The aspect of nationality and performance in a mountain ultra-marathon-the ‘Swiss Alpine Marathon’

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Date
2012-11Author
Rosemann, T.
Lepers, R.
Rust, C. A.
Knechtle, B.
Eichenberger, E.
Onywera, V.O.
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Eichenberger E, Knechtle B, Rüst CA, Lepers R, Rosemann T, Onywera VO. The aspect of nationality and
performance in a mountain ultra-marathon - the ‘Swiss Alpine Marathon’ J. Hum. Sport Exerc. Vol. 7, No. 4,
pp. 748-762, 2012. Runners from East Africa and especially from Kenya dominate middle- and long-
distance running races worldwide. The aim of the present study was to investigate the participation and
performance trends regarding the nationality of runners in a mountain ultra-marathon held in partially high
alpine terrain. We hypothesized that Kenyan runners, living and training in the Great Rift Valley, a
predominantly hilly, mountainous and altitudinous region like the Alps, would dominate also a mountain
ultra-marathon because they are accustomed to high altitudes and mountainous terrains. We examined the
participation and performance trends of ultra-marathoners regarding their nationalities in the 78-km ‘Swiss
Alpine Marathon’ including 21 km in high alpine terrain where 12,194 men and 1,781 women finished
between 1998 and 2011. A total of 1,682 women and 11,580 men, corresponding to 94.9 % of all finishers,
originated from Switzerland, Germany, Denmark, Italy, Sweden, Great Britain, Austria, the Netherlands and
Luxembourg where only one male Kenyan runner ever participated. Female runners from Denmark, Great
Britain, Germany, Luxembourg, Switzerland and Sweden as well as male runners from Denmark, Great
Britain, and Sweden increased their participation significantly. Women from the Netherlands became slower
whereas women originating from Great Britain became faster. Men from the Netherlands, Denmark,
Germany and Switzerland became slower. The fastest runners originated from Switzerland for both women
and men. To summarize, runners from Switzerland dominated the ‘Swiss Alpine Marathon’. Paradoxically,
and interestingly, the Kenyan runners were not dominating the ‘Swiss Alpine Marathon’. Further studies
should investigate Kenyan participation and performance in ultra-marathons in Africa such as the
‘Comrades Marathon