Marleen Renders
Personal information | |
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Born | (1968-12-24) 24 December 1968 (age 55) Diest, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium |
Height | 1.63 m (5 ft 4 in) |
Weight | 47 kg (104 lb; 7.4 st) |
Sport | |
Country | Belgium |
Club | AV Toekomst |
Achievements and titles | |
Olympic finals | 1988, 10,000 m, 21st 1996, Marathon, 25th 2000, Marathon, DNF |
World finals | 1987, 10,000 m, 12th 1994, Half Marathon, 8th 1995, 10,000 m, 17th 1995, Half Marathon, 13th 1997, 10,000 m, DNF 1999, 10,000 m, 9th 2001, Marathon, 18th 2002, Half Marathon, 8th |
Personal best(s) | 3000 m: 9:03.64 5000 m: 15:19.20 10,000 m: 31:03.60 Half Marathon: 1:08:56 Marathon: 2:23:05 |
Updated on 12-01-2013. |
Marleen Renders (born 24 December 1968, in Diest) is a retired female long-distance runner from Belgium, who represented her native country thrice at the Summer Olympics: in 1988, 1996 and 2000. In 1995 she won the Antwerp Marathon, in 1998 the Berlin Marathon, and she triumphed twice in the Paris Marathon in 2000 and 2002 (with a personal best of 2:23:05).
She was victorious at the Berlin Half Marathon in 1997 and 1998 and was the 2003 winner of the City-Pier-City Loop half marathon in the Hague.[1] She won the 20 km of Brussels nine times consecutively from 1996 to 2004, which included a course record run of 1:07:46 in 2002.[2]
Renders also competed in cross country running and won Belgium's 1996–97 Lotto Cross Cup series.[3]
Achievements
References
- ^ City-Pier-City Half Marathon - List of winners
- ^ Civai, Franco (2010-06-03). Brussels 20 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved on 2010-12-14.
- ^ Palmares Archived 2018-09-17 at the Wayback Machine (in French). Lotto Cross Cup. Retrieved on 2010-02-06.
External links
- (in Dutch) Vlaamse Atletiekliga (in Dutch)
- (in French) marathoninfo
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- 1974: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1975: Kristin Bochröder (FRG)
- 1976: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1977: Christa Vahlensieck (FRG)
- 1978: Ursula Blaschke (FRG)
- 1979: Jutta von Haase (FRG)
- 1980: Gerlinde Püttmann (FRG)
- 1981: Angelika Stephan (FRG)
- 1982: Jean Lochhead (GBR)
- 1983: Karen Holdsworth (GBR)
- 1984: Ágnes Sipka (HUN)
- 1985: Magda Ilands (BEL)
- 1986: Charlotte Teske (FRG)
- 1987: Kerstin Preßler (FRG)
- 1988: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1989: Päivi Tikkanen (FIN)
- 1990: Uta Pippig (GDR)
- 1991: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1992: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1993: Renata Kokowska (POL)
- 1994: Katrin Dörre-Heinig (GER)
- 1995: Uta Pippig (GER)
- 1996: Colleen De Reuck (RSA)
- 1997: Catherina McKiernan (IRL)
- 1998: Marleen Renders (BEL)
- 1999: Tegla Loroupe (KEN)
- 2000: Kazumi Matsuo (JPN)
- 2001: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2002: Naoko Takahashi (JPN)
- 2003: Yasuko Hashimoto (JPN)
- 2004: Yoko Shibui (JPN)
- 2005: Mizuki Noguchi (JPN)
- 2006: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2007: Gete Wami (ETH)
- 2008: Irina Mikitenko (GER)
- 2009: Atsede Habtamu (ETH)
- 2010: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2011: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2012: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2013: Florence Kiplagat (KEN)
- 2014: Tirfi Tsegaye (ETH)
- 2015: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2016: Aberu Kebede (ETH)
- 2017: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2018: Gladys Cherono (KEN)
- 2019: Ashete Bekere (ETH)
- 2020: Not held
- 2021: Gotytom Gebreslase (ETH)
- 2022: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- 2023: Tigst Assefa (ETH)
- World Marathon Majors
- Berlin Marathon – List (M/W)
- Boston Marathon – List (M/W)
- Chicago Marathon – List (M/W)
- London Marathon – List (M/W)
- New York City Marathon – List (M/W)
- Tokyo Marathon – List (M/W)
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by | Zevenheuvelenloop Women's Winner (15km) 1996 | Succeeded by |
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