hercules Wimbledon) 2:18:22 |
20 | 13 May 1972 | Edinburgh-North Berwick | 1 | 2:24:26 | |
21 | 08 July 1972 | Inverness-Forres | 1 | 2:33:00 | |
22 | 25 July 1972 | Helsinki (Finnish Champs) | 8 | 2:33:37 | Reino Paukkonen (Finland) 2:18:49 |
23 | 07 July 1973 | Inverness-Forres | 2 | 2:27:10 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:22:29 |
24 | 01 September 1973 | Enschede (NED) | 9 | 2:25:37 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:18:06 |
25 | 27 October 1973 | Harlow (AAA) | DNF | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:12:40 | |
26 | 04 May 1974 | Rugby (AAA) | 6 | 2:28:27 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:19:37 |
27 | 22 June 1974 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | DNF | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:18:08 | |
28 | 01 December 1974 | Barnsley | DNF | John Newsome (Wakefield) 2:24:25 | |
29 | 30 August 1975 | Enschede (NED) | 73 | 2:54:38 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:15:59 |
30 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 45 | 2:29:30 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
31 | 22 July 1978 | Pietarsaari (FIN) | 9 | 2:29:39 | Jorma Sippola (Finland) 2:20:57 |
32 | 13 May 1979 | Coventry (AAA) | 31 | 2:35:10 | Greg Hannon (Northern Ireland) 2:13:06 |
33 | 21 October 1979 | New York (USA) | 154 | 2:36:43 | Bill Rodgers (USA) 2:11:42 |
34 | 28 September 1980 | Aberdeen | 20 | 2:42:53 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:19:33 |
35 | 27 September 1981 | Aberdeen | 15 | 2:30:33 | Max Coleby (England) 2:21:29 |
36 | 24 October 1981 | Black Isle | 2 | 2:33:38 | Dave Geddes (Garscube) 2:29:58 |
37 | 18 July 1982 | Thurso | 1 | 2:30:53 | |
38 | 15 August 1982 | Elgin | 1 | 2:29:36 | |
39 | 19 September 1982 | Aberdeen | 7 | 2:24:00 | Gerry Helme (England) 2:15:16 |
40 | 23 October 1982 | Black Isle | 1 | 2:24:28 | |
41 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 90 | 2:19:35 | Mike Gratton (invicta) 2:09:43 |
42 | 26 June 1983 | Loch Rannoch | 5 | 2:28 | George Reynolds (Aberdeen) 2:24:09 |
43 | 17 July 1983 | Thurso | 4 | 2:37:04 | Dave Clark (Verlea) 2:20:34 |
44 | 14 August 1983 | Elgin | 1 | 2:36:11 | |
45 | 18 September 1983 | Aberdeen | 9 | 2:25:20 | Kevin Johnson (England) 2:19:01 |
46 | 22 October 1983 | Black Isle | 1 | 2:26:07 | |
47 | 29 April 1984 | Dundee | 5 | 2:19:58 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:18:16 |
48 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 73 | 2:21:33 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
49 | 15 July 1984 | Thurso | 1 | 2:31:25 | |
50 | 12 August 1984 | Elgin | 1 | 2:29:19 | Don Ritchie (Forres) 2:29:17 |
51 | 16 September 1984 | Aberdeen | 9 | 2:26:35 | Mark Burnhope (England) 2:19:36 |
52 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 77 | 2:21:26 | Steve Jones (RAF) 2:08:16 |
53 | 28 April 1985 | Dundee | 7 | 2:26:35 | Murray McNaught (Fife) 2:20:25 |
54 | 19 May 1985 | Motherwell | 4 | 2:28:04 | Charlie MacDougall (East Kilbride) 2:26:53 |
55 | 11 August 1985 | Elgin | DNF | Graham Flatters (Dundee Hawkhill) 2:41:15 | |
56 | 15 September 1985 | Aberdeen | 38 | 2:57:43 | Dave Catlow (England) 2:22:54 |
57 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 211 | 2:30:43 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
58 | 25 May 1986 | Aberdeen | 9 | 2:36:53 | Ray Maule (England) 2:22:56 |
59 | 10 August 1986 | Elgin | 1 | 2:36:45 | |
60 | 21 September 1986 | Glasgow | 25 | 2:26:50 | Kenny Stuart (England) 2:14:04 |
61 | 01 November 1986 | Black Isle | 1 | 2:28:38 | |
62 | 24 May 1987 | Aberdeen | 11 | 2:34:27 | Ian Corrin (England) 2:27:42 |
63 | 09 August 1987 | Elgin | 1 | 2:31:50 | |
64 | 31 October 1987 | Black Isle | 4 | 2:42:31 | Rod Bell (Dundee Hawkhill) 2:35:18 |
65 | 24 April 1988 | Lochaber (SAAA) | 2 | 2:30:26 | Colin Martin (Dumbarton) 2:30:09 |
66 | 22 May 1988 | Aberdeen | 11 | 2:29:50 | Hammy Cox (Scotland) 2:21:15 |
67 | 29 October 1988 | Black Isle | 2 | 2:34:56 | Mike Ryan (Dundee Hawkhill) 2:34:30 |
68 | 28 May 1989 | Aberdeen | 11 | 2:41:42 | Ian Bloomfield (England) 2:22:30 |
69 | 06 August 1989 | Elgin | 4 | 2:44:54 | Charlie McIntyre (Fraserburgh) 2:31:58 |
70 | 22 April 1990 | Lochaber | 1 | 2:34:01 | |
71 | 27 May 1990 | Aberdeen (SAAA) | 7 | 2:31:00 | Chris Tall (England) 2:23:32 |
72 | 05 August 1990 | Elgin | 5 | 2:35:47 | Erik Seedhouse (City of Hull) 2:28:29 |
73 | 03 November 1990 | Black Isle | 2 | 2:37:55 | John Duffy (Shettleston) 2:31:16 |
74 | 21 April 1991 | Lochaber | 3 | 2:30:40 | Jim Cooper (Springburn) 2:28:34 |
75 | 12 May 1991 | Dundee | 6 | 2:32:03 | Hugh Mackay (Fife) 2:26:03 |
76 | 04 August 1991 | Elgin | 2 | 2:46:13 | Ron Kirkton (Milburn) 2:38:18 |
77 | 02 November 1991 | Black Isle | 4 | 2:45:45 | Fraser Clyne (Aberdeen) 2:27:18 |
78 | 26 April 1992 | Lochaber | 3 | 2:38:42 | Colin Youngson (Aberdeen) 2:36:23 |
79 | 02 August 1992 | Elgin (SAAA) | 15 | 2:54:45 | Fraser Clyne (Metro Aberdeen) 2:25:38 |
80 | 31 October 1992 | Black Isle | 2 | 2:42:08 | Andy Stirling (Bo’ness) 2:36:15 |
81 | 02 April 1995 | London (AAA) | 551 | 2:46:45 | Dionicio Ceron (Mexico) 2:08:30 |
82 | 23 April 1995 | Lochaber | 9 | 2:42:47 | John Duffy (Shettleston) 2:31:19 |
83 | 03 September 1995 | Elgin | 8 | 2:43:51 | Alan Reid (Fraserburgh) 2:34:43 |
84 | 01 September 1996 | Elgin | DNF | Allan Stewart (Moray RR) 2:37:15 | |
85 | 07 September 1997 | Elgin | DNF | Fraser Clyne (Metro Aberdeen) 2:29:37 | |
86 | 06 September 1998 | Elgin | 16 | 3:08:54 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 2:29:04 |
87 | 25 April 1999 | Lochaber | 15 | 2:55:17 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 2:24:24 |
88 | 08 August 1999 | Gateshead (World Vets) | 90 | 2:59:24 | Tony Duffy (Bolton) 2:23:25 |
89 | 05 September 1999 | Elgin | 7 | 3:04:30 | David Lancaster (Rowntrees York)2:46:37 |
90 | 30 April 2000 | Lochaber | 10 | 2:53:43 | David Rodgers (Lochaber) 2:28:53 |
91 | 20 August 2000 | Glasgow | 61 | 2:58:25 | Wilson Cheruiyot (Kenya) 2:22:45 |
92 | 03 September 2000 | Elgin (SAAA) | 11 | 2:57:18 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 2:21:17 |
93 | 28 April 2002 | Lochaber (SAAA) | 3:31:08 | Jamie Reid (Cambuslang) 2:21:46 | |
94 | 27 April 2003 | Lochaber | 3:15:41 | John Duffy (Shettleston) 2:41:22 | |
95 | 06 July 2003 | Perth (AUS) | 62 | 3:26:21 | Sandy Burt (Australia) 2:42:21 |
96 | 31 August 2003 | Elgin (SAAA) | 52 | 3:32:27 | Jamie Reid (Cambuslang) 2:34:08 |
97 | 29 August 2004 | Elgin | 53 | 3:35:30 | Simon Pride (Metro Aberdeen) 2:36:49 |
98 | 24 April 2005 | Lochaber | 241 | 4:06:32 | John Duffy (Shettleston) 2:42:15 |
Don Ritchie – Ultra Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Pos | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 22 August 1970 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 7 | 3:50:50 | Phil Hampton (Royal Navy) 3:41:18 |
2 | 24 August 1974 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 5 | 3:36:58 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh AC) 3:26:31 |
3 | 29 September 1974 | London – Brighton 52.7m | 3 | 5:24:54 | John Newsome (Wakefield) 5:16:07 |
4 | 02 November 1974 | Walton-on-Thames track 30 m | 2 | 2:49:33 | Mick Molloy (Ireland) 2:44:47 WR |
5 | 19 June 1976 | Lairig Ghru 28 trail | DNF | Andy Pratt (RAF) 3:12:40 | |
6 | 30 April 1977 | Epsom 50 km track | 1 | 2:51:38 | World Best |
7 | 25 June 1977 | Hillingdon 50 km track | 1 | 2:51:42 | |
8 | 27 August 1977 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 2 | 3:28:34 | Cavin Woodward (Leamington) 3:27:10 |
9 | 25 September 1977 | London – Brighton 52.9m | 1 | 5:16:05 | |
10 | 15 October 1977 | Crystal Palace Track 24 hours | DNF | Tom Roden (SLH) 156m 439y
Don Ritchie 100 miles 11:30:51 WR |
|
11 | 30 June 1978 | Hartola (FIN) 100 km | 1 | 6:18:00 | |
12 | 29 July 1978 | Woodford-Southend 40 miles | 2 | 3:59:35 | Cavin Woodward (Leamington) 3:50:14 |
13 | 26 August 1978 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 5 | 3:32:49 | Cavin Woodward (Leamington) 3:24:45 |
14 | 01 October 1978 | London – Brighton 53.5m | 1 | 5:13:02 | |
15 | 28 October 1978 | Crystal Palace Track 100km | 1 | 6:10:20 | WR |
16 | 10 March 1979 | Altrincham Track 50 km | 1 | 2:50:30 | WR |
17 | 28 April 1979 | Ewell Track 40 Miles | 1 | 3:54:07 | |
18 | 26 May 1979 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | 1 | 6:52:33 | |
19 | 15 June 1979 | Flushing Meadows (USA) 100 ml | 1 | 11:51:11 | |
20 | 30 September 1979 | London – Brighton 54.3m | DNF | Allan Kirik (USA) 5:32:37 | |
21 | 27 October 1979 | Crystal Palace Track 24 hours | DNF | Dave Jones (Blackburn) 153m1143y | |
22 | 06 April 1980 | Niort (FRA) 50 km | 3 | 3:05:44 | Martin Daykin (Gloucester) 2:58:47 |
23 | 04 May 1980 | Torino-St Vincent (ITA) 100 km | 1 | 6:35:00 | |
24 | 24 May 1980 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | 1 | 6:54:14 | |
25 | 07 June 1980 | Oulu (FIN) 50 miles | DNF | Risto Laitinen (Finland) 5:03:16 | |
26 | 04 April 1981 | Niort (FRA) 50 km | 2 | 2:55:29 | Pattrjk Macke (Grantham) 2:53:05 |
27 | 30 May 1981 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | DNF | Vito Mileto (Italy) 6:53:15 | |
28 | 10 October 1981 | Copthall / RRC Track 24 hours | DNF | Mark Pickard (Epsom & E) 163m 1249y | |
29 | 29 May 1982 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | DNF | Luciano Ceni (Italy) 7:29:53 | |
30 | 19 June 1982 | Altrincham Track 24 hours | DNF | Dave Cooper (Cambridge) 147m 1083y | |
