Consider the London Marathon and it’s doubtless that one of many first photographs to pop into your head will probably be one in every of a stream of runners pouring down The Mall in direction of the hallowed end line, with Buckingham Palace offering a spectacular backdrop.
Overlaying these closing yards – the tip of the route was moved from Westminster Bridge in 1994 – is an unforgettable second for anybody who has been fortunate sufficient to expertise it and it has impressed numerous folks down the years to lace up their sneakers.
The identical could possibly be stated for the occasion’s youthful sibling, the Mini London Marathon, which has borne witness to the early phases of a number of the most interesting careers in latest British athletics historical past.
This yr marks its fortieth version and organisers are marking the big day by inviting earlier championship athletes again to participate in a “fortieth wave” across the 2.6km course, in addition to celebrating the achievements of the kids concerned.

Josh Kerr (Mark Shearman)
The checklist of former rivals on the occasion reads like a who’s who of British center and lengthy distance operating, together with athletes comparable to Keely Hodgkinson, Mo Farah, Josh Kerr, Jake Wightman, Laura Muir, David Weir, Hannah Cockroft, Alex Yee and Alistair Brownlee, to call only a few.
“You’ve received an unbelievable alumni that features earlier winners and contributors,” says Hugh Brasher, CEO of London Marathon Occasions. “Among the athletes that didn’t even win the Mini London Marathon went on to safe Olympic gold medals.
“There are such a lot of names to select from however extra not too long ago I consider an athlete like Innes FitzGerald. She was topped a Mini Marathon champion [in 2022] and has gone on to symbolize Nice Britain on the 2025 European Indoor Championships and win worldwide medals at junior degree as properly.”
The Mini Marathon started in 1986, and in its unique guise it came about on the morning of marathon race day, protecting the closing three miles of the marathon route and with the motion very a lot centered on the elite competitors between junior athletes.

Mini London Marathon (LM Occasions)
A lot has modified about it in recent times, nevertheless. Mirroring the principle occasion, there’s nonetheless that elite ingredient to proceedings on the head of the fields, however now it’s open to all and, since 2022 it has been given extra room to breathe, going down the day earlier than the 26.2-mile extravaganza.
The Mini Marathon offers hundreds of children with the chance to expertise the sensation of operating, strolling or wheeling themselves alongside these well-known roads. Whether or not they full one mile (for youngsters in reception to yr seven) or 2.6km (for these in years 4 to 12), contributors set off from Horse Guards Parade and end on The Mall.
Mass participation figures have sky-rocketed and the determine of 8257 finishers from 2023 rose to over 13,000 final yr.
Not solely is it free for colleges to enter however title sponsor TCS donates £10 – which may contribute in direction of issues like laptop or sports activities tools – for every pupil that finishes.
Such is the occasion’s rising reputation that numbers have needed to be restricted to 40 pupils per college for this yr’s version, with the intention to offer extra colleges throughout the UK a possibility to get entangled. Organisers predict over 18,000 finishers this month.

Mini Marathon winners (London Marathon)
“Evolving the Mini London Marathon was very a lot one thing we began round 2018,” provides Brasher. “It was a semblance of an concept of: ‘Why can’t we make the Mini London Marathon one thing greater and higher?’
“We needed to maintain the essence of elite competitors however what else may we do? How may we do it? That’s once we had conversations with TCS as a sponsor they usually simply cherished the entire concept of children getting rewards, whether or not that be laptop or sports activities tools.
“We then began colleges in additional underserved communities and people the place sport wasn’t intrinsically a part of a typical day. The primary yr we put this new occasion on was 2022 however that was within the midst of the Tube strike, which reasonably affected the numbers!”
Mini London Marathon organisers at the moment are focusing on 50,000 finishers by 2030, which wouldn’t be far off the estimated determine for the complete London Marathon itself this yr.

James Dargan and Jake Wightman (LM Occasions)
“Given we’re a number of years into this new format, colleges are beginning to see the Mini London Marathon as an actual fixture within the calendar,” says Ben Cooper, Occasion Lead on the Mini London Marathon. “They’ll have these dates within the diary now. Faculties are coming again to the mass occasion year-on-year they usually’re bringing totally different teams of kids.
“It’s a reasonably distinctive expertise, particularly for teenagers who haven’t been concerned in a mass participation occasion as properly. They could have by no means been on a begin line they usually nearly definitely haven’t run in entrance of Buckingham Palace on closed streets.”
Each Brasher and Cooper additionally stress the significance of constructing certain that the optimistic impacts of the Mini London Marathon aren’t simply felt on the day itself however throughout the yr. The ambition is for this to be a catalyst that helps extra youngsters to be lively and, given some alarming latest statistics, there’s a urgent want for that aspiration to turn out to be a actuality.

Mini London Marathon (Mark Shearman)
In December, Sport England acknowledged that, for the 2023-2024 educational yr, simply 47.8 per cent of kids met tips of participating in a median of 60 minutes or extra of sport/bodily exercise day by day.
“We wish to construct this out so there’s year-round exercise due to the power inactivity of children in colleges,” says Cooper. “It has to make a distinction within the longer-term.
“They’re getting their £10 per finisher they usually’re beginning to put that again into PE tools, so youngsters can see the influence on what they do at college.
“There’s a buzz of participation round it and I do know, once we go into colleges and meet each pupils and academics, they’re vastly excited concerning the occasion.”

Parkun
Two years in the past, the London Marathon Basis additionally gave £1.19m to junior parkrun – a weekly occasion by which youngsters aged 4 to 14 deal with a 2km course – to help its progress. Within the first yr of the partnership, 51 new junior parkruns throughout the UK opened and a complete of a couple of million youngsters took half.
“The singular goal of London Marathon Occasions and the London Marathon Basis is to encourage exercise,” says Brasher. “We imagine there’s an actual ecosystem of: ‘Begin with the Every day Mile, do junior parkrun, then do the Mini Marathon and after that the English Faculties Championships’.
“The extra we will construct that base pyramid, then the extra folks we will encourage into highway operating and athletics, creating a greater sport for everybody. We’re making an attempt to create a virtuous circle to get youngsters lively.”

Mini London Marathon (LM Occasions)
The opposite initiative that each Brasher and Cooper level to is the Mini London Marathon in Faculties. Born out of the pandemic, contributors are invited to run, jog, stroll, wheel or be guided round a two-mile course inside their college setting (this yr’s timeframe is from April 22 to Might 2). Since launching in 2020, a couple of million youngsters have completed the occasion, with every pupil receiving a certificates and each college receiving a trophy for being concerned. The expectation this yr is that, on prime of the 18,000 folks operating within the coronary heart of London, greater than 400,000 will participate in bodily exercise domestically.
“There’s one thing that’s nearly unquantifiable about seeing the faces of children after they cross the end line, whether or not that be on The Mall or at their college,” says Cooper.
“There’s such absolute elation after they end as a result of it’s a large achievement. It’s priceless. You by no means fairly know what’s going to stick with a toddler after they develop up.
“You do suppose: ‘That is going to stick with them eternally’ and expectantly it should have a extremely optimistic influence on their future.”