The run was devised by former
Olympic 10,000 m bronze medallist and
BBC Sport commentator
Brendan Foster. Foster was inspired after running in the
Round the Bays Race in
New Zealand in 1979, and has built upon the Great North Run with a series of other
Great Run road races. The first Great North Run was staged on 28 June 1981, when 12,000 runners participated. By 2003, the number of participants had risen to 47,000. The 2011 event saw an announced field of 54,000. The number of finishers was 35,777 in 2007, the largest half marathon and the 13th largest running race that year. In 2014, the event had 41,615 finishers, making it the largest half-marathon in the world as certified by Guinness World Records in 2016. Since 1990, the earliest date the race has been held on is 7 September (2014) and the latest is 22 October (2000).
Bupa was the title partner of the Great North Run from the early 1990s until 2014, one of Britain's longest ever sports sponsorship agreements. In 2015
Morrisons announced their sponsorship of the Great Run series. In November 2015, the Great Run Company announced it was searching for a new title sponsor which includes the Great North Run. The 2016 Great North Run was the first staging of the event without a title sponsor. Simplyhealth became the new lead sponsor for 2017. AJ Bell was announced as the new lead sponsor for the Great Run series in 2023 in a 5-year partnership
Events In 2004 a runner died (the eighth death in the event's then 24-year history). The 2005 Great North Run was the twenty-fifth edition of the race. Events to mark the anniversary included the launch of the
Great North Run Cultural Programme at the
Sage Gateshead. The race was started by
Mike McLeod, the winner of the inaugural race in 1981. During the race, four participants died en route to South Shields. An inquest into the four deaths from 2005 began on Monday 5 June 2006 at Gateshead Council Chambers. In subsequent events, more emergency service personnel were brought in to ensure there was adequate cover. In spite of increased medical provision at the 2006 race, a man in his twenties died. The 2007 Great North Run was held on 30 September and was started by former
England and
Newcastle United manager
Sir Bobby Robson.
Kara Goucher defeated
Paula Radcliffe in an impressive victory for the American. Goucher's winning time was 1:06:57. The 2008 Great North Run was held on 5 October and was started by former
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair. The 2009 Great North Run was held on 20 September and was started by the musician
Sting. The 2010 Great North Run was the 30th running of the event and was held on 19 September and was started by TV presenters
Ant & Dec. The number of finishers (half marathon only) was 39,459. The 2011 Great North Run took place on the morning of Sunday, 18 September 2011. The race was started by World 5,000-metre champion
Mo Farah. In 2013 the 33rd Great North Run had 56,000 participants, most of whom were raising money for charity. The elite races had Olympic Gold Medalists and World Champion long-distance runners participating including in the men's race,
Mo Farah,
Kenenisa Bekele and a regular supporter of the event,
Haile Gebrselassie. Ethiopian Bekele won the men's event just ahead of Farah. Kenya's
Priscah Jeptoo came first the women's race and multi Olympic Gold Medalist
David Weir won the wheelchair event. In 2014 the 34th Great North Run had 57,000 participants, celebrated the 1 millionth runner to cross the finish line, and was the first to have a British man win in 29 years.
Mo Farah completed the race in exactly 1 hour, while
Mary Keitany completed in 1:05:39 seconds - surpassing the previous course record of 1:05:40 by 1 second, a record held by
Paula Radcliffe. Tracey Cramond, who was raising money for Butterwick Hospices, was the 1 millionth person to complete the run, stating she was "gobsmacked" and that it was her "moment of fame". The Great North Run was the first
International Athletics Association Event (IAAF) event in the world to reach such a milestone. In 2015 a 58 year old male runner died. The 2020 Great North Run was cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The 2022 event cancelled its Junior and Mini events due to the
death of Elizabeth II.
Eddie Howe started the 2023 Great North Run for the 60,000 participants. The race was
Mo Farah's last ever before his retirement. The 2024 Great North Run took place on 8th September and was started by Olympic Silver Medalist
Kieran Reilly. A 29 year old male runner died after collapsing during the race. The 2025 edition was notable for an error where the finisher’s medal features a mislabeled map of Sunderland and the
River Wear instead of the Tyne. The 2026 Great North Run will take place on 13th September. ==Past winners==