31 | 11 July 1982 | Pistoia-Abetone 53 km | 11 | 4:05:15 | Sergio Pozzi (Italy) 3:30:58 |
32 | 25 September 1982 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 1 | 6:28:11 | |
33 | 16 October 1982 | Copthall / RRC Track 100 km | DNF | Peter Sugden (Reading) 7:07:22
Don Ritchie 40 miles 3:48:35 WR |
|
34 | 12 March 1983 | Copthall / RRC Track 50 miles | 1 | 4:51:49 | WR |
35 | 28 May 1983 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | DNF | Mauro Cillia (Italy) 6:57:08 | |
36 | 27 August 1983 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 1 | 3:34:39 | |
37 | 25 September 1983 | London – Brighton 53.6m | 3 | 5:24:23 | Bruce Fordyce (South Africa) 5:12:32 |
38 | 29 October 1983 | Coatbridge Track 24 hours | DNF | Dave Cooper (Cambridge) 151m 1098y
Don Ritchie 200km 16:32:30 WR |
|
39 | 25 February 1984 | Manx Airlines 40 miles road | 1 | 3:53:14 | |
40 | 03 June 1984 | Edinburgh-Glasgow 50 miles | 1 | 5:03:44 | |
41 | 24 June 1984 | Lincolnshire 100 km | 1 | 6:48:15 | |
42 | 25 August 1984 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 2 | 3:34:47 | Barry Heath (Royal Marines) 3:31:46 |
43 | 07 October 1984 | London – Brighton 53.5m | 2 | 5:28:27 | Barry Heath (Royal Marines) 5:24:15 |
44 | 24 November 1984 | Coatbridge Track 24 hours | 3 | 136m1390y | Dave Cooper (Cambridge) 148m 247y
|
45 | 23 February 1985 | Manx Airlines 50 kms road | 3 | 2:56:39 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:53:21 |
46 | 23 June 1985 | Lincolnshire 100 km | 1 | 6:47:40 | |
47 | 13 July 1985 | Solihull Track 24 hrs | 12 | 116m 528y | Martin Daykin (Gloucester) 152m 713y |
48 | 03 November 1985 | Geneva (SUI) 100 km | DNF | Vaclav Kamenik (Czech) 6:23:49 | |
49 | 01 March 1986 | Manx Airlines 50 kms road | 3 | 3:06:48 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:53:26 |
50 | 04 May 1986 | Turin-St Vincent (ITA) 100 km | 1 | 6:36:02 | |
51 | 22 June 1986 | Lincolnshire 100 km | 1 | 7:02:46 | |
52 | 23 August 1986 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 1 | 3:36:37 | |
53 | 04 October 1986 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 2 | 6:47:49 | Domingo Catalan (Spain) 6:32:09 |
54 | 28 February 1987 | Manx Airlines 50 kms road | 2 | 2:57:00 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:55:15 |
55 | 30 May 1987 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | 8 | 7:47:08 | Jean Marc Bellocq (France) 6:52:42 |
56 | 20 June 1987 | Tourhout (BEL) 100 km (World) | 2 | 6:40:51 | Domingo Catalan (Spain) 6:19:35 |
57 | 29 August 1987 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 3 | 3:41:19 | Charlie Trayer (USA) 3:36:27 |
58 | 03 October 1987 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 2 | 6:43:58 | Domingo Catalan (Spain) 6:36:32 |
59 | 16 October 1987 | Cagliari-Sassari (ITA) 254 km | 5 | 25:28:51 | Milan Furin (Czech) 23:59:11 |
60 | 27 February 1988 | Manx Airlines 50 kms road | 2 | 3:02:47 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:58:27 |
61 | 28 May 1988 | Del Passatore (ITA) 101.5 km | 4 | 6:56:03 | Normano Di Gennaro (Italy) 6:37:10 |
62 | 19 June 1988 | Lincolnshire 100 km | DNF | Paul Taylor (Woodstock) 7:41:45 | |
63 | 19 November 1988 | Kelvin Hall Indoor Track 24 hrs | 1 | 144m 1009y | |
64 | 25 June 1989 | Paris (FRA) 100 km (World) | 13 | 7:21:32 | Bruno Scelsi (France) 6:47:06 |
65 | 16 July 1989 | Hereford 50 miles | 3 | 5:43:14 | Martin Daykin (Hereford C) 5:27:55 |
66 | 26 August 1989 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 9 | 3:55:07 | Mick McGeoch (Les Croups) 3:36:02 |
67 | 07 October 1989 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 2 | 6:51:14 | Luis Saraiva (Portugal) 6:46:10 |
68 | 03 February 1990 | Milton Keynes Indoor Track 24 hrs | 1 | 166m 425y | World Indoor Best: 100ml, 200km, 24hr |
69 | 01 April 1990 | Madrid (ESP) 100 km | 5 | 7:11:49 | Luis Saraiva (Portugal) 6:48:34 |
70 | 03 June 1990 | Holme Pierrepoint 100km (AAA) | 1 | 6:46:29 | |
71 | 24 June 1990 | Livingston Track 100km (SAAA) | 1 | 6:46:10 | |
72 | 15 July 1990 | Hereford 50 miles | 1 | 5:29:50 | |
73 | 22 July 1990 | Lincolnshire 100 km | 1 | 7:12:17 | |
74 | 25 August 1990 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 1 | 3:38:00 | |
75 | 06 October 1990 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 1 | 6:40:23 | |
76 | 27 October 1990 | Duluth (USA) 100 km (World) | 10 | 7:11:14 | Roland Vuillemenot (France) 6:34:02 |
77 | 07 April 1991 | Madrid (ESP) 100 km | 4 | 6:54:10 | Valmir Nunes (Brazil) 6:35:41 |
78 | 25 May 1991 | Del Passatore (ITA) 100 km (World) | 8 | 7:13:26 | Valmir Nunes (Brazil) 6:35:36 |
79 | 02 June 1991 | Holme Pierrepoint 100km (AAA) | 3 | 6:56:55 | Erik Seedhouse (City of Hull) 6:42:02 |
80 | 21 June 1991 | Tourhout (BEL) 100 km | 5 | 6:52:09 | John Paul Praet (Belgium) 6:33:51 |
81 | 30 June 1991 | Lairig Ghru 28 miles trial | 10 | 4:06:32 | Ben Preece (Aberdeen) 3:27:45 |
82 | 06 July 1991 | West Highland Way 95 miles trial | 1 | 19:44:11 | |
83 | 21 July 1991 | Hereford 50 miles | 1 | 5:40:15 | |
84 | 24 August 1991 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 2 | 3:41:28 | Andy Stirling (Bo’ness) 3:41:04 |
85 | 05 October 1991 | Santander (ESP) 100 km | 5 | 6:49:13 | Valmir Nunes (Brazil) 6:36:53 |
86 | 26 October 1991 | Copthall Track 24 hrs (AAA) | 1 | 166m 1203y | |
87 | 16 February 1992 | Palamos (ESP) 100 km (World) | 39 | 7:34:21 | Konstantin Santalov (Russia) 6:23:35 |
88 | 05 April 1992 | Madrid (ESP) 100 km | 14 | 7:44:49 | Konstantin Santalov (Russia) 6:42:22 |
89 | 03 May 1992 | Barcelona (ESP) 100 km | 9 | 6:57:31 | Konstantin Santalov (Russia) 6:22:28 |
90 | 31 May 1992 | Holme Pierrepoint 100km (AAA) | 1 | 6:51:54 | |
91 | 19 June 1992 | Tourhout (BEL) 100 km | 15 | 7:12:33 | John Paul Praet (Belgium) 6:24:46 |
92 | 12 July 1992 | Hereford 50 miles | 2 | 5:56:15 | Tony Lenagan (Wigan Phoenix) 5:45:26 |
93 | 08 August 1992 | Birmingham 24 hrs track (AAA) | 1 | 161m 1521y | |
94 | 29 August 1992 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 11 | 4:00:52 | Peter Baxter (Pitreavie) 3:47:48 |
95 | 12 September 1992 | Winschoten (NED) 100km (Euro) | 7 | 6:52:20 | John Paul Praet (Belgium) 6:16:41 WR |
96 | 27 September 1992 | Edinburgh 100 km (SAAA) | 1 | 7:01:27 | |
97 | 03 October 1992 | Barcelona-Madrid Stage Race | DNF | Konstantin Santalov (Russia) 40:39:29 | |
98 | 27 February 1993 | New York 100 km (US Champ) | 9 | 7:53:23 | Valmir Nunes (Brazil) 6:45:35 |
99 | 01 May 1993 | Basel (SUI) 24 hr (European) | DNF | Nikolai Safin (Russia) 164m | |
100 | 22 May 1993 | Holme Pierrepoint 100km (AAA) | 2 | 7:09:40 | Greg Dell (Vale of Aylesbury) 6:58:50 |
101 | 29 May 1993 | Feltham 24 hours (AAA) | 2 | 129m 932y | Mike Aris (Ealing & S) 142m1205y |
102 | 27 June 1993 | Lake Saroma (JAP) 100 km | 14 | 8:02:38 | Toshiro Kashihara (Japan) 6:43:14 |
103 | 08 August 1993 | Torhout (BEL) 100 km (World) | DNF | Konstantin Santalov (Russia) 6:26:26 | |
104 | 03 April 1994 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 6 | 3:31:06 | Fraser Clyne (Metro Aberdeen) 3:02:07 |
105 | 21 May 1994 | Szeged (HUN) 24 hour (Euro) | 9 | 138m 340y | Janos Bogar (Hungary) 162m 508y |
106 | 18 June 1994 | West Highland Way (short) | 3 | 14 hr 46min | Brian Davidson (Citadel) 13 hr 41 min |
107 | 31 August 1994 | Victoria (CAN) 100 km | 3 | 7:29:46 | Stefan Feckner (Canada) 6:54:31 |
108 | 22 October 1994 | Tooting Bec 24 hours track | 1 | 147m 314y | |
109 | 05 March 1995 | Barry 40 miles track | 2 | 4:21:34 | Robin Gardner (Woodstock) 4:17:46 |
110 | 16 April 1995 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 3 | 3:26:25 | Peter Baxter (Pitreavie) 3:23:11 |
111 | 27 May 1995 | Chavanges (FRA) 100km (Euro) | 18 | 7:16:17 | Jaraslov Janicki (Poland) 6:28:36 |
112 | 17 June 1995 | West Highland Way 95 miles trail | 3 | 20:46:43 | Dave Wallace (Harmeny) 17:43:30 |
113 | 30 July 1995 | Edinburgh 100 km (SAAA) | 3 | 7:34:30 | Stephen Moore (Hertford &W) 7:17:47 |
114 | 16 September 1995 | Winschoten (NED) 100 km (World) | 37 | 7:09:49 | Valmir Nunes (Brazil) 6:18:09 |
115 | 14 October 1995 | Tooting Bec 24 hours track | 21 | 62m 1116y | Mike Aris (100 km Assoc) 132m 765y
Don Ritchie: 50mile 5:37:17 and 100km 7:07:29 World M50 bests |
116 | 22 June 1996 | West Highland Way 95 miles trail | 7 | 22:11:24 | Dave Wallace (Harmeny) 18:36:22 |
117 | 21 July 1996 | Edinburgh 100 km (Anglo CP) | 2 | 7:38:15 | Stephen Moore (England) 7:17:16 |
118 | 25 August 1996 | Cleder (FRA) 100 km (Euro) | 64 | 8:11:20 | Jaraslav Janicki (Poland) 6:33:39 |
119 | 02 March 1997 | Barry 40 miles track | 5 | 4:23:28 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 3:54:24 |
120 | 20 July 1997 | Edinburgh 100 km (SAAA) | DNF | Stephen Moore (Hertford &W) 7:04:22 | |
121 | 11 October 1997 | Tooting Bec 24 hours track | 9 | 112m 1489y | Jaroslav Kocourek (CZE)150m 1727y |
122 | 12 April 1998 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 10 | 3:58:32 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 3:19:59 |
123 | 10 May 1998 | Greenwich 100 km (Anglo CP) | 3 | 7:41:28 | Stephen Moore (England) 6:57:33 |
124 | 19 June 1998 | Torhout (BEL) 100 km (Euro) | 50 | 7:59:38 | Grigoriy Murzin (Russia) 6:23:29 |
125 | 19 July 1998 | Edinburgh 100 km (SAAA) | DNF | Mark Guichard (100 km Assoc) 7:50:35 | |
126 | 29 August 1998 | Lille (FRA) 24 hour (Euro) | 11 | 145m 804y | Lucien Taelman (Belgium) 166m 583y |
127 | 12 September 1998 | Winschoten (NED) 100 km(World Vets) | 37 | 8:53:10 | Andrzej Magier (Poland) 6:59:50 |
