3000 m – 7:35.18
NR (2021) 5000 m – 13:06.21
NR (2019)[2] 10000 m – 27:36.77
NR (2022)
Andrew Butchart (born 14 October 1991) is a
British runner who competed in the 5000 metres event at the
2016 and
2020 Summer Olympics. He is the current Scottish record holder in the 3000, 5000 and 10,000 metre events. In June 2023, he broke the
parkrun “world-record”.
Career
Butchart has trained at the Central Athletic Club in
Stirling.[3][4] At the age of 16, Butchart came third in the Scottish schools cross-country championships.[5] He won the 2014
Age UK Leeds Abbey Dash.[6] Butchart won his first professional race in the 5000 metres event at the 2015 Scottish Seniors Championships; he also finished second in the 1,500 metres race.[7] In June 2015, Butchart was selected for the European 10,000m Cup despite having never previously run a 10,000m race on a track, and also finished third in the 3000 metres event at the
European Team Championships in
Moscow.[8][9] In November he won the Scottish Short Course Cross County Championships.[10]
Butchart became a full-time athlete at the beginning of 2016, leaving a fitness coaching job based at
Gleneagles Hotel.[11][12] In February 2016, Butchart won the Scottish Cross Country Championships,[13][14] and in May, Butchart broke
Nat Muir's Scottish record in the 5000 metres event at the
Fanny Blankers-Koen Games. His time was 13:13.30, four seconds quicker than Muir's record, which had stood for 36 years, and Butchart ran the last lap of the race with only one shoe.[15][16] In June 2016, Butchart broke the Scottish 3000 metre record at the
IAAF Diamond League meeting in
Birmingham; Butchart recorded a time of 7:45:00, less than a second quicker than
John Robson's record from 1984. In the same race,
Mo Farah broke the British 3000 metre record.[17][18] Later in the month, he won the 5000 metres event at the
British Championships, meaning that he qualified for the
5000 metres event at the
2016 Summer Olympics.[19][3]
Butchart was the third athlete from the small town of
Dunblane to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics, after brothers
Andy and
Jamie Murray.[19][11] Butchart qualified for the 5000 metre Olympic final, after finishing fifth in his heat in a time of 13:20.08,[20] and finished sixth in the final, recording a
personal best time of 13:08.61.[a][22][23] In 2016, he also won the
London 10,000 race.[3]
Butchart qualified for the
5,000 metres event at the delayed
2020 Summer Olympics after coming second at the
2021 British Athletics Championships.[31] On 29 June 2021, UK Athletics said that they were investigating claims that Butchart faked a COVID-19 test to get entry to the United Kingdom for the Championships.[32] On 17 July, he was given a 12-month
suspended ban, which meant he could still compete at the Olympics.[33] At the Games, Butchart finished 11th in the final.[34] In October 2021, Butchart's funding from
The National Lottery was cut due to the pre-Olympics COVID-19 test incident.[35]
In March 2022, Butchart set a Scottish national record time of 27:36.77 in the 10,000 metres event, during his first competition at the distance.[36] In July 2022, he was selected for the
Scottish team for the 2022 Commonwealth Games, to compete in the
5000 and
10,000 metres events.[37] He finished seventh in the 10,000 metres event.[38]
In May 2023, Butchart became British champion in the 10,000 metres event, after being the highest finishing Briton at the Night of the 10k PBs event.[39] In June, he set the record for the fastest ever
Parkrun time, finishing the
Edinburgh parkrun 5,000 metres event in 13:45, which was 3 seconds faster than the previous record that had been held by
Andy Baddeley for 11 years.[40]
Personal life
Butchart lived in Dunblane, Scotland, the same town as Andy and Jamie Murray.[19][11][41] He now lives with his partner and fellow runner
Lynsey Sharp in
San Diego, US.[25][11] In October 2019, the couple announced their engagement.[42] In 2021, Butchart and Sharp had their first child, Max.[43]
Notes
^ Butchart originally finished seventh, but was awarded sixth place after the disqualification of
Muktar Edris.[21]