Men's marathon T11 at the XII Paralympic Games | |||||||||||||
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Competitors | 17 from 10 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Athletics at the 2004 Summer Paralympics | ||
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T11–13 | ||
100 m | men | women |
200 m | men | women |
400 m | men | women |
800 m | men | women |
1500 m | men | |
5000 m | men | |
10,000 m | men | |
Marathon | men | |
4×100 m relay | men | |
P13 | ||
Pentathlon | men | |
F11–13 | ||
Long jump | men | women |
Triple jump | men | |
Shot put | men | women |
Discus throw | men | women |
Javelin throw | men | |
The Men's marathon T11 was a marathon event in athletics at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, for totally blind athletes (running with a sighted guide). Defending champion and world record holder Carlos Amaral Ferreira of Portugal took part, along with sixteen other athletes, from a total of ten countries. No athlete had ever successfully defended his title in the men's fully blind marathon, and Ferreira failed to become the first; he took silver, finishing half a minute behind Japan's Yuichi Takahashi. [1]
The 2004 men's T11 marathon is the most recent to have been held as a distinct event. At the 2008 Paralympics, it was abolished, and athletes categorised T11 (totally blind) were invited to run in the T12 marathon for athletes with severe visual impairment. [2]
Place | Athlete | Time | |
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1 | Yuichi Takahashi (JPN) | 2:44:24 | |
2 | Carlos Amaral Ferreira (POR) | 2:45:07 | |
3 | Andrea Cionna (ITA) | 2:49:59 | |
4 | Yoshihide Fukuhara (JPN) | 2:53:56 | |
5 | Kiyoshi Hoshina (JPN) | 2:56:30 | |
6 | Jambal Lkhagvajav (MGL) | 3:03:03 | |
7 | Carlo Durante (ITA) | 3:05:01 | |
8 | Clemente Esquivel (MEX) | 3:20:23 | |
9 | Joerund Gaasemyr (NOR) | 3:22:41 | |
10 | Pablo Astoreca (ARG) | 3:30:37 | |
11 | Nikolaos Tsatsaklas (GRE) | 3:44:39 | |
12 | Stergios Sioutis (GRE) | 3:47:11 | |
13 | Konstantinos Stavridis (GRE) | 3:49:26 | |
- | Pedro Acosta (MEX) | dnf | |
- | Nicolas Ledezma (MEX) | dnf | |
- | Martin Mosso (COL) | dnf | |
- | Zhang Zhen (CHN) | dnf | |
Men's marathon T13 at the XII Paralympic Games | |||||||||||||
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Competitors | 19 from 14 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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The T13 event, held at the same time as the T11, was won by Ildar Pomykalov, representing Russia. [3]
Place | Athlete | Time | |
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1 | Ildar Pomykalov (RUS) | 2:38:45 | |
2 | Roy Daniell (AUS) | 2:42:17 | |
3 | Linas Balsys (LTU) | 2:43:55 | |
4 | Daniel Ramirez (MEX) | 2:44:23 | |
5 | Moisés Beristáin (MEX) | 2:44:24 | |
6 | Paul Pearce (GBR) | 2:46:20 | |
7 | Joseph L. Ngorialuk (KEN) | 2:49:08 | |
8 | Jozef Ambroz (SVK) | 2:50:38 | |
9 | Fabrizio Cocchi (ITA) | 2:51:16 | |
10 | Aurelio Santos (BRA) | 2:51:36 | |
11 | Shiro Fukudome (JPN) | 2:51:56 | |
12 | Mark Farnell (GBR) | 2:57:16 | |
13 | Nicolai Ciumac (MDA) | 3:09:03 | |
14 | Zeinolla Seitov (KAZ) | 3:13:35 | |
- | Qi Shun (CHN) | DNF | |
- | Kestutis Bartkenas (LTU) | DNF | |
- | Igor Lisnic (MDA) | DNF | |
- | Tomasz Chmurzynski (POL) | DNF | |
- | Anton Sluka (SVK) | DNF |
The 2004 Summer Paralympics, the 12th Summer Paralympic Games, were a major international multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities governed by the International Paralympic Committee, held in Athens, Greece from 17 to 28 September 2004. 3,806 athletes from 136 National Paralympic Committees competed. 519 medal events were held in 19 sports.
Christie Dawes is an Australian Paralympic wheelchair racing athlete. She has won three medals in athletics at seven Paralympics from 1996 to 2021.