128 | 18 October 1998 | Nakamura (JAP) 100 km (World) | 48 | 10:43:42 | Grigoriy Murzin (Russia) 6:30:06 |
129 | 07 March 1999 | Barry 40 miles track | 23 | 5:19:56 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 3:53:55 |
130 | 11 April 1999 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 13 | 3:44:44 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 3:02:20 |
131 | 09 May 1999 | Glenrothes 50 km (SAAA) | 11 | 3:34:48 | Alan Reid (Peterhead) 3:12:48 |
132 | 19 June 1999 | Dublin 100 km (Anglo Celtic P) | 5 | 7:35:29 | Stephen Moore (England) 6:56:27 |
133 | 18 July 1999 | Edinburgh 100 km (SAAA) | DNF | William Sichel (Moray RR) 7:32:19 | |
134 | 25 September 1999 | Verona (ITA) 24 hour track (Euro) | 5 | 138m 399y | Yiannis Kouros (Guest) 163m 1y |
135 | 05 March 2000 | Barry 40 miles track | 6 | 4:44:09 | Chris Finill (Harrow) 4:21:57 |
136 | 16 April 2000 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 10 | 3:43:32 | Alan Reid (Peterhead) 3:12:20 |
137 | 14 May 2000 | Glenrothes 50 km (SAAA) | 7 | 3:33:04 | Alan Reid (Peterhead) 3:07:42 |
138 | 16 June 2000 | Torhout (BEL) 100 km | 18 | 8:05:10 | Farid Ganiev (Russia) 6:33:19 |
139 | 09 September 2000 | Winschoten (NED) 100 km (World) | 61 | 7:54:45 | Pascal Fetizon (France) 6:23:15 |
140 | 01 October 2000 | London-Brighton 55.0m | 8 | 7:07:03 | Sarel Ackermann (RSA) 5:56:50 |
141 | 21 October 2000 | Uden (NED) 24 hour track (Euro) | 17 | 136m 1476y | Lubomir Hrmo (Slovakia) 161m 185y |
142 | 04 March 2001 | Barry 40 miles track | 9 | 4:53:07 | Alan Reid (Peterhead) 4:11:45 |
143 | 03 March 2002 | Barry 40 miles track | 16 | 5:31:50 | Mikk Bradley (Watford) 4:20:03 |
144 | 07 April 2002 | Moreton-in-Marsh 100 km (AAA) | 18 | 11:12:15 | Dennis Walmsley (Bourton) 7:07:39 |
145 | 12 May 2002 | Glenrothes 50 km (SAAA) | 11 | 4:05:49 | Terry Mitchell (Fife) 3:16:18 |
146 | 06 October 2002 | London-Brighton 54.1m | 23 | 8:12:20 | Brian Hennessey (Crawley) 6:00:57 |
147 | 20 October 2002 | Crystal Palace Track 100 miles | DNF | Oleg Kharitonov (Russia) 11:28:03 | |
148 | 02 March 2003 | Barry 40 miles track | 20 | 5:38:03 | Brian Hennessey (Crawley) 4:13:10 |
149 | 11 May 2003 | Glenrothes 50 km (SAAA) | 14 | 4:09:02 | Dennis Walmsley (Bourton) 3:08:37 |
150 | 31 May 2003 | Apeldoorn (NED) 24 hour | 81m 630y | Etienne Van Acker (Belgium) 157m 446y | |
151 | 27 September 2003 | Verona (ITA) 50 km | 4:17:44 | Mario Fattore (Italy) 3:06:00 | |
152 | 11 October 2003 | Tooting Bec 24 hours track | 1 | 117m 951y | |
153 | 07 March 2004 | Barry 40 miles track | 17 | 6:05:29 | Brian Cole (Royal Marines) 4:08:16 |
154 | 09 October 2004 | Tooting Bec 24 hours track | 19 | 84m 1504y | Ken Fancett (Beckenham) 133m 801y |
Sandy Keith – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 10 May 1969 | Shettleston | 1 | 2:29:22 | |
2 | 18 August 1973 | Windsor | 3 | 2:22:53 | Bob Sercombe (Newport) 2:19:48 |
3 | 27 October 1973 | Harlow (AAA) | 24 | 2:23:07 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:12:40 |
4 | 22 June 1974 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 6 | 2:26:39 | Don MacGregor (Edinburgh SH) 2:18:08 |
5 | 06 July 1974 | Inverness – Forres | 1 | 2:26:28 | |
6 | 28 June 1975 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:17:58 | Colin Youngson (Edinburgh SH) 2:16:50 |
7 | 30 August 1975 | Enschede (NED) | 2 | 2:18:43 | Ron Hill (Bolton) 2:15:59 |
8 | 25 October 1975 | Harlow | 1 | 2:16:12 | |
9 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 6 | 2:19:02 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
10 | 31 July 1976 | Noordwijkerhout (NED) | 1 | 2:21:43 | |
U | 21 August 1976 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 3 | 3:38:01 | Mick Orton (Tipton) 3:27:58 |
11 | 05 June 1977 | Edmonton (CAN) | 3 | 2:24:26 | Jack Foster (New Zealand) 2:22:06 |
12 | 25 June 1977 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:18:52 | Jim Dingwall (Falkirk Victoria) 2:16:05 |
13 | 27 August 1977 | Enschede (NED) | 8 | 2:20:44 | Brian Maxwell (Can) 2:15:14 |
14 | 16 October 1977 | Middlesbrough (? distance) | 2 | 2:16:03 | Mike Critchley (Cardiff) 2:13:38 |
15 | 07 May 1978 | Sandbach (AAA) | 16 | 2:18:15 | Tony Simmons (Luton) 2:12:33 |
16 | 10 June 1978 | Sneek (NED) | 13 | 2:20:42 | Jan Fjaerestad (Norway) 2:14:01 |
17 | 16 September 1978 | Berchem (BEL) | 2 | 2:21:21 | Herman Parmentier (Belgium) 2:20:20 |
18 | 15 October 1978 | Middlesbrough | 4 | 2:20:01 | Malcolm Mountford (Stafford) 2:19:11 |
19 | 28 January 1979 | Hamilton (BER) | 10 | 2:30:34 | Andy Holden (Tipton) 2:18:50 |
20 | 17 June 1979 | Sandbach | 2 | 2:17:39 | Colin Kurkham (Coventry Godiva) 2:17:30 |
21 | 01 September 1979 | Chemnitz (E GER) | 10 | 2:24:16 | Waldemar Cierpinski (East Ger) 2:15:50 |
22 | 14 October 1979 | Glasgow | 2 | 2:18:08 | Barry Watson (England) 2:17:45 |
23 | 10 July 1982 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:26:34 | Colin Youngson (Aberdeen) 2:18:02 |
24 | 05 September 1982 | Edinburgh | 8 | 2:30:39 | Dave Ellis (England) 2:21:09 |
25 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 18 | 2:24:25 | Glenn Forster (England) 2:17:16 |
Colin Youngson – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 12 July 1969 | Inverness – Forres | 3 | 2:41:13 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:27:44 |
2 | 24 October 1970 | Harlow | 24 | 2:34:49 | Alastair Wood (Aberdden) 2:17:59 |
3 | 24 June 1972 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:26:45 | Alastair Wood (Aberdeen) 2:21:02 |
4 | 25 July 1972 | Helsinki | 6 | 2:32:18 | Reino Paukkonen (Fin) 2:18:49 |
5 | 23 June 1973 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 5 | 2:24:01 | Don MacGregor (Edinburgh S) 2:17:50 |
6 | 27 October 1973 | Haverodal (SWE) | 1 | 2:22:28 | |
7 | 25 November 1973 | Sodertalje (SWE) | 1 | 2:26:07 | |
8 | 22 June 1974 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:21:36 | Don MacGregor (Edinburgh S) 2:18:08 |
9 | 06 July 1974 | Inverness – Forres | 2 | 2:33:44 | Sandy Keith (Edinburgh) 2:26:28 |
10 | 26 October 1974 | Harlow | 8 | 2:21:06 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh) 2:16:28 |
11 | 28 June 1975 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:16:50 | CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD |
12 | 13 September 1975 | Berchem (BEL) | 2 | 2:21:09 | Danny McDaid (Ire) 2:20:51 |
13 | 06 April 1976 | Marathon – Athens | 6 | 2:46 | Mircea Damian (Rom) 2:27:33 |
14 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 40 | 2:27:56 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
15 | 25 June 1977 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 4 | 2:19:35 | Jim Dingwall (Falkirk) 2:16:05 |
16 | 27 August 1977 | Enschede (NED) | 35 | 2:32:57 | Brian Maxwell (Can) 2:15:14 |
17 | 07 May 1978 | Sandbach | 43 | 2:23:07 | Tony Simmons (Luton) 2:12:33 |
18 | 03 June 1978 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 11 | 2:46:40 | Ian MacIntosh (Ranelagh) 2:23:07 |
19 | 26 May 1979 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:19:48 | Alastair MacFarlane (Springburn) 2:18:03 |
20 | 08 July 1979 | Tullamore (IRE) | 22 | 2:30:42 | Pat Hooper (Ire) 2:17:46 |
21 | 16 September 1979 | Aberdeen | 3 | 2:27:44 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:21:40 |
22 | 12 April 1980 | Maassluis (NED) | 2 | 2:21:29 | Jorn Lauenborg (Den) 2:17:30 |
23 | 21 June 1980 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:24:56 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:23:03 |
24 | 11 April 1981 | Maassluis (NED) | 4 | 2:18:54 | Cor Vriend (Ned) 2:17:06 |
25 | 20 June 1981 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:20:42 | |
26 | 18 October 1981 | Glasgow | 4 | 2:19:12 | Jim McGlynn (Ire) 2:18:24 |
27 | 03 May 1982 | Belfast | 5 | 2:24:01 | Greg Hannon (N Ire) 2:20:25 |
28 | 10 July 1982 | Grangemouth (SAAA) | 1 | 2:18:02 | |
29 | 19 September 1982 | Aberdeen | 4 | 2:21:03 | Gerry Helme (Eng) 2:15:16 |
30 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 12 | 2:22:13 | Glenn Forster (Eng) 2:17:16 |
31 | 02 April 1983 | Maassluis (NED) | 6 | 2:17:33 | Cor Vriend (Ned) 2:13:29 |
32 | 18 June 1983 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:28:46 | Peter Wilson (Aberdeen) 2:26:20 |
33 | 11 September 1983 | Glasgow | 4 | 2:19:18 | Peter Fleming (Bellahouston) 2:17:46 |
34 | 18 March 1984 | Barcelona | 28 | 2:26:04 | Werner Meier (Sui) 2:14:50 |
35 | 28 April 1984 | Albi (FRA) | 2 | 2:29:49 | Raffaele diBenedetto (Ita) 2:27:04 |
36 | 16 September 1984 | Aberdeen (SAAA) | 6 | 2:23:36 | Mark Burnhope (Eng) 2:19:36 |
37 | 13 April 1985 | Maassluis (NED) | 12 | 2:19:22 | John Boyes (Bournemouth) 2:13:20 |
38 | 23 June 1985 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 2 | 2:23:46 | Evan Cameron (Edinburgh) 2.22.49 |
39 | 15 September 1985 | Aberdeen | 2 | 2:23:58 | Dave Catlow (Eng) 2:22:54 |
40 | 27 April 1986 | Dundee | 1 | 2:20:03 | |
41 | 25 May 1986 | Aberdeen | 4 | 2:27:56 | Ray Maule (Eng) 2:22:52 |
42 | 21 September 1986 | Glasgow | 13 | 2:22:42 | Kenny Stuart (Eng) 2:14:04 |
43 | 26 April 1987 | Lochaber | 1 | 2:26:15 | |
44 | 24 May 1987 | Aberdeen | 2 | 2:29:21 | Ian Corrin (Eng) 2:27:42 |
45 | 18 April 1988 | Boston (USA) | 109 | 2:29:51 | Ibrahim Hussein (Ken) 2:08:43 |
46 | 22 May 1988 | Aberdeen | 10 | 2:28:38 | Hamilton Cox (Sco) 2:21:15 |
47 | 02 October 1988 | Stone (Flying Fox) | 2 | 2:29:15 | Eddy Lee (Pegaus) 2:23:15 |
48 | 23 April 1989 | Lochaber | 1 | 2:29:40 | |
