2022 European Cross Country Championships
2022 European Cross Country Championships | |
---|---|
Organisers | EAA |
Edition | 28th |
Date | 11 December |
Host city | Venaria Reale, Turin, Italy |
Venue | La Mandria Park |
Events | 7 |
Distances | 9,572 m – Men 7,662 m – Women 7,662 m – U23 men 5,722 m – U23 women 5,722 m – U20 men 3,812 m – U20 women 5,722 m – Mixed relay |
Participation | 623 athletes from 40 nations |
Official website | EAA FIDAL |
External, official videos | |
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via YouTube | |
Senior Men’s Race | |
Senior Women’s Race | |
U23 Men’s Race | |
U23 Women’s Race | |
U20 Men’s Race | |
U20 Women’s Race | |
Mixed relay |
The 2022 European Cross Country Championships was the 28th edition of the cross country running competition for European athletes. It was held on 11 December 2022 in La Mandria Park near Turin, Italy.[1]
Italy became the first country to have staged the European Cross Country Championships on four occasions after previous editions in Ferrara in 1998, San Giorgio su Legnano in 2006 and Chia in 2016. Initially Turin received the right to host the event in 2021.[2] However, due to the coronavirus pandemic and cancellation of the 2020 championship, which was supposed to be staged by Dublin, the organizers of the Turin championship agreed to hold them in Italy in 2022, so that the 2021 event could be hosted by the Irish city.[3]
The looped course featured a steep 300 metre uphill and downhill section and a 50 metre-long indoor section through the carriage pavilion of La Mandria Castle (it:Castello della Mandria), part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997, on each long lap.[4]
Norwegians Jakob Ingebrigtsen and Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal successfully defended their men's and women's senior titles from Fingal-Dublin 2021 respectively. It was Ingebrigtsen's sixth consecutive European cross country title after four victories at under-20 level.[5] Grøvdal earned her ninth individual medal, an unsurpassed record by a female athlete in the meet history; it was her third gold after U20 success in 2009.[6]
Great Britain's Charles Hicks and Italy's Nadia Battocletti successfully defended their men's and women's U23 titles respectively. For Battocletti it was a fourth consecutive continental cross country victory.[7]
Great Britain and Northern Ireland topped the medal table with 10 medals, including five golds.
Medal summary
[edit]- Note: Athletes in italics did not score for the team result.
Medal table
[edit]* Host nation (Italy)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Great Britain (GBR) | 5 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
2 | Italy (ITA)* | 2 | 2 | 0 | 4 |
3 | Spain (ESP) | 2 | 1 | 2 | 5 |
4 | Norway (NOR) | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
5 | France (FRA) | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 |
6 | Germany (GER) | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4 |
7 | Ireland (IRL) | 0 | 2 | 3 | 5 |
8 | Turkey (TUR) | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
9 | Belgium (BEL) | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Finland (FIN) | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Totals (10 entries) | 13 | 13 | 13 | 39 |
Results
[edit]Senior men
[edit]Senior women
[edit]
|
|
U23 men
[edit]Rank | Athlete | Country | Time (m:s) |
---|---|---|---|
Charles Hicks | United Kingdom | 23:40 | |
Zakariya Mahamed | United Kingdom | 23:48 | |
Valentin Bresc | France | 23:58 | |
4 | Etienne Daguinos | France | 24:04 |
5 | Efrem Gidey | Ireland | 24:05 |
6 | Adisu Guadia | Israel | 24:06 |
