Cape Town’s marathon weekend has taken on global significance as Eliud Kipchoge arrives for the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon, giving the city one of its biggest sporting moments of the year and placing the Green Point race route in front of an international running audience.
Cape Town is stepping into the global running spotlight this weekend as the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon brings thousands of runners, supporters and visitors into the city, with Eliud Kipchoge’s appearance turning the event into one of the most closely watched sporting moments on the local calendar.
The marathon weekend is already under way, with trail and shorter-distance events taking place before the main road marathon on Sunday. The main race starts and finishes in Green Point, placing one of Cape Town’s most recognisable sporting precincts at the centre of the action.
For Cape Town, this is not just another race weekend. The Sanlam Cape Town Marathon has grown into one of the largest and most visible running events on the African continent. It brings together elite athletes, club runners, recreational participants, international visitors, local supporters and volunteers across a weekend that carries both sporting and economic value.
The headline name is Eliud Kipchoge, widely regarded as one of the greatest marathon runners in history. His presence in Cape Town gives the event immediate international weight. It also adds symbolic importance because this is his first marathon on African soil, a milestone that connects the city to a wider story about African distance running, global athletics and the continent’s place in elite road racing.
Kipchoge’s career has helped redefine modern marathon running. His calm racing style, disciplined preparation and record-breaking performances have made him one of the most recognisable figures in world athletics. For Cape Town to host him during a major race weekend gives the city a rare opportunity to be seen by a global sporting audience beyond its usual tourism and lifestyle reputation.
The wider race weekend also matters for local sport development. Major running events create opportunities for South African athletes to test themselves against international fields while giving local clubs and recreational runners a chance to take part in a professionally organised event on home ground. For many runners, the Cape Town Marathon is not only about elite competition. It is a personal goal, a charity effort, a fitness milestone, or a way to experience the city differently.
The event’s route and setting also play a major role in its appeal. Cape Town offers a rare combination of ocean views, urban energy, mountain backdrops and heritage spaces. That visual identity gives the marathon strong broadcast and social media value. For tourism bodies and event organisers, every image of runners moving through the city becomes part of Cape Town’s wider global marketing story.
There is also a practical side for residents and visitors. A marathon of this size affects movement in and around the city. Green Point, the city centre and sections of the race route are expected to be busy, with road closures, spectator areas and increased public activity. For businesses, hospitality venues, transport operators and accommodation providers, the marathon weekend can bring higher foot traffic and stronger weekend trading.
Cape Town has worked to position itself as a major events city, and large sporting weekends are central to that strategy. Events such as the Cape Town Marathon help fill hotels, support restaurants, attract international visitors and create visibility for the city as a destination that can host world-class gatherings.
The presence of Kipchoge raises the stakes even further. His appearance gives the event a storyline that extends beyond Cape Town and South Africa. It speaks to international athletics fans, African sports pride and the growing importance of the Cape Town Marathon as a race with serious global ambition.
For local supporters, Sunday’s marathon offers more than road closures and crowds. It is a chance to see one of the world’s greatest athletes compete in the Mother City, while thousands of ordinary runners take on the same city streets in pursuit of their own finish line.
The Sanlam Cape Town Marathon weekend is therefore both a sporting event and a city showcase. It brings elite performance, public participation, tourism value and international attention into one weekend, with Green Point becoming the centre of Cape Town’s running story. Source: Sanlam Cape Town Marathon – Kendra Stewart; SuperSport – Staff Reporter.Cape Town is stepping into the global running spotlight this weekend as the Sanlam Cape Town Marathon brings thousands of runners, supporters and visitors into the city, with Eliud Kipchoge’s appearance turning the event into one of the most closely watched sporting moments on the local calendar.
The marathon weekend is already under way, with trail and shorter-distance events taking place before the main road marathon on Sunday. The main race starts and finishes in Green Point, placing one of Cape Town’s most recognisable sporting precincts at the centre of the action.
For Cape Town, this is not just another race weekend. The Sanlam Cape Town Marathon has grown into one of the largest and most visible running events on the African continent. It brings together elite athletes, club runners, recreational participants, international visitors, local supporters and volunteers across a weekend that carries both sporting and economic value.
The headline name is Eliud Kipchoge, widely regarded as one of the greatest marathon runners in history. His presence in Cape Town gives the event immediate international weight. It also adds symbolic importance because this is his first marathon on African soil, a milestone that connects the city to a wider story about African distance running, global athletics and the continent’s place in elite road racing.
Kipchoge’s career has helped redefine modern marathon running. His calm racing style, disciplined preparation and record-breaking performances have made him one of the most recognisable figures in world athletics. For Cape Town to host him during a major race weekend gives the city a rare opportunity to be seen by a global sporting audience beyond its usual tourism and lifestyle reputation.
The wider race weekend also matters for local sport development. Major running events create opportunities for South African athletes to test themselves against international fields while giving local clubs and recreational runners a chance to take part in a professionally organised event on home ground. For many runners, the Cape Town Marathon is not only about elite competition. It is a personal goal, a charity effort, a fitness milestone, or a way to experience the city differently.
The event’s route and setting also play a major role in its appeal. Cape Town offers a rare combination of ocean views, urban energy, mountain backdrops and heritage spaces. That visual identity gives the marathon strong broadcast and social media value. For tourism bodies and event organisers, every image of runners moving through the city becomes part of Cape Town’s wider global marketing story.
There is also a practical side for residents and visitors. A marathon of this size affects movement in and around the city. Green Point, the city centre and sections of the race route are expected to be busy, with road closures, spectator areas and increased public activity. For businesses, hospitality venues, transport operators and accommodation providers, the marathon weekend can bring higher foot traffic and stronger weekend trading.
Cape Town has worked to position itself as a major events city, and large sporting weekends are central to that strategy. Events such as the Cape Town Marathon help fill hotels, support restaurants, attract international visitors and create visibility for the city as a destination that can host world-class gatherings.
The presence of Kipchoge raises the stakes even further. His appearance gives the event a storyline that extends beyond Cape Town and South Africa. It speaks to international athletics fans, African sports pride and the growing importance of the Cape Town Marathon as a race with serious global ambition.
For local supporters, Sunday’s marathon offers more than road closures and crowds. It is a chance to see one of the world’s greatest athletes compete in the Mother City, while thousands of ordinary runners take on the same city streets in pursuit of their own finish line.
The Sanlam Cape Town Marathon weekend is therefore both a sporting event and a city showcase. It brings elite performance, public participation, tourism value and international attention into one weekend, with Green Point becoming the centre of Cape Town’s running story.
Source: Sanlam Cape Town Marathon – Kendra Stewart; SuperSport – Staff Reporter.