49 | 28 May 1989 | Aberdeen (SAAA) | 7 | 2:31:23 | Ian Bloomfield (Eng) 2:22:30 |
50 | 27 May 1990 | Aberdeen | DNF | Chris Tall (Eng) 2:23:32 | |
51 | 26 April 1992 | Lochaber | 1 | 2:36:23 | |
52 | 18 April 1993 | London (AAA) | 255 | 2:37:14 | Eamonn Martin (Basildon) 2:10:50 |
53 | 03 October 1993 | Stone (Flying Fox) | 4 | 2:36:18 | Kevin Wilkinson (San Domenico) 2:28:37 |
54 | 17 April 1994 | London (AAA) | 350 | 2:39:10 | Dionicio Ceron (Mex) 2:08:53 |
55 | 02 April 1995 | London (AAA) | 695 | 2:49:40 | Dionicio Ceron (Mex) 2:08:30 |
56 | 26 September 1999 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 138 | 2:55:43 | Andres Espinosa (Mex) 2:14:31 |
Colin Youngson – Ultra Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Pos | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 23 August 1975 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 2 | 3:29:44 | Cavin Woodward (Leamington) 3:26:45 |
2 | 23 August 1980 | Two Bridges 36.2m | 4 | 3:38:23 | Andy Holden (Tipton) 3:21:46 |
3 | 28 September 1980 | London – Brighton 54.2m | 7 | 5:52:04 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 5:15:15 |
4 | 03 June 1984 | Edinburgh – Glasgow 50 m | 3 | 5:28:15 | Don Ritchie (Forres) 5:03:44 |
5 | 29 June 1986 | Lairig Ghru 45.062 km | 1 | 3:43:28 | |
6 | 16 April 1995 | Speyside Way 50 km | 8 | 3:33:04 | Peter Baxter (Pitreavie) 3:23:11 |
7 | 14 April 1996 | Speyside Way 50 km | 6 | 3:29:27 | Simon Pride (Keith & District) 3:11:00 |
Jim Dingwall – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 19 August 1972 | Morecambe | 6 | 2:27:47 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:21:24 |
2 | 26 October 1974 | Harlow | 4 | 2:19:01 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh) 2:16:28 |
3 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 30 | 2:26:00 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
4 | 07 May 1977 | Rugby (AAA) | 8 | 2:21:37 | Dave Cannon (Gateshead) 2:15:02 |
5 | 25 June 1977 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:16:05 | CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD |
6 | 27 August 1977 | Enschede (NED) | 45 | 2:36:22 | Brian Maxwell (Can) 2:15:14 |
7 | 07 May 1978 | Sandbach (AAA) | 5 | 2:13:58 | Tony Simmons (Luton) 2:12:33 |
8 | 11 August 1978 | Edmonton (Comm) | 18 | 2:32:54 | Gidamis Shahanga (TAN) 2:15:40 |
9 | 26 August 1978 | Rosyth (2 Bridges) | 12 | 3:50:25 | Cavin Woodward (Leamington) 3:24:45 |
10 | 16 April 1979 | Boston (USA) | 55 | 2:20:18 | Bill Rodgers (USA) 2:09:28 |
11 | 22 September 1979 | Milton Keynes | 2 | 2:15:45 | Gianpaolo Messina (ITA) 2:15:21 |
12 | 27 January 1980 | Hamilton, Bermuda | 2 | 2:18:49 | Andy Holden (Tipton) 2:15:20 |
13 | 03 May 1980 | Milton Keynes (AAA) | 22 | 2:21:38 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:14:00 |
14 | 06 July 1980 | Le Quesnoy (FRA) | 1 | 2:18:40 | |
15 | 14 September 1980 | Glasgow | 1 | 2:16:07 | |
16 | 28 September 1980 | Aberdeen | 10 | 2:30:55 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:19:33 |
17 | 04 January 1981 | Tiberius (ISR) | 1 | 2:16:19 | |
18 | 29 March 1981 | London | 7 | 2:14:54 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
19 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach | DNF | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:14:23 | |
20 | 25 October 1981 | New York | 167 | 2:28:38 | Alberto Salazar (USA) 2:08:13 |
21 | 31 January 1982 | Hamilton, Bermuda | 5 | 2:19:48 | Colin Kirkham (Coventry Godiva) 2:17:28 |
22 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 5 | 2:15:30 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
23 | 26 September 1982 | Beijing (CHN) | 14 | 2:19:48 | Jong-Hyong Lee (PRK) 2:14:44 |
24 | 22 January 1983 | Hong Kong | 1 | 2:15:48 | |
25 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 5 | 2:11:44 | Mike Gratton (Invicta) 2:09:43 |
26 | 19 June 1983 | Laredo (ESP) – E Cup | 37 | 2:21:35 | Waldemar Cierpinski (E Ger) 2:12:26 |
27 | 21 August 1983 | Bolton | 9 | 2:27:12 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:18:09 |
28 | 23 October 1983 | New York | 117 | 2:25:33 | Rod Dixon (New Zealand) 2:08:59 |
29 | 21 January 1984 | Hong Kong | 2:20:43 | Graeme Kennedy (Australia) 2:17:27 | |
30 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 223 | 2:29:28 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
31 | 30 September 1984 | Glasgow | 5 | 2:16:44 | John Boyes (Bournemouth) 2:14:54 |
32 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 18 | 2:15:24 | Steve Jones (RAF) 2:08:16 |
33 | 01 September 1985 | Bolton | 1 | 2:20:58 | |
34 | 15 September 1985 | Humber Bridge | 1 | 2:21:24 | |
35 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 102 | 2:24:53 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
36 | 10 May 1987 | London (AAA) | 217 | 2:32:15 | Horomi Tanaguchi (Japan) 2:09:50 |
37 | 17 April 1988 | London (AAA) | 104 | 2:26:48 | Henrik Jorgensen (Denmark) 2:10:20 |
38 | 11 September 1988 | Humber Bridge | 4 | 2:21:49 | Steve Brace (Bridgend) 2:18:53 |
39 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 86 | 2:24:50 | Douglas Wakiihuri (KEN) 2:09:03 |
40 | 10 September 1989 | Humber Bridge | 8 | 2:26:37 | Marty Deane (Belfast Olympians) 2:19:53 |
41 | 22 April 1990 | London (AAA) | 161 | 2:28:53 | Allister Hutton (Edinburgh SH) 2:10:10 |
42 | 09 September 1990 | Humber Bridge | 3 | 2:27:44 | Ieuan Ellis (Newport) 2:19:26 |
43 | 21 April 1991 | London (AAA) | 232 | 2:29:20 | Yakov Tolstikov (RUS) 2:09:17 |
44 | 12 April 1992 | London (AAA) | 252 | 2:34:43 | Antonio Pinto (POR) 2:10:02 |
45 | 04 October 1992 | Humber Bridge | 18 | 2:39:31 | Ieuan Ellis (Elswick) 2:19:53 |
46 | 18 April 1993 | London (AAA) | 150 | 2:32:34 | Eamonn Martin (ENG) 2:10:50 |
47 | 17 April 1994 | London (AAA) | 170 | 2:32:42 | Dionicio Ceron (MEX) 2:08:53 |
48 | 02 April 1995 | London (AAA) | 234 | 2:37:39 | Dionicio Ceron (MEX) 2:08:30 |
49 | 21 April 1996 | London (AAA) | 177 | 2:39:16 | Dionicio Ceron (MEX) 2:10:00 |
50 | 13 April 1997 | London (AAA) | 277 | 2:39:14 | Antonio Pinto (POR) 2:07:55 |
51 | 16 April 2000 | London (AAA) | 1476 | 3:03:48 | Antonio Pinto (POR) 2:06:36 |
52 | 22 April 2001 | London (AAA) | 710 | 2:56:26 | Abdelkader El Mouaziz (MOR) 2:07:11 |
53 | 14 April 2002 | London (AAA) | 578 | 2:52:01 | Khalid Khannouchi (USA) 2:05:38 |
54 | 13 April 2003 | London (AAA) | 295 | 2:47:30 | Gezahegne Abera (ETH) 2:07:56 |
Alastair Macfarlane – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 26 October 1974 | Harlow | 25 | 2:29:43 | Jim Wight (Edinburgh) 2:16:28 |
2 | 01 June 1975 | Stoke (AAA) | 23 | 2:25:00 | Jeff Norman (Altrincham) 2:15:50 |
3 | 08 May 1976 | Rotherham (AAA) | 27 | 2:24:44 | Barry Watson (Cambridge) 2:15:08 |
4 | 26 June 1976 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 4 | 2:30:14 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:24:12 |
5 | 26 May1979 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:18:03 | |
6 | 03 May 1980 | Milton Keynes (AAA) | 39 | 2:25:51 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:14:00 |
7 | 21 June 1980 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:27:21 | Graham Laing (Aberdeen) 2:23:03 |
8 | 29 March 1981 | London | 35 | 2:22:18 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
9 | 20 June 1981 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:22:25 | Colin Youngson (Aberdeen) 2:20:42 |
10 | 18 October 1981 | Glasgow | 6 | 2:21:01 | Jim McGlynn (Ireland) 2:18:24 |
11 | 29 April 1984 | Dundee | 4 | 2:19:56 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:18:16 |
David Clark – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 03 July 1976 | Milton Keynes (RRC) | 9 | 2:34:53 | Norman Deakin (City of Stoke) 2:25:50 |
2 | 11 September 1976 | Windsor | 11 | 2:28:48 | Bernie Plain (Cardiff) 2:15:43 |
3 | 07 May 1977 | Rugby (AAA) | 10 | 2:21:54 | Dave Cannon (Gateshead) 2:15:02 |
4 | 25 June 1977 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 5 | 2:21:18 | Jim Dingwall (Falkirk Victoria) 2:16:05 |
5 | 04 September 1977 | Rugby | 1 | 2:22:50 | |
6 | 07 May 1978 | Sandbach (AAA) | 29 | 2:20:26 | Tony Simmons (Luton) 2:12:33 |
7 | 22 July 1978 | Pietarsaari (Finland) | 4 | 2:27:57 | Jorma Sippola (Finland) 2:20:57 |
8 | 03 September 1978 | Rugby | 2 | 2:22:25 | Dave Francis (Westbury) 2:19:28 |
9 | 28 October 1978 | Harlow | 2 | 2:17:55 | Paul Eales (Windsor S&E) 2:16:40 |
10 | 25 March 1979 | Essonne (FRA) | 2 | 2:16:01 | Chun-Son Go (PRK) 2:13:34 |
11 | 16 April 1979 | Boston (USA) | 41 | 2:18:29 | Bill Rodgers (USA) 2:09:28 |
12 | 13 May 1979 | Coventry (AAA) | 10 | 2:25:56 | Greg Hannon (Northern Ireland) 2:13:06 |
13 | 08 July 1979 | Tullamore (Ireland) | 2 | 2:18:01 | Pat Hooper (Ireland) 2:17:46 |
14 | 01 September 1979 | Chemnitz (East Ger) | 3 | 2:18:22 | Waldemar Cierpinski (East Ger) 2:15:50 |
15 | 06 July 1980 | Le Quesnoy (FRA) | 4 | 2:23:06 | Jim Dingwall (Falkirk Victoria) 2:18:40 |
16 | 28 September 1980 | Berlin (GER) | 2 | 2:19:33 | Ingo Sensburg (West Ger) 2:16:48 |
17 | 29 March 1981 | London | 29 | 2:21:37 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
18 | 10 May 1981 | Rugby (AAA) | 6 | 2:20:01 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:14:07 |
19 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach | 7 | 2:18:42 | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:14:23 |
20 | 27 September 1981 | Berlin (GER) | 3 | 2:20:10 | Ian Ray (Salisbury) 2:15:42 |
21 | 14 March 1982 | Rome (ITA- ?distance) | 7 | 2:15:06 | Emiel Puttemans (Belgium) 2:09:53 |
