AUSTIN (KXAN) — The Ascension Seton Austin Marathon takes place Sunday, Feb. 18, in downtown Austin and looks to bring cold, clear weather with temperatures in the middle 30s.

But how does this marathon forecast stack up to the conditions runners experienced in previous years?

We examined data from every Austin Marathon since 1992. We found this year’s conditions appear to be colder than a typical Austin Marathon and dry, just like the marathon typically is.

Coldest Austin Marathon on record

On the morning of Feb. 19, 2006, Austin recorded a low temperature of 28º along with freezing fog and freezing mist.

More than 400 car accidents were reported early as bridges and overpasses turned into skating rinks. Cloudy, cold conditions persisted all afternoon with a light drizzle and temperatures rising above freezing late in the day.

Warmest Austin Marathon on record

When Austinites think of heat, they think of 2011 — and the marathon fits that trend.

On the morning of Feb. 20, 2011, Austin’s low temperature only dipped to 64º — roughly 20º warmer than normal. On the marathon mornings of both 2017 and 1994, Austin recorded abnormally warm low temperatures of 61º. By 11 a.m. on race day 2017, it was a sweaty 78º in Austin.

Tornadoes after the marathon in 2017

While 27 out of the 30 Austin Marathon dates we analyzed were completely dry, not all of them have been.

After a warm, humid race morning on Feb. 19, 2017, a line of severe thunderstorms later that night brought two tornadoes south of Austin. An EF-1 tornado brought 100 mile-per-hour winds seven miles northwest of San Marcos, creating a damage path 10 miles long to near Kyle. The tornado was three football fields wide.

A weaker EF-0 tornado touched down in Caldwell County at 11:48 p.m. near Niederwald, lifting just one mile northwest of Mustang Ridge. The tornado packed 85 mile-per-hour winds and was one football field wide.

The severe weather continued overnight when two more tornadoes touched down north of Austin in Williamson County. After midnight, two EF-2 tornadoes touched down near Thrall and straight-line winds of over 100 miles per hour blew train cars off the track. There were no injuries reported.