Carla Beurskens

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Carla Beurskens
Carla Beurskens 1982.jpg
Carla Beurskens in 1982
Personal information
Full nameCarolina Alwina Hubertina Beurskens
NationalityDutch
Born (1952-02-10) 10 February 1952 (age 71)
Tegelen, Limburg
Height1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)
Weight45 kg (99 lb)
Sport
Sport Running
Event(s)1500 metres
3000 metres
marathon
ClubFestina, Venlo

Carolina Alwina Hubertina "Carla" Beurskens (born 10 February 1952) was one of Holland's most prominent female long-distance runners from the second half of the 1970s until well into the 1990s, including all distances from 3000 metres to the marathon. During the greater part of this period she was most successful at the longer distance. [1]

Contents

The variety of the twenty-three national titles [1] she obtained during her long carrier clearly shows to what extent Beurskens dominated all aspects of the métier: three titles on indoor- and five on outdoor tracks, nine on the road and six in the cross country. At the long distances she is by far the most successful Dutch female athlete ever.

Carla Beurskens did not very often represent her native country in major international tournaments. She took part in the Summer Olympics twice: in Los Angeles 1984 and Seoul 1988, [1] three times in European and one time in World Championships. For various reasons she never performed particularly well at those events. Her fifth place in the European Championships marathon of 1982 in Athens was her best achievement ever. [1]

Much better were Beurskens’ achievements in the marathons of various big cities all over the world. For instance, with the exception of Kenya’s Tegla Loroupe, she is the only female athlete who won the Rotterdam Marathon more than once. And this although shortly after her first victory in 1984 she declared that in the future she would ignore Rotterdam, unless the circumstances for female competitors would improve drastically. Finally in 1990 the circumstances seemed to fulfil the conditions of the athlete from Limburg, because she appeared on the scene once more and won for the second time. Moreover, she became the first female in Rotterdam to realise a time within two-and-a-half hours: 2:29:47. She won the City-Pier-City Loop half marathon in the Hague four times (1984–86, 1990). [2]

Carla Beurskens ran her personal best (2:26:34 hours) on November 15, 1987, in the Tokyo Marathon, finishing second behind triple winner Katrin Dörre. This Dutch national record stood for nearly thirteen years. [1] It was finally broken on November 2, 2003, by the Dutch Kenyan Lornah Kiplagat at the New York Marathon: 2:23:43. Beurskens was also victorious in the Nagoya marathon in Japan in 1987, finishing in 2:28:27, taking into account the bad weather conditions (some snow showers on the way), in Eindhoven in 1995 and Enschede in 1997, both towns in The Netherlands. She won the Parelloop 10 km in race in the Netherlands in 1993 [3]

Eight out of the ten times she participated in the Honolulu Marathon in Hawaii, she carried off the palm,[ clarification needed ] [1] for the first time in 1985. A two-week vacation offer came together with the invitation for this event. She took part without being fully prepared and won straightaway. In the following years up to 1994 her series of victories was only interrupted in 1988 and 1991. With her eight victories in Hawaii she is the most successful female marathon runner ever. Nowadays[ when? ] she is invited by the organizers to be present at the event as a guest of honour.[ citation needed ]

Achievements

YearCompetitionVenuePositionEventNotes
Representing the Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands
1982 Osaka Ladies Marathon Osaka, Japan 2ndMarathon2:34:14
European Championships Athens, Greece 5thMarathon 2:39:22
1983 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 17thMarathon 2:39:25
1984 City-Pier-City Loop The Hague, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:12:57
Rotterdam Marathon Rotterdam, Netherlands 1stMarathon2:34:56
Olympic Games Los Angeles, United States 22ndMarathon 2:37:51
1985 City-Pier-City Loop The Hague, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:10:44
Frankfurt Marathon Frankfurt, Germany 1stMarathon2:28:37
Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:35:51
1986 Egmond Half Marathon Egmond, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:18:16
City-Pier-City Loop The Hague, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:09:28
European Championships Stuttgart, West Germany 7thMarathon 2:39:05
Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:31:01
1987 Nagoya Marathon Nagoya, Japan 1stMarathon2:28:27
Tokyo Marathon Tokyo, Japan 2ndMarathon2:26:34
Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:35:11
1988 Olympic Games Seoul, South Korea 34thMarathon 2:37:52
1989 Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:31:50
1990 Egmond Half Marathon Egmond, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:13:25
City-Pier-City Loop The Hague, Netherlands 1stHalf Marathon1:10:04
Rotterdam Marathon Rotterdam, Netherlands 1stMarathon2:29:47
Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:33:34
1992 Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:32:13
1993 Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:32:20
1994 Honolulu Marathon Honolulu, Hawaii 1stMarathon2:37:06
1995 Eindhoven Marathon Eindhoven, Netherlands 1stMarathon2:35:16
1997 Enschede Marathon Enschede, Netherlands 1stMarathon2:37:20

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References

Awards
Preceded by KNAU Cup
1982
1985
Succeeded by
Preceded bySucceeded by
Sporting positions
Preceded by Egmond Women's Half Marathon Winner
1986
Succeeded by
Preceded by Women's Zevenheuvelenloop Winner (15km)
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Egmond Women's Half Marathon Winner
1990
Succeeded by