22 | 09 May 1982 | London | 7 | 2:15:28 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:09:24 |
23 | 08 August 1982 | St Hilaire de Riez (FRA) | 1 | 2:22:22 | |
24 | 26 September 1982 | Beijing (PRC) | 11 | 2:18:36 | Jong-Hyong Lee (PRK) 2:14:44 |
25 | 22 January 1983 | Hong Kong | 1 | 2:19:14 | Jim Dingwall (Falkirk Victoria) 2:15:48 |
26 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 45 | 2:16:06 | Mike Gratton (Invicta) 2:09:43 |
27 | 29 May 1983 | Geneva (SUI) | 5 | 2:18:19 | Ryszard Kopijasz (Poland) 2:15:00 |
28 | 03 July 1983 | Huddersfield (Pennine) | 1 | 2:22:51 | |
29 | 17 July 1983 | Caithness | 1 | 2:20:34 | |
30 | 21 August 1983 | Bolton | 5 | 2:24:17 | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:18:09 |
31 | 23 October 1983 | New York (USA) | 40 | 2:17:30 | Rod Dixon (New Zealand) 2:08:59 |
32 | 11 March 1984 | Marseilles (FRA) | 6 | 2:26:49 | Christian Geffrey (France) 2:17:50 |
33 | 18 March 1984 | Barcelona (ESP) | 19 | 2:21:36 | Werner Meier (Switzerland) 2:14:50 |
34 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 48 | 2:18:38 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
35 | 27 May 1984 | Geneva (SUI) | 10 | 2:20:02 | Svend-Erik Kristensen (Denmark) 2:14:55 |
36 | 01 July 1984 | Huddersfield (Pennine) | 2 | 2:23:54 | Malcolm McBride (Salford) 2:22:54 |
37 | 23 September 1984 | Montreal (CAN) | 7 | 2:20:27 | Jorge Gonzalez (Puerto Rico) 2:12:48 |
38 | 28 October 1984 | New York (USA) | 17 | 2:21:04 | Orlando Pizzolato (Italy) 2:14:53 |
39 | 02 December 1984 | Florence (ITA-?distance) | 5 | 2:18:07 | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:15:23 |
40 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 37 | 2:18:10 | Steve Jones (RAF) 2:08:16 |
41 | 15 June 1985 | Rio de Janeiro (BRA) | 4 | 2:18:51 | Ron Tabb (USA) 2:16:15 |
42 | 06 October 1985 | Saint Paul (USA) | 14 | 2:18:57 | Phil Coppess (USA) 2:10:05 |
43 | 27 October 1985 | New York (USA) | DNF | Orlando Pizzolato (Italy) 2:11:34 | |
44 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | DNF | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 | |
45 | 20 July 1986 | San Francisco (USA) | 11 | 2:26:04 | Peter Pfitzinger (USA) 2:13:29 |
46 | 12 October 1986 | Saint Paul (USA) | 33 | 2:22:32 | William Donakowski (USA) 2:10:42 |
47 | 02 November 1986 | New York (USA) | 68 | 2:25:35 | Gianni Poli (Italy) 2:11:06 |
48 | 19 March 1987 | Tel Aviv (ISR) | 2 | 2:27:34 | Michel Constant (France) 2:23:27 |
49 | 20 April 1987 | Boston (USA) | 24 | 2:21:27 | Toshihiko Seko (JAP) 2:11:50 |
50 | 13 December 1987 | Honolulu (USA) | 37 | 2:46:06 | Ibrahim Hussein (Kenya) 2:18:26 |
Graham Laing – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 16 September 1979 | Aberdeen | 1 | 2:21:40 | |
2 | 21 June 1980 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 1 | 2:23:03 | |
3 | 28 September 1980 | Aberdeen | 1 | 2:19:33 | |
4 | 01 February 1981 | Beppu (JAP) | 40 | 2:26:59 | Shigeru Soh (Japan) 2:11:30 |
5 | 29 March 1981 | London | 5 | 2:13:59 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
6 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach | 4 | 2:15:29 | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:14:23 |
7 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 6 | 2:15:39 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
8 | 08 October 1982 | Brisbane (AUS-Comm) | 7 | 2:14:54 | Rob DeCastella (Australia) 2:09:18 |
9 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 22 | 2:14:20 | Mike Gratton (Invicta) 2:09:43 |
10 | 19 June 1983 | Laredo (ESP-Euro Cup) | 34 | 2:20:16 | Waldemar Cierpinski (East Ger) 2:12:26 |
11 | 18 September 1983 | Aberdeen | DNF | Kevin Johnson (England) 2:19:01 | |
12 | 23 September 1984 | Montreal (CAN) | 20 | 2:28:53 | Jorge Gonzalez (Puerto Rico) 2:12:48 |
13 | 08 December 1985 | Sacramento (USA) | 22 | 2:22:08 | Peter Butler (Canada) 2:10:56 |
14 | 21 September 1986 | Glasgow | 5 | 2:19:32 | Kenny Stuart (England) 2:14:04 |
15 | 18 September 1987 | Glasgow | 64 | 2:38:09 | Eamonn Tierney (Ireland) 2:19:09 |
16 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 221 | 2:32:53 | Douglas Wakiihuri (Kenya) 2:09:03 |
Andy Robertson – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 22 September 1979 | Milton Keynes | 9 | 2:21:51 | Gianpaolo Messina (ITA) 2:15:21 |
2 | 06 April 1980 | RAF Swinderby | 1 | 2:24:12 | |
3 | 08 June 1980 | Laredo (ESP) | 13 | 2:18.14 | John Graham (Birchfield) 2:13:21 |
4 | 25 January 1981 | Hamilton, Bermuda | 2 | 2:17:20 | Andy Holden (Tipton) 2:16:57 |
5 | 29 April 1981 | RAF Swinderby | 1 | 2:19:06 | |
6 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach | 1 | 2:14:23 | |
7 | 13 September 1981 | Agen (FRA-Euro Cup) | 51 | 2:27:01 | Massimo Magnani (Italy) 2:13:29 |
8 | 31 January 1982 | Hamilton, Bermuda | 2 | 2:18:11 | Colin Kirkham (Coventry Godiva) 2:17:28 |
9 | 10 April 1982 | Maasluis (NED) | 3 | 2:17:05 | Cor Vriend (Netherlands) 2:13:28 |
10 | 26 September 1982 | Torbay | 1 | 2:18:21 | |
11 | 30 January 1983 | Hamilton, Bermuda | 1 | 2:19:09 | |
12 | 15 July 1984 | Bristol | 1 | 2:18:58 | |
13 | 02 December 1984 | Florence (ITA-? distance) | 1 | 2:15:23 | |
14 | 02 June 1985 | Plymouth | 1 | 2:25:35 | |
15 | 17 August 1986 | Bolton | 2 | 2:21:15 | Mike Neary (Salford) 2:19:25 |
16 | 21 September 1986 | Torbay | 1 | 2:20:50 | |
17 | 20 May 1989 | Ryde, Isle of Wight | 1 | 2:25:13 |
Des Austin – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 27 October 1979 | Harlow | 10 | 2:24:58 | Ian Ray (Salisbury) 2:16:04 |
2 | 19 July 1980 | Morecambe | 2 | 2:19:30 | Mike Critchley (Bolton) 2:18:17 |
3 | 29 March 1981 | London | 18 | 2:20:16 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
4 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach | 9 | 2:19:21 | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:14:23 |
5 | 23 August 1981 | Bolton | 2 | 2:23:34 | Stan Curran (Salford) 2:19:32 |
6 | 18 October 1981 | Glasgow | 5 | 2:19:19 | Jim McGlynn (IRL) 2:18:24 |
7 | 09 May 1982 | London | 52 | 2:22:28 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:09:24 |
8 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 60 | 2:36:36 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
9 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 20 | 2:24:56 | Glenn Forster (ENG) 2:17:16 |
10 | 30 May 1983 | Gillingham | 2 | 2:23:56 | Terry Osborne (Royal Navy) 2:23:04 |
11 | 23 October 1983 | New York (USA) | 631 | 2:46:00 | Rod Dixon (NZ) 2:08:59 |
12 | 20 October 1985 | Chicago (USA) | 47 | 2:24:49 | Steve Jones (WAL) 2:07:13 |
13 | 02 November 1986 | New York (USA) | 398 | 2:48:05 | Gianni Poli (ITA) 2:11:06 |
14 | 10 May 1987 | London (AAA) | 74 | 2:24:14 | Hiromi Tanaguchi (JAP) 2:09:50 |
15 | 18 April 1988 | Boston (USA) | 90 | 2:28:38 | Ibrahim Hussein (KEN) 2:08:43 |
16 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 130 | 2:28:12 | Douglas Wakiihuri (KEN) 2:09:03 |
17 | 22 April 1990 | London (AAA) | 198 | 2:30:42 | Allister Hutton (Edinburgh SH) 2:10:10 |
John Graham – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 03 May 1980 | Milton Keynes (AAA) | DNF | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:14:00 | |
2 | 08 June 1980 | Laredo (ESP) | 1 | 2:13:21 | |
3 | 07 September 1980 | Eugene, Oregon (USA) | 8 | 2:15:04 | Dick Quaz (New Zealand) 2:10:47 |
4 | 26 October 1980 | New York (USA) | 3 | 2:11:46 | Alberto Salazar (USA) 2:09:41 |
5 | 08 February 1981 | Auckland (NZ) | DNF | Dave Cannon (Gateshead) 2:12:53 | |
6 | 10 May 1981 | Rugby (AAA) | DNF | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:14:07 | |
7 | 23 May 1981 | Rotterdam (NED) | 1 | 2:09:28 | |
8 | 13 September 1981 | Agen (FRA) – Euro Cup | DNF | Massimo Magnani (ITA) 2:13:29 | |
9 | 25 October 1981 | New York (USA) | 44 | 2:19:13 | Alberto Salazar (USA) 2:08:13 |
10 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 4 | 2:15:14 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
11 | 08 October 1982 | Brisbane (AUS – Comm) | 4 | 2:13:04 | Rob DeCastella (AUS) 2:09:18 |
09 April 1983 | Rotterdam (NED) | Pace | Rob DeCastella (AUS) 2:08:37 | ||
12 | 23 October 1983 | New York (USA) | 5 | 2:10:57 | Rod Dixon (New Zealand) 2:08:59 |
13 | 19 February 1984 | Los Angeles (USA) | DNF | Gidamis Shahanga (TAN) 2:10:19 | |
14 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 11 | 2:14:40 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
15 | 19 August 1984 | San Francisco (USA) | 17 | 2:23:48 | Simon Kigen (KEN) 2:10:18 |
16 | 20 April 1985 | Rotterdam (NED) | 2 | 2:09:58 | Carlos Lopes (POR) 2:07:12 |
17 | 20 October 1985 | Chicago (USA) | 12 | 2:12:55 | Steve Jones (WAL) 2:07:13 |
18 | 19 April 1986 | Rotterdam (NED) | 6 | 2:13:42 | Abebe Mekonnen (ETH) 2:09:08 |
19 | 01 August 1986 | Edinburgh (SCO – Comm) | 4 | 2:12:10 | Rob DeCastella (AUS) 2:10:15 |
20 | 18 April 1987 | Rotterdam (NED) | DNF | Belayneh Dinsamo (ETH) 2:12:58 | |
21 | 10 May 1987 | London (AAA) | 11 | 2:12:32 | Horomi Tanaguchi (Japan) 2:09:50 |
22 | 15 January 1989 | Marrakech (MAR) | DNF | Jean Weijts (BEL) 2:15:49 | |
23 | 01 October 1989 | Berlin (GER) | DNF | Alfredo Shahanga (TAN) 2:10:11 |
Allister Hutton – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 03 May 1980 | Milton Keynes (AAA) | DNF | Ian Thompson (Luton) 2:14:00 | |
2 | 01 September 1984 | Oslo (NOR) | 2 | 2:16:08 | Kjell-Erik Stahl (SWE) 2:13:01 |
3 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 3 | 2:09:16 | Steve Jones (WAL) 2:08:16 |
