Race in Beijing: Decoding China’s marathon fever – ecns
Runners of 2019 Beijing Marathon. (Photo: China News service/Sheng Jiapeng)
30,000 runners participated in the iconic 2019 Beijing Marathon under a drizzle on Sunday.
Mathew Kisorio of Kenya won the race by clocking 2:07:06 to break the men’s course record.
The Beijing Marathon, the first ever city marathon in China that attracted many champions from all over the world, is also known as China’s “national marathon.”
The starting line of the competition is Tian’anmen Square and the finishing point is the Beijing Olympic Park. It covered a standard distance of 42.195 km.
The high-level event has won the title of Gold Label Road Race endorsed by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) since 2008, turning itself into an international race with huge influences.
The event is also witnessing the booming development of the marathon races in the country.
China’s marathon fever
In 2011, China only hosted 22 running events nationwide.
But the number soared to over 1,500 across the country in 2018, according to the China Athletics Association (CAA). It means an average of 4.3 long-running races were held in China per day, up more than 43 percent from a year before.
“Road running events, especially marathons, have been rapidly popularized in China, becoming the new fashion in sports for mass fitness,” Yu Hongchen, vice president of CAA, told Xinhua.
Over 85 percent Chinese cities held marathon in 2018, according to CAA data. East China’s Zhejiang province alone held 180 races.
These events attracted a total of 5.83 million participants, a 17-percent rise from 2017, according to CAA. About half of them took part in the 42.195-km full marathon in 2018.
China’s marathon development is also switching from high-speed boom towards a trajectory of viable and quality development. “A number of high-standard and high-quality events have emerged in China,” said Yu.
There are now 24 IAAF label events in China this year, and half of them are gold label races, ranking top in the world in terms of the number of label events.
As the Chinese get richer, they focus more on health. Running has the lowest entry requirement among all the sports.
Moreover, with eased policy environment and cities’ increasing desire for shaping the image by holding such races, the nation saw the number of related events increasing and industries flourishing year by year.
These races made an economic output of 74.6 billion yuan (about 10.86 billion U.S. dollars) last year.
The CAA forecasts that there will be 1,900 races and 10 million participants next year, with a revenue of 120 billion yuan (about 17 billion U.S. dollars) from related industries.