Marti ten Kate
Dutch long-distance runner
Marti ten Kate in 1983 | |
Personal information | |
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Born | (1958-12-16) 16 December 1958 (age 65) Vollenhove, the Netherlands |
Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 8 in) |
Weight | 58 kg (128 lb) |
Sport | |
Sport | Long-distance running |
Club | Vlug en Lenig, Den Haag |
Martin "Marti" ten Kate (born 16 December 1958) is a retired long-distance runner from the Netherlands, who represented his native country at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, where he finished in 9th place in the 10,000 metres (27:50.30), and 15th (02:14:53) in the marathon. Ten Kate won the Enschede Marathon twice (1987 and 1989).[1]
He won the City-Pier-City Loop half marathon in the Hague four times a row (1987–1990).[2]
Achievements
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
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Representing Netherlands | |||||
1983 | Egmond Half Marathon | Egmond, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:06:45 |
1987 | City-Pier-City Loop | The Hague, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:03:14 |
Enschede Marathon | Enschede, Netherlands | 1st | Marathon | 2:13:52 | |
World Championships | Rome, Italy | 24th | Marathon | 2:22:21 | |
1988 | Egmond Half Marathon | Egmond, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:03:26 |
City-Pier-City Loop | The Hague, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:02:20 | |
Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | 15th | Marathon | 2:14:53 | |
1989 | City-Pier-City Loop | The Hague, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:01:34 |
Enschede Marathon | Enschede, Netherlands | 1st | Marathon | 2:10:57 | |
1990 | Egmond Half Marathon | Egmond, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:03:32 |
City-Pier-City Loop | The Hague, Netherlands | 1st | Half Marathon | 1:02:24 | |
European Championships | Split, Yugoslavia | 8th | 10,000m | 28:12.53 | |
14th | Marathon | 2:21:55 | |||
1994 | European Championships | Helsinki, Finland | 28th | Marathon | 2:16:48 |
References
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Enschede Marathon – men's winners
- 1947: Eero Riikonen (FIN)
- 1949: Jack Holden (ENG)
- 1951: Veikko Karvonen (FIN)
- 1953: Jim Peters (ENG)
- 1955: Reinaldo Gorno (ARG)
- 1957: Piet Bleeker (NED)
- 1959: Pavel Kantorek (TCH)
- 1961: Peter Wilkinson (GBR)
- 1963: Václav Chudomel (TCH)
- 1965: Aurèle Vandendriessche (BEL)
- 1967: Yoshiro Mifune (JPN)
- 1969: Kazuo Matsubara (JPN)
- 1971: Bernie Allen (ENG)
- 1973–1975: Ron Hill (ENG)
- 1977: Brian Maxwell (CAN)
- 1979: Kirk Pfeffer (USA)
- 1981: Cor Vriend (NED)
- 1983: Kevin Forster (GBR)
- 1985: Zoltan Köszegi (HUN)
- 1987–1989: Marti ten Kate (NED)
- 1991: Sergey Prorokov (URS)
- 1992: Willie Mtolo (RSA)
- 1993: Jan Tau (RSA)
- 1994: Piotr Poblocki (POL)
- 1995: Viktor Goural (UKR)
- 1996: John Mandu (KEN)
- 1997: Dmitry Kapitonov (RUS)
- 1998: Hussein Ahmed Salah (DJI)
- 1999: Anatoli Zerouk (UKR)
- 2000: Cancelled
- 2001: El Mustapha Riad (MAR)
- 2002: Raymond Kipkoech (KEN)
- 2003: Wilson Kibet (KEN)
- 2004: Girma Tolla (ETH)
- 2005: John Kelai (KEN)
- 2006: Sammy Rotich (KEN)
- 2007: Thomson Cherogony (KEN)
- 2008: Silas Toek (KEN)
- 2009: Jacob Kipchumba Yator (KEN)
- 2010: John Kelai (KEN)
- 2011: Stephen Kiprotich (UGA)
- 2012: Ishhimael Busendich (KEN)
- 2013: Isaac Kosgei (KEN)
- 2014: Elijah Sang (KEN)
- 2015: Evans Cheruiyot (KEN)
- 2016: David Stevens (BEL)
- 2017: Jonas Roels (BEL)
- 2018: Mohamed Oumaarir (MAR)
- 2019: Geart Jorritsma (NED)
- 2020: cancelled
- 2021: Eliud Kipchoge (KEN)
- 2022: Julius Tuwei (KEN)
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Sam Carey | Zevenheuvelenloop Men's Winner (15km) 1987 | Succeeded by Robin Bergstrand |
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