The Nic Bideau coached duo of Brett Robinson and Sinead Diver set new marks in Japan and Spain.
Running at the Fukuoka Marathon, Robinson ran 2:07:31 to take twenty seconds off the 1986 Boston Marathon winning time of Rob de Castella. Robinson finished fourth behind Ethiopian born Israeli athlete Maru Teferi, who won the race in 2:06:43.
Robinson covered the 42.195km distance in just a tick over three-minutes-per-kilometre, with metronomically consistent splits of 30:03 (10km), 60:06 (20km), 63:22 (halfway) and 1:30:08 (30km), before tiring only slightly in the closing stages (his 40km split was 2:00:47).
Brett Robinson breaks Rob de Castella’s Australian marathon NR with 2:07:31 for 4th at Fukuoka International Marathon. pic.twitter.com/AQVsuBSgjo— Japan Running News (@JRNHeadlines) December 4, 2022
“It’s such a great feeling. I’ve gone for this record a few times now, and it’s funny – I always talk about going for it before a race but I didn’t mention it to anyone this time around,” Robinson said after the race.
“I went about my own business and I finally got it. I knew I was capable of it.”
Robinson will now turn his attention to the 2023 World Cross Country Championships, being held in Bathurst on 18 February.
Achieving the record breaking performance in Fukuoka was poignant, as it is a happy stomping ground for Australian marathoners: Derek Clayton set a pioneering 2:09:37 world record on the course in 1967, while de Castella recorded the second fastest time of his career there (2:08:18) in his 1981 victory. 
Hours later, in Valencia, Spain, Sinead Diver broke the women’s record by over a minute with her 11th place finish in 2:21:34. The performance bettered the 16-year-old Australian record held by Benita Willis at 2:22:36.
Remarkably, 45-year-old Diver is younger than Willis, but was only running occasionally for general fitness when Willis set the previous mark. Diver’s running career kicked off in earnest in 2010 and continues to go from strength-to-strength.
“I have wanted this for so long and I wasn’t sure if I was good enough to get it,” Diver said.
“I’ve had a few goes at it now, this was my third crack at it and every time I line up, it takes a lot. Things have to really fall into place so I’m beyond delighted that it’s happened.
“Benita (Willis) is Australia’s best runner of all time so it’s an honour to now have this record. I couldn’t be prouder today.”
Amane Beriso Shankule from Ethiopia took out the race in 2:14:58, the third fastest performance of all-time. In second, Letesenbet Gidey recorded the fastest ever debut marathon of 2:16:49. The race also had record depth, with the top seven in the field breaking 2 hours, 19 minutes. In the men’s race, Kenya’s Kelvin Kiptum recorded the fastest ever marathon debut with 2:01:53, just 44 seconds short of the world record set earlier this year by Eluid Kipchoge.
Top 5 Fastest Australian Marathoners – Men
- Brett Robinson – 2:07:31 – Fukuoka, 2022
- Rob de Castella – 2:07:51 – Boston, 1986*
- Steve Moneghetii – 2:08:16 – Berlin, 1990
- Derek Clayton – 2:08:34 – Antwerp, 1969
- Pat Carroll – 2:09:39 – Beppu-Oita, 1995
* The Boston Marathon is now considered ineligible for records under World Athletics Rules due to the start and finishing line being separated by more than 50% of the race distance. de Castella’s second fastest career time was 2:08:18 at Fukuoka in 1981.
Top 5 Fastest Australian Marathoners – Women
- Sinead Diver – 2:21:34 – Valencia, 2022
- Benita Willis – 2:22:36 – Chicago, 2006
- Lisa Ondieki – 2:23:51 – Osaka, 1988
- Lisa Weightman – 2:24:00 – Berlin, 2022
- Eloise Wellings – 2:25:10 – Nagoya, 2022
Latest posts:
- Commonwealth Games Qualifiers
Here’s the athletes that have achieved the tough qualifying standards for the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. With a hard cap of 63 open athletes for the Australian team, most selections will be discretionary. The only automatic pathway to selection is achieving the qualifying standard before, or while, winning the Australian Championship in April. Here’s… Read more: Commonwealth Games Qualifiers - “I Live and Breathe Athletics”: Inside Mia Gross’s Love for the Sport
On a quiet Thursday night, Mia Gross might be found at a local athletics meet: not racing, just watching. “If I’m here [in Geelong] I’ll just go down to Landy Field on a Saturday and watch the racing,” she said. “Or I’ll walk over to Albert Park and watch a Thursday night meet. I just… Read more: “I Live and Breathe Athletics”: Inside Mia Gross’s Love for the Sport - 400m Men Sharpen Up Over Shorter Distances
Australia’s leading 400m contenders are tuning their speed at the business end of the domestic season, with Cooper Sherman and Aidan Murphy both producing personal best performances over shorter sprint distances this weekend. At the High Velocity Club meet in Geelong, Sherman lowered his 200m best with a sharp 20.44s (+1.8), slicing more than half a second off the 20.95s personal best… Read more: 400m Men Sharpen Up Over Shorter Distances - Claudia Hollingsworth Breaks Four Minutes at Box Hill, Climbs to No.3 All-Time
Fresh off her victory in the national 3000m titles, Claudia Hollingsworth has shot to number three on the Australian all-time list over 1500m. Running at the Box Hill Classic the 20-year-old stopped the clock at 3:58.09 to record the fastest ever performance by an Australian in Australia. The run bettered the mark of 3:59.33 set… Read more: Claudia Hollingsworth Breaks Four Minutes at Box Hill, Climbs to No.3 All-Time - Vanessa Low: Just Because It Hasn’t Been Done…
In 2006, fifteen-year-old Vanessa Low left her home in Ratzeburg, Germany to go meet friends in a nearby town. It was a trip she had taken many times before. She was an adventurer, always out and about, the family’s “little butterfly” as her dad would say. But she never made it to her friends that… Read more: Vanessa Low: Just Because It Hasn’t Been Done…