4 | 20 October 1985 | Chicago (USA) | 11 | 2:12:28 | Steve Jones (WAL) 2:07:13 |
5 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 3 | 2:12:36 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
6 | 30 August 1986 | Stuttgart (GER – Euro) | DNF | Gelindo Bordin (ITA) 2:10:54 | |
7 | 26 October 1986 | Chicago (USA) | 12 | 2:15:57 | Toshihiko Seko (JAP) 2:08:27 |
8 | 01 November 1987 | New York (USA) | 44 | 2:22:52 | Ibrahim Hussein (KEN) 2:11:01 |
9 | 17 April 1988 | London (AAA) | 6 | 2:11:42 | Henrik Jorgensen (Denmark) 2:10:20 |
10 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 13 | 2:12:47 | Douglas Wakiihuri (KEN) 2:09:03 |
11 | 22 April 1990 | London (AAA) | 1 | 2:10:10 | |
12 | 21 April 1991 | London (AAA) | 32 | 2:14:13 | Yakov Tolstikov (RUS) 2:09:17 |
13 | 12 April 1992 | London (AAA) | 89 | 2:25:15 | Antonio Pinto (POR) 2:10:02 |
Graham Getty – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 22 June 1980 | Sandbach/British Students | 11 / 2 | 2:25:46 | Trevor Wright (Wolves & Bilston) 2:13:45
Evan Cameron 2.24.27 |
2 | 21 June 1981 | Sandbach/British Students | 44 / 5 | 2:31:10 | Andy Robertson (Army) 2:14:23
Dave Ellis 2.26.26 |
3 | 10 July 1982 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 7 | 2:33:37 | Colin Youngson (Aberdeen) 2:18:02 |
4 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 24 | 2:25:38 | Glenn Forster (Sunderland) 2:17:16 |
5 | 11 September 1983 | Glasgow | 15 | 2:24:24 | Peter Fleming (Bellahouston) 2:17:46 |
6 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 54 | 2:19:34 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
7 | 30 September 1984 | Glasgow | 14 | 2:19:24 | John Boyes (Bournemouth) 2:14:54 |
8 | 23 June 1985 | Edinburgh (SAAA) | 3 | 2:24:13 | Evan Cameron (Edinburgh SH) 2:22:49 |
9 | 22 September 1985 | Glasgow | 24 | 2:23:25 | David Lowes (Chester le Street) 2:15:31 |
10 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 85 | 2:23:42 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
Andy Daly – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 26 October 1980 | New York (USA) | 534 | 2:47:13 | Alberto Salazar (USA) 2:09:41 |
2 | 29 March 1981 | London | 60 | 2:24:23 | Dick Beardsley / Inge Simonsen 2:11:48 |
3 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 7 | 2:21:41 | Glenn Forster (England) 2:17:16 |
4 | 13 March 1983 | Barcelona (ESP) | 10 | 2:20:09 | Allan Zachariasen (Denmark) 2:11:05 |
5 | 20 March 1983 | Essonne (FRA) | 5 | 2:24:07 | Andras Jenkei (Hungary) 2:16:24 |
6 | 11 September 1983 | Glasgow | 6 | 2:19:30 | Peter Fleming (Bellahouston) 2:17:46 |
7 | 07 May 1984 | Belfast | 1 | 2:18:05 | |
8 | 30 September 1984 | Glasgow | 6 | 2:16.56 | John Boyes (Bournemouth) 2:14:54 |
9 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 21 | 2:15:47 | Steve Jones (RAF) 2:08:16 |
10 | 22 September 1985 | Glasgow | DNF | David Lowes (Chester le Street) 2:15:31 | |
11 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 36 | 2:17:53 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
12 | 15 March 1987 | Barcelona (ESP) | 5 | 2:19:35 | Par Wallin (Sweden) 2:13:59 |
13 | 18 September 1987 | Glasgow | 6 | 2:21:00 | Eamonn Tierney (Ireland) 2:19:09 |
14 | 31 October 1988 | Dublin | 6 | 2:19:21 | John Griffin (Ireland) 2:16:02 |
15 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 62 | 2:21:40 | Douglas Wakiihuri (KEN) 2:09:03 |
16 | 28 January 1990 | Hong Kong | 6 | 2:33:52 | Shang Y Cai (China) 2.25.14 |
Fraser Clyne – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 27 September 1981 | Aberdeen | 4 | 2:23:36 | Max Coleby (England) 2:21:29 |
2 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 17 | 2:20:39 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
3 | 19 September 1982 | Aberdeen | 3 | 2:19:58 | Gerry Helme (England) 2:15:16 |
4 | 06 February 1983 | Oakland (USA) | 1 | 2:18:18 | |
5 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 23 | 2:14:29 | Mike Gratton (Invicta) 2:09:43 |
6 | 04 December 1983 | Fukuoka (JAP) | 31 | 2:19:18 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:08:52 |
7 | 05 February 1984 | Oakland (USA) | 1 | 2:15:21 | |
8 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 18 | 2:15:54 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
9 | 30 September 1984 | Berlin (GER) | 6 | 2:15:21 | Johan Skovbjerg (Denmark) 2:13:35 |
10 | 02 December 1984 | Sacramento (USA) | 2 | 2:11:50 | Ken Martin (USA) 2:11:24 |
11 | 14 April 1985 | Hiroshima (JAP-World Cup) | 48 | 2:16:20 | Ahmed Saleh (Djibouti) 2:08:09 |
12 | 05 May 1985 | Pittsburgh (USA) | 13 | 2:23:28 | Ken Martin (USA) 2:12:57 |
13 | 13 October 1985 | Melbourne (AUS) | 2 | 2:14:20 | Frederik Vandervennet (Belgium) 2:12:35 |
14 | 08 December 1985 | Sacramento (USA) | 7 | 2:14:26 | Peter Butler (Canada) 2:10:56 |
15 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | DNF | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 | |
16 | 01 August 1986 | Edinburgh (SCO-Comm) | 10 | 2:17:30 | Rob DeCastella (Australia) 2:10:15 |
17 | 07 December 1986 | Sacramento (USA) | 6 | 2:15:03 | Daniel Gonzalez (USA) 2:13:20 |
18 | 12 April 1987 | Soeul (PRK-World Cup) | 47 | 2:17:43 | Ahmed Saleh (Djibouti) 2:10:55 |
19 | 19 July 1987 | San Francisco (USA) | 5 | 2:17:27 | Mehmet Turzi (Turkey) 2:14:07 |
20 | 06 December 1987 | Sacramento (USA) | 5 | 2:18:58 | Peter Maher (Canada) 2:16:49 |
21 | 06 March 1988 | Casablanca (MAR) | 2 | 2:16:32 | Petr Klimes (Czechoslavakia) 2:16:32 |
22 | 02 October 1988 | Saint Paul (USA) | 4 | 2:16:04 | Daniel Boltz (Switzerland) 2:14:10 |
23 | 15 January 1989 | Houston (USA) | 9 | 2:16:11 | Richard Kaitany (Kenya) 2:10:04 |
24 | 16 April 1989 | Milan (ITA-World Cup) | DNF | Metaferia Zeleke (Ethiopia) 2:10:28 | |
25 | 01 October 1989 | Berlin (GER) | 23 | 2:17:45 | Alfredo Shahanga (Tanzania) 2:10:11 |
26 | 03 December 1989 | Sacramento (USA) | 4 | 2:17:57 | Budd Coates (USA) 2:14:07 |
27 | 02 November 1991 | Black Isle | 1 | 2:27:18 | |
28 | 08 December 1991 | Sacramento (USA) | 2 | 2:16:58 | Bruce Deacon (Canada) 2:15:16 |
29 | 03 May 1992 | Pittsburgh (USA) | 18 | 2:25:03 | Jorge Gonzalez (Puerto Rico) 2:17:33 |
30 | 02 August 1992 | Elgin (SAAA) | 1 | 2:25:38 | |
31 | 06 December 1992 | Sacramento (USA) | 8 | 2:20:43 | Steve Plasencia (USA) 2:14:14 |
32 | 30 June 1993 | Greenock (SAAA) | 1 | 2:26:40 | |
33 | 24 April 1994 | Fort William | 1 | 2:25:17 | |
34 | 19 June 1994 | Loch Rannoch (SAAA) | 1 | 2:23:08 | |
35 | 15 September 1996 | Greenock (SAAA) | 1 | 2:28:25 | |
36 | 13 April 1997 | London (AAA) | 70 | 2:26:29 | Antonio Pinto (Portugal) 2:07:55 |
37 | 07 September 1997 | Elgin (SAAA) | 1 | 2:29:37 | |
38 | 17 May 1998 | Fort William | 2 | 2:33:46 | Mike Girvan (Warrington) 2:30:46 |
FRASER CLYNE ULTRA CAREER RECORD
No | Date | Venue | Pos | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 19 March 1994 | Pitreavie 50 km | 1 | 3:03:33 | |
2 | 03 April 1994 | Speyside Way 50 km | 1 | 3:02:07 | |
3 | 08 May 1994 | Greenwich (UK 100 km) | DNF | Paul Taylor (Woodstock) 7:35:03 | |
4 | 15 April 1995 | Two Oceans (RSA) 56 km | 37 | 3:26:22 | Simon Malindi (RSA) 3:10:53 |
Terry Mitchell – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 27 September 1981 | Aberdeen | 14 | 2:28:39 | Max Coleby (England) 2:21:29 |
2 | 24 April 1983 | Dundee | 2 | 2:20:50 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:17:24 |
3 | 29 April 1984 | Dundee | 6 | 2:20:24 | Don MacGregor (Fife) 2:18:16 |
4 | 22 September 1985 | Glasgow | 31 | 2:24:45 | David Lowes (Chester le Street) 2:15:31 |
5 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 38 | 2:18:00 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
6 | 29 June 1986 | Loch Rannoch | 1 | 2:30:35 | |
7 | 20 September 1986 | Niagara Falls (CAN) | 4 | 2:22:42 | Kazuya Nishimoto (Japan) 2:17:35 |
8 | 26 April 1987 | Dundee (SAAA) | 1 | 2:22:19 | |
9 | 20 September 1987 | Glasgow | 2 | 2:19:40 | Eamonn Tierney (Ireland) 2:19:09 |
10 | 14 February 1988 | Sliema, Malta | 1 | 2:20:35 | |
11 | 23 April 1989 | London (AAA) | 46 | 2:20:10 | Douglas Wakiihuri (Kenya) 2:09:03 |
12 | 28 May 1989 | Aberdeen (SAAA) | 2 | 2:24:53 | Ian Bloomfield (England) 2:22:30 |
13 | 29 October 1990 | Dublin | 6 | 2:20:21 | John Bolger (Ireland) 2:17:17 |
14 | 11 August 1991 | Greenock (SAAA) | 1 | 2:24:50 | |
15 | 13 October 1991 | Istanbul (TUR) | 1 | 2:22:09 | |
16 | 25 April 1992 | Belgrade (SER) | 5 | 2:17:56 | Nicolas Nyengerai (Zimbabwe) 2:16:07 |
17 | 12 July 1992 | Gold Coast (AUS) | 8 | 2:19:15 | Katsumi Kitajima (Japan) 2:14:15 |
18 | 11 October 1992 | Istanbul (TUR) | 3 | 2:24:14 | Cihangir Demirel (Turkey) 2:23:28 |
19 | 14 February 1993 | Sliema, Malta | 2 | 2:21:56 | Hugh Jones (Ranelagh) 2:19:30 |
20 | 18 July 1993 | Patthaya (Thailand) | 4 | n/a | Nicodemus Ongeri (Kenya) 2:17:19 |
21 | 25 October 1993 | Dublin | 5 | 2:19:00 | John Treacy (Ireland) 2:14:40 |
22 | 02 May 1994 | Belfast | 1 | 2:20:24 | |
23 | 19 June 1994 | Loch Rannoch (SAAA) | 2 | 2:23:46 | Fraser Clyne (Metro Aberdeen) 2:23:08 |
24 | 02 October 1994 | Kosice (SLO) | 16 | 2:25:18 | Petr Pipa (Slovakia) 2:15:03 |
25 | 08 May 1995 | Belfast | 3 | 2:21:52 | John Ferrin (Northern Ireland) 2:18:42 |
26 | 06 May 1996 | Belfast | 1 | 2:21:36 | |
27 | 05 May 1997 | Belfast | 6 | 2:29:13 | John Ferrin (Northern Ireland) 2:20:17 |
28 | 13 September 1998 | Greenock (SAAA) | 3 | 2:39:06 | Brian Scally (Shettleston) 2:29:32 |
29 | 01 May 2000 | Belfast | 2 | 2:28:39 | Wilson Cheruiyot (Kenya) 2:24:13 |
30 | 07 May 2001 | Belfast | 6 | 2:34:28 | Joseph Riri (Kenya) 2:26:00 |
