logo
Edinburgh Marathon results 2025

Edinburgh Marathon results 2025

The National26-05-2025
Thousands of runners set off at 10am on Sunday morning, running the 26.2-mile route from Edinburgh's old town out along the East Lothian coast.
Marshall Smith won the men's race, finishing the course in two hours, 22 minutes and 16 seconds.
And Melissah Gibson won the women's event, crossing the finish line in two hours, 38 minutes and 48 seconds.
READ MORE: Las Vegas-bound flight forced to make emergency landing at Scottish airport
Smith, who won the men's race, was from Ashford AC, while Gibson, who won the women's race, was from Eagles RC.
Ben Holmes came in second in the men's race at two hours, 26 minutes and 14 seconds, while Kris Lecher came in third at two hours, 26 minutes and 57 seconds.
Kirsty Oldham came second in the women's event at two hours, 45 minutes and 30 seconds, and Emily Soanes came in third at two hours, 46 minutes and 58 seconds.
The half-marathon also took place on Sunday before the main event.
In the men's half-marathon, Sean Chalmers from Aberdeen AAC came first at one hour, four minutes and 59 seconds.
In the women's half-marathon, the winner was Stella Cross (from Wetherby runners) at one hour, 19 minutes and four seconds.
The marathon and half marathon are each held annually as part of the Edinburgh Marathon Festival, which also includes relay races as well as 10- and five-kilometre runs and children's events.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lynx F Napheesa Collier departs with ankle injury
Lynx F Napheesa Collier departs with ankle injury

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Lynx F Napheesa Collier departs with ankle injury

August 2 - Minnesota Lynx star forward Napheesa Collier exited Saturday's road game against the Las Vegas Aces late in the third quarter with an apparent right ankle injury. The WNBA's leading scorer was trailing a Minnesota fast break when her feet got tangled with teammate Alanna Smith, who had been bumped by Aces guard Jewell Loyd in a battle for positioning under the basket. Collier went down to the court as the players transitioned to the other end of the floor. Both teams surrounded Collier as she sat on the court with 10.8 seconds left in the third and the Lynx leading 92-49. Collier rose, only to fall back down to the court, favoring her ankle. She was helped off the court by a member of the team's medical staff then walked under her own power into the Lynx locker room. Collier had 14 points in the third quarter alone and finished the game with 18. An All-Star this season, she is an MVP candidate with a league-best 23.8 points per game. --Field Level Media

Why Hearts look destined to beat Hibs and Aberdeen to third place in the Premiership this season
Why Hearts look destined to beat Hibs and Aberdeen to third place in the Premiership this season

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Why Hearts look destined to beat Hibs and Aberdeen to third place in the Premiership this season

