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Spanish Marathon Team Prince of Asturias Award for Sports 1997

Spanish Marathon Team

The marathon is the longest track and field competition, having a distance of 42 kilometers, 195 meters. It is a specialized event in which athletes can only participate two times per year, due to the tremendous effort and strain caused by pushing the human body to its limits in a race that lasts for more than two hours. Its origin dates back to the year 487 BC when, according to legend, a Greek herald ran from Marathon to Athens to proclaim victory over the Persians. That race now closes each edition of the Olympic Games and the World Athletics Championships.

In August 1997, in Athens, the Spanish marathon team made up of Abel Antón, Martín Fiz, José Manuel García, Fabián Roncero, Alberto Juzdado and Diego García confirmed their dominance in this event by winning -in the same race- the World Cup, the world sub-championship and championship. Spain became the only country that has won two consecutive world championships in this competition. This took place on a route that started at the city of Marathon and finished at Panathinaikon Stadium, where the first modern Olympic Games were celebrated in 1896.

Spanish supremacy in the marathon began at the European Championships of Helsinki in 1994, when three Spanish athletes climbed the podium: Martín Fiz, Diego García and Alberto Juzdado. One year later, at the world championships held in Göteborg, the gold medal was once again awarded to Martín Fiz.

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