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Antarctica Marathon

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Event information

Antarctica Marathon

Mar 10, 2009

3.2
Organizer`s website

Where

Anywhere, Antarctica

Start time

06:00

Distances

Marathon

Surface

Trail

Sub-events

26.2

Marathon

March 10, 2009 Tuesday
Distance: Marathon·Start time: 06:00
TrailMarathonPoint to pointTrail Race

Race Results

Top 3

1. Kornelis Brienne 03:04:50
2. Juan Antonio Alegre Munoz 03:06:35
3. Matthew Guzik 03:19:32

Top 3 Women

1. Lisa DeYoung 04:07:57
2. Connie Lutkevich 04:14:28
3. Emily Cross 04:24:29

Top 3 Men

1. Kornelis Brienne 03:04:50
2. Juan Antonio Alegre Munoz 03:06:35
3. Matthew Guzik 03:19:32
SEE ALL RESULTS

Race Details

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Reviews

3.2
Based on 2 Reviews from other runners - tap or click to see all!

By: whitedot s.

Posted: May 01, 2023

The ULTIMATE Destination Marathon

The March 23, 2023 course was a 6 lap out-and-back between the Russian and Uruguayan scientific research bases. We basically ran the same 2.18 miles back and forth 12 times. Check out my YouTube trip recap: https://youtu.be/50x2ysVCAZU and course video: https://youtu.be/XDcnHMLXTeo to get a glimpse of what you will experience and see how the terrain looked like. It got a lot more muddy as the day went on which is not captured. We were advised normally it is a longer route with 3 laps but we were told the Chinese base was not responding to the organizers so we did not have access to their road. The conditions were brutal. There were constant strong headwinds blowing from the West, roller coaster hills, and uneven dirt roads that started the race as ankle twisting frozen ground and morphed into shoe sucking mud as the day went on. Temperature was 0°C/32°F not accounting for windchill. It turned out the cold was the least of our worries. Many runners finished with results one or two hours off their usual times while others dropped down to a half-marathon or did not finish. The field was originally 107 marathon participants. The wind created logistical issues and we had to spread the race over two days. There were 87 actual marathon finishers over two days (day two conditions were less windy but more muddy). There was consensus among the runners that this was the toughest marathon we competed in. There was a lot of camaraderie on the course that made up for the absence of spectators. Epic glacial views and a major accomplishment for all! The medal is funky with only the year on the ribbon and the race shirt looks like it was designed in the 90's by an amateur. I gave mine away. For a $10k package, there should be separate medals for Marathon and Half-Marathon with the year on the medal. The online pre-trip 'shop' was ok but the t-shirts were Craft brand that only fits the taller crowd. A mainstream brand like Nike or Adidas would be better. Our tour was the second of a back to back on the Ocean Victory. The on-board shop had a nice selection of items but very poor inventory of sizes. Very few M and L were left. Seems like they were unprepared for all the destination marathon shoppers. Race production was mixed. The course could have been better marked and some of the mile markers duplicates added to the confusion. Communications were muddled and sometimes Marathons Tours simply did not follow through on what they promised. They were generally disorganized. I think Jeff did a good job, but he needs help. Some finishers had to wait for three weeks to get their photos while others could see their pics on the ship. The Albatros photographer shared useless thumbnail sized photos of the polar plunge. We lost three days to the wind, why not simply share the hi-res images? I recommend you train on a lot of steep rolling hills and go out when it is muddy and windy. It's a once in a lifetime adventure for sure. Keep in mind the race is only half a day - there is so much more to see in Buenos Aires and Antarctica. Our group had bad luck with the wind and lost three days of excursions. The extra days stuck on the ship were painfully boring, but we had good company that made it tolerable. If the race is the top priority for you, go for it!
2.3

By: Svein H.

Posted: June 18, 2022

Great experience

My wife and I have both run full and half marathon in Antarctica with Marathon Tours. Tom, Jeff and everybody else do an outstanding job to make this an exceptional experience. They are professional, extremely organized and at the same time fun to travel with. We were actually scheduled with another company this year (MA), but bailed out because of poor communication (they actually got stranded in Chile and never got to go to Antarctica). We switched to MTs , they had a few openings - I assume because of Covid cancellations, and had a great time. Would recommend any tour with MTs!
4.0
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Jun 8, 2026

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Related News

Gregory McCarthy finishes Antarctic race, has run marathons on seven continents

Gregory McCarthy finished the Antarctic Ice Marathon on Tuesday and has officially completed a marathon on all seven continents. Jason Wolfe won the marathon with a time of 4 hours 46 minutes and 50 seconds.

General News Washington Post

Dec 19, 2009

Peter Jensen, first Dane in Antarctica Marathon

Peter Jensen is normally sitting in his office chair at the bank. But Jensen swapped his cozy chair for a marathon race in the cold of Antarctica. He completed the race in 8 hours and 50 minutes.

General News The Copenhagen Post

Dec 16, 2009

Goshen Man Completes Marathon in Antarctica

61-year-old Floyd Miller successfully completed a marathon in Antarctica, part of his quest to run a marathon on every continent, and set a new record there there for runners over 60.

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Mar 27, 2009

McLoughlin set for Antarctic Marathon

Susan McLoughlin plans to run the Antarctic Marathon in memory of her father, who was killed in a place crash when she was a child. She will be raising money for the Campbell River Search and Rescue.

General News Courier-Islander

Feb 27, 2009

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