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ONE of them ended last season in disarray — the other defied the odds by lifting the Scottish Cup. So why am I convinced Hearts will be very good and Aberdeen, well, I just don't know? 4 Claudio Braga has impressed since arriving at Hearts Credit: Kenny Ramsay 4 Jimmy Thelin guided Aberdeen to Scottish Cup success last season Credit: PA 4 New Hearts boss Derek McInnes Credit: Kenny Ramsay Monday night's powderkeg clash at Tynecastle should tell us a lot about both teams. But there has already been plenty of evidence to suggest it's the Jambos who will be the third force this season. When they finally turned to Derek McInnes in June, the feeling at the time was it was a no-brainer. Nothing's happened since to change that opinion. The signings, with the help of Jamestown Analytics, look about as promising as it gets. Claudio Braga has got the potential to become the darling of Gorgie fans. He has style, swagger, and has already shown he knows where the goal is. Oisin McEntee was a wrecking ball against Sunderland last weekend next to Cammy Devlin. Alexandros Kyziridis has pace, power and a desire to run at worried defenders. Aberdeen fans react to historic Scottish Cup win Stuart Findlay has settled in at the back alongside Frankie Kent and Craig Halkett. Lawrence Shankland, having finally signed his deal, has come back looking sharp. That's not even counting Pierre Landry Kabore and Tomas Bent Magnussen, soon to be in the door. Then there's McInnes himself, who gets what a Hearts team at Tynecastle should look like from his previous experiences as a visiting boss. That's 11 men on the front foot. Wingers getting to the line and swinging in crosses. It's not rocket science. It's the way Jim Jefferies and Billy Brown got them to play. It's the perfect style for a stadium as tight as Tynie with the support so close to the pitch. But for some reason successive Jambos bosses have tried to get their sides to control games with endless passing. 4 And the crowd, so often a weapon, ended up bored to tears. I can't see past them for third place — and that's despite rivals Hibs having improved. David Gray's side were excellent over the second half of last season and will be a force again. I can't wait to see how Thibault Klidje settles given the money Gray has spent on him. But no Scottish club in recent times outside the Old Firm has found a way of coping with regular European football on top of their domestic commitments. I fear that will be the case with Hibs as well, which will only help their bitter rivals. Then there's the Dons, who we know will be playing league phase football until Christmas. That's what did for Barry Robson two years ago as his side fell off a cliff in the league. The question is has Jimmy Thelin recruited well enough to deal with it this time around? Monday will give us an indication of where Nicolas Milanovic, Kusini Yengi and Kjartan Mar Kjartansson fit in. All the indications are there will be more new faces to come. But they need time to settle, that's not something teams get a lot of when they are playing Thursday/Sunday/Thursday. Thelin has credit in the bank and rightly so. The Cup win was a remarkable achievement. But he needs to steady the ship and help them be more consistent. If he doesn't? I have a hunch ex-gaffer McInnes and his Jambos will leave them trailing. Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

SFA VAR manager 'all for' referee stadium explanations
SFA VAR manager 'all for' referee stadium explanations