31 | 06 May 2002 | Belfast | 14 | 2:40:46 | Simon Pride (Metro Aberdeen) 2:22:21 |
Terry Mitchell – Ultra Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 22 September 1996 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 1 | 3:02:27 | |
2 | 10 May 1998 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 1 | 3:03:46 | |
3 | 13 May 2001 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 1 | 3:19:11 | |
4 | 12 May 2002 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 1 | 3:16:18 | |
5 | 08 May 2005 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 3 | 3:30:34 | Colin Deasy (Coventry Godiva) 3:12:32 |
6 | 14 May 2006 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 4 | 3:33:21 | Colin Deasy (Coventry Godiva) 3:06:44 |
7 | 27 August 2006 | Strathaven 50 miles | 1 | 6:49:16 | |
8 | 09 September 2007 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 2 | 3:35:37 | Colin Gell (Sale) 3:25:37 |
9 | 17 February 2008 | Draycote Water 35 miles | 11 | 4:13:56 | David Gardiner (Kirkintilloch Olym) 3:44:58 |
10 | 18 May 2008 | Cardiff Anglo Celtic Plate 100km | DNF | Dominic Croft (Woodstock/England) 7:21:45 | |
11 | 10 May 2009 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 3 | 3:34:29 | Andy McNeil (Long Eaton) 3:26:25 |
12 | 31 March 2013 | Perth (SAAA) 50 km | 10 | 3:55:06 | Paul Fernandez (Abingdon Amblers) 3:04:07 |
Peter Fleming – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 25 October 1981 | New York (USA) | 145 | 2:27:21 | Alberto Salazar (USA) 2:08:13 |
2 | 17 October 1982 | Glasgow | 3 | 2:19:40 | Glenn Forster (Sunderland) 2:17:16 |
3 | 11 September 1983 | Glasgow | 1 | 2:17:46 | |
4 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 102 | 2:23:34 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
5 | 16 March 1986 | Barcelona (ESP) | 3 | 2:17:47 | Frederik Vandervennet (Belgium) 2:15:45 |
6 | 06 November 1988 | New York (USA) | 27 | 2:21:48 | Steve Jones (Wales) 2:08:20 |
7 | 10 December 1989 | Palermo (ITA) | 1 | 2:15:22 | |
8 | 30 September 1990 | Brussels (BEL) | 7 | 2:22:32 | Csaba Szucs (Hungary) 2:17:36 |
9 | 20 January 1991 | Houston (USA) | 7 | 2:14:57 | Carey Nelson (Canada) 2:12:28 |
10 | 15 September 1991 | Brussels (BEL) | 2 | 2:18:17 | Anatoliy Korepanov (Russia) 2:18:04 |
11 | 26 January 1992 | Houston (USA) | 12 | 2:16:48 | Filemon Lopez (Mexico) 2:13:12 |
12 | 11 October 1992 | Beijing (PRC) | 9 | 2:17:02 | Takahiro Izumi (Japan) 2:11:29 |
13 | 31 October 1993 | San Sebastian (ESP-World Cup) | 24 | 2:13:33 | Richard Nerurkar (GBR) 2:10:03 |
14 | 19 March 1994 | Naaldwijk (NED) | 1 | 2:14:03 | |
15 | 09 October 1994 | Eindhoven (NED) | 14 | 2:17:33 | Aiduna Aitnafa (Ethiopia) 2:11:37 |
16 | 15 January 1995 | Houston (USA) | 5 | 2:13:35 | Peter Fonseca (Canada) 2:11:52 |
17 | 07 May 1995 | Pittsburgh (USA) | 5 | 2:16:00 | John Kagwe (Kenya) 2:10:24 |
18 | 15 October 1995 | Chicago (USA) | 12 | 2:15:25 | Eamonn Martin (England) 2:11:18 |
19 | 03 March 1996 | Los Angeles (USA) | DNF | Jose Luis Molina (Costa Rica) 2:13:23 | |
20 | 22 June 1996 | Duluth (USA) | 3 | 2:16:58 | Patrick Muturi (Kenya) 2:13:43 |
21 | 20 October 1996 | Chicago (USA) | DNF | Paul Evans (England) 2:08:52 | |
22 | 10 November 1996 | Columbus (USA) | 2 | 2:20:00 | Abderazzak Haki (Morocco) 2:17:29 |
23 | 14 February 1999 | Austin (USA) | 1 | 2:17:14 | |
24 | 11 July 1999 | San Francisco (USA) | DNF | Brad Hawthorne (USA) 2:24:36 | |
25 | 16 April 2001 | Boston (USA) | DNF | Bong Ju Lee (Korea) 2:09:43 | |
26 | 17 February 2002 | Austin (USA) | 13 | 2:23:49 | Andrzej Krzyscin (Poland) 2:12:11 |
27 | 16 February 2003 | Austin (USA) | 10 | 2:23:21 | Andrzej Krzyscin (Poland) 2:12:41 |
28 | 15 February 2004 | Austin (USA) | 12 | 2:28:49 | Andrzej Krzyscin (Poland) 2:14:17 |
29 | 30 May 2004 | Burlington (USA) | 1 | 2:24:02 |
Lindsay Robertson – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 13 June 1982 | Gateshead (AAA) | 14 | 2:19:18 | Steve Kenyon (Salford) 2:11:40 |
2 | 05 September 1982 | Edinburgh | 3 | 2:21:43 | Dave Ellis (England) 2:21:09 |
3 | 17 October 1982 | Turin (ITA – ?distance) | 4 | 2:19:16 | Mark DeBlander (Belgium) 2:14:57 |
4 | 13 March 1983 | Barcelona (ESP) | 6 | 2:18:02 | Allen Zachariassen (Denmark) 2:11:05 |
5 | 17 April 1983 | London (AAA) | 59 | 2:17:02 | Mike Gratton (Invicta) 2:09:43 |
6 | 04 September 1983 | Edinburgh | 1 | 2:21:36 | |
7 | 18 March 1984 | Barcelona (ESP) | 6 | 2:16:15 | Werner Meier (Switzerland) 2:14:50 |
8 | 13 May 1984 | London (AAA) | 25 | 2:16:44 | Charlie Spedding (Gateshead) 2:09:57 |
9 | 02 September 1984 | Edinburgh | 1 | 2:15:55 | |
10 | 28 October 1984 | New York (USA) | 14 | 2:20:09 | Orlando Pizzolato (Italy) 2:14:53 |
11 | 17 December 1984 | Tiberias (ISR) | 1 | 2:16:28 | |
12 | 21 April 1985 | London (AAA) | 13 | 2:14:59 | Steve Jones (RAF) 2:08:16 |
13 | 15 September 1985 | Rome (ITA-Euro Cup) | 23 | 2:17:43 | Michael Heilmann (E Germany) 2:11:28 |
14 | 17 December 1985 | Tiberias (ISR) | 1 | 2:15:39 | |
15 | 20 April 1986 | London (AAA) | 13 | 2:15:03 | Toshihiko Seko (Japan) 2:10:02 |
16 | 02 November 1986 | New York (USA) | 24 | 2:17:31 | Gianni Poli (Italy) 2:11:06 |
17 | 12 April 1987 | Soeul (PRK-World Cup) | 22 | 2:15:07 | Ahmed Saleh (Djibouti) 2:10:55 |
18 | 25 October 1987 | Frankfurt (W Ger) | 1 | 2:13:30 | |
19 | 09 December 1987 | Tiberias (ISR) | 1 | 2:16:06 | |
20 | 17 April 1988 | London (AAA) | 26 | 2:16:26 | Henrik Jorgensen (Denmark) 2:10:20 |
Simon Pride – Marathon Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Position | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 28 April 1996 | Fort William | 3 | 2:40:24 | John Duffy (Shettleston) 2:29:03 |
2 | 06 September 1998 | Elgin | 1 | 2:29:04 | |
3 | 25 April 1999 | Fort William | 1 | 2:24:24 | |
4 | 16 January 2000 | Houston (USA) | 10 | 2:21:35 | Stephen Ndungu (Kenya) 2:11:28 |
5 | 16 April 2000 | London | 33 | 2:21:00 | Antonio Pinto (Portugal) 2:06:36 ER |
6 | 03 September 2000 | Elgin (SAAA) | 1 | 2:21:17 | |
7 | 30 October 2000 | Dublin | 1 | 2:18:49 | |
8 | 12 January 2001 | Dubai (UAE) | 14 | 2:20:03 | Wilson Kibet (Kenya) 2:13:36 |
9 | 22 April 2001 | London | 17 | 2:16:27 | Abdelkader El Mouaziz (Morocco) 2:07:11 |
10 | 02 September 2001 | Elgin (SAAA) | 1 | 2:28:34 | |
11 | 29 October 2001 | Dublin | 8 | 2:17:37 | Zacharia Mpolokeng (South Africa) 2:14:03 |
12 | 06 May 2002 | Belfast | 1 | 2:22:21 | |
13 | 28 July 2002 | Manchester (Comm) | 16 | 2:23:56 | Francis Robert Naali (Tanzania) 2:11:58 |
14 | 28 September 2003 | Loch Ness | 2 | 2:23:52 | Tomas Abyu (Salford) 2:20:59 |
15 | 27 October 2003 | Dublin | 5 | 2:18:52 | Onesmus Nzioka (Kenya) 2:17:03 |
16 | 29 February 2004 | Seville (ESP) | 8 | 2:19:42 | Nelson Lebo (Kenya) 2:11:13 |
17 | 25 April 2004 | Fort William (SAAA) | 1 | 2:21:21 | |
18 | 29 August 2004 | Elgin | 1 | 2:36:49 | |
19 | 03 October 2004 | Loch Ness | 1 | 2:27:58 | |
20 | 25 October 2004 | Dublin | 19 | 2:29:01 | Lezan Kipkosgei (Kenya) 2:13:08 |
21 | 02 October 2005 | Loch Ness | 1 | 2:30:15 | |
22 | 23 April 2006 | Fort William | 1 | 2:27:57 | |
23 | 03 September 2006 | Elgin | 1 | 2:39:53 | |
24 | 01 October 2006 | Loch Ness (SAAA) | 2 | 2:22:25 | Zachary Kihara (Kenya) 2:22:17 |
25 | 30 October 2006 | Dublin | 11 | 2:23:06 | Aleksey Sokolov (Russia) 2:11:39 |
26 | 02 September 2007 | Elgin (SAAA) | 2 | 2:33:46 | Jamie Reid (Cambuslang) 2:33:11 |
Simon Pride – Ultra Career Record
No | Date | Venue | Pos | Time | Winner (Club) Time |
1 | 14 April 1996 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:11:00 | |
2 | 21 July 1996 | Edinburgh ACP/UK 100 km | 3 | 8:01:38 | Stephen Moore (Hertford & Ware) 7:17:16 |
3 | 22 Sept 1996 | Glenrothes (SAAA) 50 km | 2 | 3:08:56 | Terry Mitchell (Fife) 3:02:27 |
4 | 02 March 1997 | Barry 40 miles track | 1 | 3:54:24 | |
5 | 06 April 1997 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 2:59:18 | |
6 | 31 May 1997 | Del Passatore (ITA) Euro 100 km | 9 | 7:10:25 | Alexsei Kononov (Russia) 6:47:35 |
7 | 20 July 1997 | Edinburgh ACP/UK 100 km | 2 | 7:14:13 | Stephen Moore (Hertford & Ware) 7:04:22 |
8 | 13 September 1997 | Winschoten (NED) World 100 km | 17 | 6:57:09 | Sergey Yanenko (Ukraine) 6:25:25 |
9 | 01 March 1998 | Barry 40 miles track | 1 | 4:01:32 | |
10 | 12 April 1998 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:19:59 | |
11 | 19 June 1998 | Torhout (BEL) Euro 100 km | 13 | 6:57:28 | Grigoriy Murzin (Russia) 6:23:29 |
12 | 29 August 1998 | Two Bridges 35.5 miles | 1 | 3:27:40 | |
13 | 18 October 1998 | Nakamura (JAP-World 100 km) | 6 | 6:59:38 | Grigoriy Murzin (Russia) 6:30:06 |
14 | 07 March 1999 | Barry 40 miles track | 1 | 3:53:55 | |
15 | 11 April 1999 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:02:20 | |
16 | 15 May 1999 | Chavagnes-en-Paillers (FRA-World 100km) | 1 | 6:24:05 | UK record (road) |
17 | 16 June 1999 | Comrades 89.9 km (down) | 33 | 6:09:21 | Jaroslaw Janicki (Poland) 5:30:10 |
18 | 14 April 2002 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:07:27 | |
19 | 13 April 2003 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:11:56 | |
20 | 11 April 2004 | Speyside Way 50 km trail | 1 | 3:02:15 | |
21 | 29 May 2004 | Del Passatore (ITA) Euro 100 km | 3 | 6:48:48 | Maro Ardemagni (Italy) 6:31:45 |
Athletics Weekly
“Athletics Weekly” is an English athletics magazine which covers athletics all over Britain and, they might claim, the world. From the Scottish perspective, it should be looked at for three main reasons.