The Men's Marathon T12 was held on September 17 at 7:30.
Carlos Amarel Ferreira is a Paralympic track and field athlete from Portugal competing mainly in category T10/T11, visually-impaired, long-distance running events.
Odair Santos is a visually impaired Paralympian athlete from Brazil competing mainly in T11 classification middle and long-distance events. A veteran of four Paralympics, Santos has won eight Paralympic medals, including four silver medals. Santos is also a four time IPC World champion at the 1,500 metres event, being unbeaten from 2006 to 2015.
Marathon events have been held at the Summer Paralympic Games, for both men and women, since the 1984 Summer Paralympics in Stoke Mandeville and New York City. They are held as part of the Paralympic athletics programme.
Andrea Cionna is an Italian athlete from Osimo in the Province of Ancona. He holds the world record for the fastest marathon run by a totally blind man, set in 2:31:59 in Rome in 2007, and has won two bronze medals in blind long-distance running at the Paralympic Games.
The Men's marathon B1 was a marathon event in athletics at the 1988 Summer Paralympics, for totally blind athletes. It was the first time marathon events for blind or visually impaired athletes were held at the Paralympic Games; the marathon had been introduced to the Paralympics in 1984, but had then been held only for wheelchair athletes. The men's 1988 B1 marathon was contested by six athletes from six countries. Norway's Joerund Gaasemyr won by a clear margin, in 2:45:48, quarter of an hour ahead of his competitors, who all completed the race in three hours or more.
The Men's marathon T10 was a marathon event in athletics at the 1996 Summer Paralympics, for totally blind athletes. Defending champion Carlo Durante of Italy took part, as did 1992 silver medallist Tofiri Kibuuka of Norway, and 1988 gold medallist Joerund Gaasemyr or Norway, holder of the Paralympic record in 2:45:48. Durante failed to defend his title, and took silver, finishing two and a half minutes behind Japan's Harumi Yanagawa, who had finished sixth four years earlier. The two Norwegians failed to obtain a place on the podium. Of the fourteen starters, eleven reached the finish line.
The Men's marathon T11 was a marathon event in athletics at the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, for totally blind athletes. Defending champion Harumi Yanagawa of Japan took part, as did 1992 gold medallist Carlo Durante of Italy, and 1988 gold medallist Joerund Gaasemyr or Norway, holder of the Paralympic record in 2:45:48. There were thirteen starters, from nine countries; twelve of them reached the finish line. Portugal's Carlos Amaral Ferreira took gold, setting a new world record in 2:38:27, and finishing over nine minutes ahead of silver medallist Robert Matthews.
The women's marathon T54 was a marathon event in athletics at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing, for wheelchair athletes. It was the only marathon event held for women. Wheelchair athletes with a disability level more severe than T54 were permitted to compete in the T54 marathon. Ten athletes, from seven countries, took part; defending champion Kazu Hatanaka of Japan was not among them.
Men's 1500m races for blind & visually impaired athletes at the 2004 Summer Paralympics were held in the Athens Olympic Stadium from 19 to 22 September. Events were held in two disability classes.
Men's 5000m races for blind & visually impaired athletes at the 2004 Summer Paralympics were held in the Athens Olympic Stadium on 23 & 24 September. Events were held in three disability classes, each class running a single race.
Men's 10,000m races for blind and visually impaired athletes at the 2004 Summer Paralympics were held in the Athens Olympic Stadium. Events were held in two disability classes, each class running a single race.
Men's marathon races for wheelchair athletes at the 2004 Summer Paralympics followed a course from Marathon to the Panathinaiko Stadium, and started at 08:00 on 26 September. Events were held in three wheelchair disability classes, together with two classes of visually impaired athletes.
Men's javelin throw events for blind & visually impaired athletes were held at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in the Athens Olympic Stadium. Events were held in three disability classes.
Men's long jump events for blind & visually impaired athletes were held at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in the Athens Olympic Stadium. Events were held in three disability classes.
Men's shot put events for blind & visually impaired athletes were held at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in the Athens Olympic Stadium. Events were held in two disability classes.
Men's triple jump events for blind & visually impaired athletes were held at the 2004 Summer Paralympics in the Athens Olympic Stadium. Events were held in two disability classes.
The Men's 4 × 100 m relay T11-13 for blind & visually impaired athletes at the 2004 Summer Paralympics were held in the Athens Olympic Stadium on 27 September. The event consisted of 3 heats and a final, and was won by the team representing China.