The National

time4 hours ago

  • The National

SFA VAR manager 'all for' referee stadium explanations

That's why the Scottish FA promptly secured the services of experienced former English Premier League referee Martin Atkinson at the end of last year. Drafted in as VAR manager, the 54-year-old brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the upper echelons of Hampden Park. "Since I've been up here, I do not think the guys can be any more professional than what they are at the moment in time," said Atkinson when asked if Scottish refs could ever go full-time. "I'm so impressed. The guys that we work with are so professional and thorough in what they do - the preparation, the fitness. "We talk about the fitness test, the level being raised this season. They couldn't be any more professional than they are. I'm really impressed with them. There's always a lot of talk about referees becoming professional, but no way, because the money isn't there. "I don't think there's anything to suggest that being professional or where we are at the moment makes a difference. We're human beings. The guys are human beings. No matter who you are, no matter how many hours of training you do, you will still make mistakes when you're in there. "It's human nature. It's the nature of the game. You can practice something so many times and still get it wrong. It doesn't matter who you are. Where we're at, I'm happy with." Although the John Beatons and Kevin Clancys of the world might never get to give up their day jobs to take charge of football matches, they are constantly introduced to new rules, technologies, and innovations. Down south, in-game stadium VAR announcements by referees have been trialled. This allows them to explain their decisions publicly to the spectators in the stands. Atkinson would be in favour of such an addition to Scottish football. "I'm a football fan myself," he continued. "All referees are football fans. You wouldn't do this job if you didn't love being involved in it and being part of the game. I think the communication side is something that we certainly embrace. I think it's something that we talk about. Again, this is not just the referees want this and that's it. Read more: "I think we're quite open to doing anything that will enhance us in stadiums. It's certainly not written off by us at all. We'd certainly be looking to implement it as soon as the clubs are ready, as soon as we get the green light to say, yes, the clubs want it, the clubs support it. We'd be all for that. "I think any country is allowed to do it when they're ready to do it. If the clubs say, 'We're ready to go, we've got the infrastructure and the money and everything that goes with it to roll it out', then we would certainly support that and encourage it. I've obviously seen it with the guys down south. I did quite a bit of work with them, training to do that for last season. We're in place and ready to train the referees if we get the green light, if the clubs say they want this." One thing increased in-game communications will never take away from football is contention. Regardless of modern technological advancements such as VAR and the like, weekly debates remain. Handball is a key area of dispute. "I think we're in a good place with handball in Scotland," says Atkinson. "I say that looking as an outsider for many years and then to see the difference last season. Certainly, all the feedback from everybody in the game feels like we're in a good place with handball, and that comes as well from clubs. "With the British game, we are always going to be slightly different, and I think everybody accepts that. That's the way that the game is, and we're always going to have that slight difference, which is what we expect. We've all been brought up on that." Having taken charge of multiple cup finals south of the border, as well as the 2015 Europa League final, Atkinson knows the costly price of making poor decisions. In his day, VAR didn't exist. Now, it helps referees correct their mistakes. Regardless of public perceptions and numerous criticisms, it is seemingly here to stay. "I think it's always going to be a discussion," admits Atkinson. "Some people like it. I fully get that. Some people are against it. That's football. It will always split opinion, won't it? We talk about football in the old days. We talk about football now, modern football. We're always going to get that debate about it. I go back to when I was a referee. "On the field, you make a mistake. It's a clear mistake that influences a result. You drive home. You watch whatever television programme is on that evening, the following day, whatever is written in the media, whatever follows, and it continues for so long. "There's no worse feeling as a match referee than knowing that you've made that mistake. Now, the guys don't go out to make mistakes. There's no reason for them to want to be perfect when they're out there. We make mistakes. If we make that mistake and we have a chance, an opportunity to make that right, then that's got to be good for the game. It's got to be good for the integrity of the game. "It's got to be the way forward. I do think that it has improved the game. I really wish it were there in many situations in my career where I've driven home and I've just thought, why didn't I give that penalty? Why did I give that penalty when I should have done that? It's there for that reason. "But the big decisions, we'll still always have subjective decisions that split a room. We'll always have decisions that split a room. We always get that. That's just football. "I think when you look at UEFA in general, 46 out of 53 nations have got it [VAR]. So that speaks for itself straight away. And the other countries, you may well get an odd outlying country that is like, 'We don't want it'. "But again, I'd just reiterate that if the referee gives a penalty when a ball hits a player in the face, it changes the whole game. We seem to forget about these big, big decisions that have influenced games and results over a number of years. Personally, I know they haunt me. Decisions that I've made over the years. I could tell you all the mistakes." Atkinson himself refereed at the 2012 European Championships. Nick Walsh, one of the SFA's flagship whistlers, spent time at the under-21 version of the tournament this summer. "I think that's fantastic for Scottish match officials and for Scottish football, I think it's brilliant that they went there," said a proud Atkinson. "They stayed at the tournament; they refereed in the semi-finals of a major tournament. It's brilliant for us. We can't do anything about the past. We can't change that now. We can't change what history has been. We can change the future of what's coming next. "The targets are always the next competitions, the next tournaments that are coming. It's got to be. We've got to be doing that. That's what we thrive on. Certainly, for myself and Willie [Collum] and the team, it is identifying that and supporting that talent as well, supporting these guys to get there. "I reiterate the success of Nick in the summer. Nick and his team were all really proud of that. We should shout about that as well. To get a semi-final in a major tournament is something to be proud of." Walsh, his team, and countless other match officials in Scotland are used to their decisions being scrutinised every week throughout the season. Indeed, Atkinson thinks refs north of the border are lambasted much more than their English counterparts. "It is pretty high pressure in England, but we get the feeling that here it's even more intense and even more critical on referees," he said. 'It's certainly on a par with what it is down in England. Definitely the expectation, but I think you'll find that in just about every country as well. I think each country is so passionate. It's like that. The expectations are there. "I must say, since I've been up here, I'm really impressed with how the guys, how the match officials have taken on board a lot of the stuff. I come up bringing experience from the Premier League and implementing it here with these guys. They have really taken on board a lot of it. "I think you'll find that from certainly the communication side of it, the way that the guys speak on the field of play. You can listen to things from the start of the season to where we are at the end of the season. The comms are far better. "I'm delighted with that. I'm really pleased with that. I think we can continue to do that. I think we can still get better at it. But pressure-wise, that's part of the game. We all want more all the time. Every season, we want more. We want the guys to get better. Teams want to get better. We want the match officials to be better. That's football. That's the nature of it."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store