First, It covers all the main races in depth – this is especially true of cross-country and major marathon races. Linked with the Scottish penchant for going where the races are to be found it is an invaluable source of results in depth which are meat and drink to athletes and statisticians alike;
second are the British ranking lists which athletes love to pore over for their own and their rivals performances;
and third, the content often has profiles of Scots athletes, stories of Scottish interest and a page of reports on Scottish races (this last has been at times scanty but more of that later).
To appear on the cover of the “Athletics Weekly” is an honour – I remember turning up for a race at Irvine and being greeted by a friend from Greenock with the words, “Puckers is on the cover of AW!” His team mate Alan Puckrin had appeared on it for the first time! The cover above, courtesy of Hugh Barrow, shows a Scot leading the field in the mile at the Sward Trophy Meeting, one of the big inter-club meetings which were a feature of athletics at the time.
The picture above is of the first ever issue of the magazine. It is a bit blurred but does show that it is Volume II Issue I. The story is that it was started as a monthly by PW “Jimmy” Green in 1945, with the first few issues produced from the back bedroom of a bungalow in Kent which Green shared with his wife, Pam. Post-war paper rationing was still in force (the Glasgow Herald for instance was down to 8 pages), Green, as Wikipedia tells us used “a mixture of determination and devilment to launch the first, self-published edition. It was numbered Volume II Issue I, but this was a deliberate error to fool the government into thinking the magazine had existed before the war. “
Green was also told by experts in both athletics and publishing that the idea would never work. He is reported to have “thanked them for their advice and completely ignored it. I was pig headed,” said Green. Green’s magazine went weekly in January 1950, published on Fridays, and has never failed to come out since. In 1968, Green (who died in 1998, aged 88) passed the editorship to the enthusiastic and knowledgeable Mel Watman, who in a near-20-year reign steered the title to some success and continued to build its reputation for accuracy and authority.
The cover varied from issue to issue to start with – see the one above before settling on the ‘Green-with-Yellow’ covers of the 1950’s shown above and in the 1960’s it became Yellow-with-Green for a short while. The photograph below is of Glasgow’s Shettleston Harriers. By the time of the Commonwealth Games in the 1970’s it was the familiar blue that most of us will remember.
There had been many Scots profiled in the magazine – Graham Everett above had been only one of them from the 50’s along with many of the all-conquering Victoria Park team of the period, Ian McCafferty, Lachie Stewart and many others in the 1960’s and 70’s, Donald Macgregor, Jim Alder, Fergus Murray in the 80’s, lots of them appeared on the front cover too. Some of them form part of the profiles of the athletes on this website. But one of the really big attractions for the real aficionados was the ranking list. There were ranking lists for men and women, for junior, youth and boy athletes, for Inters, Juniors and girls; there were real in depth lists for separate events (the marathon lists of the 1970’s and 80’s were well scrutinised), and for groups of events. All accompanied by top quality photographs by such well known photographers as Mark Shearman, and pretty well every one annotated by an authority such as Bob Sparks. The one spot that Scots felt could have been better dealt with was the coverage of Scottish events. In the beginning Willie Diverty of Glasgow University and Victoria Park did the job, he was followed by Colin Shields who did the reporting for a long time and then there were some others who reported for relatively short periods – Cammie Spence and Dave Cooney among them. The trouble was that the reports were erratic – for instance there might have been three pages devoted to Scottish events, eg 27th December issue had three whole pages devoted to Scottish reports by Colin Shields, and other weeks had either non-existent or very brief results. In general however Scottish athletics was pretty well covered.
The coverage by the magazine of the Edinburgh Commonwealth Games in 1970 could not have been bettered either before or after. Ranking lists both national and commonwealth, relevant national championship results, race reports, interviews with athletes, some wonderful photographs and expert assessments of every race.
Independently published by Kent Art Printers in a distinctive A5, pocket-sized format, the magazine reached its peak of popularity in the mid-1980s – coinciding with the marathon running boom following the first London Marathon in 1981 – selling some 25,000 copies per week. The cover on 21st December was of Sandy Keith winning at Harlow and the issue of 27th December showed Leslie Watson as one of the first three at Barnsley. Both featured frequently in the publication. Typical of the content was this inside front of the 27 December 1975 issue
There were results, ranking lists, profiles of runners and other items of interest to the athletics public. The UK women’s lists included Scots such as Helen Golden, Liz Sutherland, Ann Clarkson, Christine McMeekin, Christine Haskett, Myra Nimmo and Meg Ritchie; and while none of them were in the World Tp 20 for their event there were several not too far away who would be very interested in how much or how little they had to improve to be at that level. It was also an issue of the magazine that covered Scots results well with the SCCU Cross-Country Relays reported on in depth, the SWCCU East District Championship, the East District League result and Stewarton Cross-Country races for both men and women.
The 70’s and early/mid-80’s saw the best of “Athletics Weekly” – a publication for athletes and athletics lovers for athletes and athletics lovers. It coincided with the ‘running boom’ when literally thousands of athletes trained for and succeeded in running marathons. The standard had never been higher nor had it ever had so much depth of talent. The magazine covered the scene superbly. Incidentally the cover changed too with colour being introduced and we had this one (below) with Rob de Castella on the front of a special London Marathon preview issue with 40 pages devoted to the event. These included AIMS meeting to be held in London, an article on BARR (how many now, in the 21st century, remember AIMS and BARR?) a list of all time best performances including all men under 2:10 (47 of them) and women’s performances under 2:30 (25); the UK all time lists (men to 2:14 and women to 2:45) and lots more.
The ‘special issues’ were huge but the everyday, or every week, issues were also big – the one below ran to 64 pages and that was normal and accepted as such by all who bought it as well as by those who produced it. Nor was it one of those magazines which enthusiasts bought and kept in a binder, taking care to keep it clean, sharp and ‘as new’. No doubt many were but most were bought, scrutinised marked or had notes taken, borrowed, loaned, discussed ….. I remember lending a copy to a fellow Harrier on a Saturday, him eventually taking me back to his house to return it and us sitting there with a bowl of potatoes and stew talking about it. (It was a yellow one with green writing!) It really was important reading to athletes with pretensions to operate at UK or European or World level; it was important too to their coaches. The coaches were also catered to by the frequent articles on coaching by Frank Dick, Frank Horwill, Cliff Temple, Brian Mitchell and others.
You will note at the top of the cover ‘Incorporating ‘Women’s Athletics, Modern Athletics and World Athletics’. These had been either rival magazines or more likely complementary magazines but it may be that the market was not quite strong enough for 4 specialist weekly journals. The ‘World Athletics’ is an interesting one in that (a) it was produced by Ross and Norris McWhirter before they went on to do the Guinness Book of Records; and (b) it was one of the inspirations for George Sutherland’s excellent ‘Athletics in Scotland’ magazine and there was some correspondence between them.
The title was bought in 1987 by Emap Publishing and moved from Kent to Peterborough, where, according to Wikipedia, the management sought to repeat the publishing success of its Smash Hits pop title and re-launched AW as an A4 title aimed at teenagers. publish the Emap was to publish the magazine for 12 years (1987 – 1999)
Whatever their aims and ambitions, the magazine deteriorated. It seemed to us that the paper was of a lesser quality – as a journal of record it had to be printed on quality paper – but that was not the most important change. Read the following extract from Wikipedia:
“Emap made some business decisions that decreased the quality of the product and damaged the magazine’s reputation. First, the previous editorial staff was not retained by Emap thus losing the experience and inside connections these employees had fostered through the years. On top of this the inexperienced editorial team had to deal with a publication date brought forward to Wednesdays, requiring a speedy and expensive turnaround of each weekend’s results. The result of these decisions was that lucrative subscriptions were lost and Athletics Weekly sales nosedived. By late 1989, one-third of sales had been lost and Keith Nelson, Emap’s choice as editor, was moved on.”
Aware of its loyal following’s disgruntlement with the re-launch of Athletics Weekly, in 1989 Eddie Kulukundis funded the launch of a rival title, Athletics Today (above) , jointly edited by Randall Northam and Mel Watman: for the first time in its existence, Athletics Weekly now faced competition. Mel Watman had been a close colleague of Jimmy Green and been editor from 1968 to 1987. It was maybe unfortunate that this period coincided with the careers of Tom McKean, Yvonne Murray, Liz McColgan and other top athletes from north of the border. The magazine was not nearly as good as it had been up to 1967. The results service was very poor, the layout was not good either with splashes of colour all over the place, articles at times difficult to follow Despite the sport’s continued successes through the 1990s and the ultimate demise of its rival in 1993, Athletics Weekly struggled in vain to regain its reputation for comprehensiveness and accuracy.
Descartes: Lee McConnell, 2001
The next paragraphs are from Wikipedia’s coverage of the magazine and are worth reprinting in full:
After a decade’s ownership, Emap admitted defeat and in April 1999 licensed the title to Descartes Publishing, a company established by businessman and athletics enthusiast Matthew Fraser Moat for the purpose. Descartes kept the title in Peterborough and went on to purchase the title outright in 2003. In February 2005 the magazine was awarded Sports BrandLeader status[1] and in December 2005 Athletics Weekly celebrated its 60th birthday with a charity calendar[2][3] and a special 100 page edition.[4]
In 2006 the title changed its publication date back to a Thursday, and increased in size to 64 pages a week; in 2007 an online digital version was launched and in 2009 Athletics Weekly became the first magazine in the world to have all its content commercially available on the iPhone.[5][6] In 2010 the AW app was relaunched for the iPad.[7]
A sister company, Athletics Data Limited, was formed to manage the commercial rights of Athletics Weekly’s results data and in 2009 Athletics Data was appointed to run Power of 10, a statistical website, for UK Athletics.[8]
Taking advantage of the renewed interest in the sport generated by London 2012 and Usain Bolt, the magazine was “highly commended” in the “Brand Extension of The Year” category at the 2009 Independent Publisher Awards[9] and won a “Media Pioneer Award” at the 2010 Specialist Media Show.[10]
In January 2010, the magazine celebrated 60 years as a weekly magazine.”
From the enthusiast’s point of view, the magazine was back where it should always have been and from the historian’s point of view too, it was back where it should always have been. Matthew Fraser Moat is a very interesting character. A member of Serpentine Running Club, an enthusiastic member of the British Milers Club he is a genuine lifelong enthusiast for the sport. But whatever else he is, he is the man who probably saved Athletics Weekly as a significant publication, not only in the UK but worldwide.