7 | Antoine Senard | France | 24:10 |
8 | Matthew Stonier | United Kingdom | 24:11 |
9 | Keelan Kirlehill | Israel | 24:13 |
10 | Magnus Tuv Myhre | Norway | 24:14 |
11 | Rory Leonard | United Kingdom | 24:15 |
12 | Derebe Ayele | Israel | 24:18 |
13 | Joseph Wigfield | United Kingdom | 24:19 |
14 | Marco Fontana Granotto | Italy | 24:22 |
15 | Shay McEvoy | Ireland | 24:22 |
16 | Miguel Moreira | Portugal | 24:33 |
17 | Luc Le Baron | France | 24:43 |
18 | Adam Maijo | Spain | 24:44 |
19 | Andrii Atamaniuk | Ukraine | 24:45 |
20 | Tim Verbaandert | Netherlands | 24:45 |
21 | Job Ijtsma | Netherlands | 24:45 |
22 | Ramazan Baştuğ | Turkey | 24:47 |
23 | Yorick van de Kerkhove | Belgium | 24:48 |
24 | Eemil Helander | Finland | 24:49 |
25 | Luca Alfieri | Italy | 24:50 |
26 | Darragh McElhinney | Ireland | 24:51 |
27 | Pierre Bordeau | France | 24:52 |
28 | Arnaud Collard | France | 24:54 |
29 | Rayan Vanderpoorten | Belgium | 24:54 |
30 | Enrico Vecchi | Italy | 24:56 |
31 | Aarón Las Heras | Spain | 24:59 |
32 | Marco Vanderpoorten | Belgium | 24:59 |
33 | Pol Oriach | Spain | 25:00 |
34 | Jonathan Carmin | Israel | 25:01 |
35 | Mikołaj Czeronek | Poland | 25:01 |
36 | Miguel Ángel Martínez | Spain | 25:02 |
37 | Tomer Tarragano | United Kingdom | 25:04 |
38 | Francesco Guerra | Italy | 25:05 |
39 | Adria Ceballos | Spain | 25:07 |
40 | Vid Botolin | Slovenia | 25:07 |
41 | Tim Aßmann | Germany | 25:08 |
42 | Téo Rubens Banini | France | 25:09 |
43 | Jesse Fokkenrood | Netherlands | 25:10 |
44 | Rúben Amaral | Portugal | 25:11 |
45 | Marcel Tobler | Austria | 25:12 |
46 | Giedrius Valinčius | Lithuania | 25:17 |
47 | Etson Barros | Portugal | 25:24 |
48 | Miguel Baidal | Spain | 25:25 |
49 | Zemenu Muchie | Israel | 25:27 |
50 | Mika Kotiranta | Finland | 25:34 |
51 | Paul Specht | Germany | 25:34 |
52 | Assaf Harari | Israel | 25:34 |
53 | Dereje Chekole | Israel | 25:35 |
54 | Pedro Amaro | Portugal | 25:37 |
55 | Jamie Battle | Spain | 25:37 |
56 | Markus Kirk Kjeldsen | Denmark | 25:46 |
57 | Léo Lädermann | Switzerland | 25:46 |
58 | Sebastian Frey | Austria | 25:48 |
59 | Mateusz Gos | Poland | 25:50 |
60 | Riccardo Martellato | Italy | 25:54 |
61 | Alain Cavagna | Italy | 25:54 |
62 | Andreas Bock Bjørnsen | Denmark | 26:02 |
63 | Thomas McStay | Ireland | 26:06 |
64 | Florian Bremm | Germany | 26:08 |
65 | Julian Großkopf | Germany | 26:08 |
66 | Nikolaos Stamoulis | Greece | 26:11 |
67 | Michal Staník | Slovakia | 26:12 |
68 | Aleksander Wiącek | Poland | 26:20 |
69 | Kalev Hõlpus | Estonia | 26:20 |
70 | Panagiotis Petroulakis | Greece | 26:39 |
71 | Benedikt Brem | Germany | 26:43 |
72 | Vasyl Sabunyak | Ukraine | 26:44 |
73 | Gil Weicherding | Luxembourg | 26:47 |
74 | Andriy Krakovetskyy | Ukraine | 26:54 |
75 | Jonathan Hedemann Makwarth | Denmark | 27:02 |
76 | Athanasios Ligonis | Greece | 27:10 |
77 | Leonid Vandevski | North Macedonia | 27:26 |
78 | David Borg | Malta | 28:32 |
References
[edit]- ^ "European Cross Country Championships 2022 – Final Results" (PDF). European Athletics. 2022-12-13. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-12-15. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
- ^ "Turin and Jerusalem awarded major events in 2021 and 2022". European Athletics. 2019-11-12. Retrieved 2022-12-11.
- ^ "Dublin and Turin to stage SPAR European Cross Country Championships in 2021 and 2022". European Athletics. 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2022-12-11.
- ^ Turnbull, Simon (8 December 2022). "Preview | Can anyone dethrone Ingebrigtsen in the shadow of La Mandria Castle?". European Athletics. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
- ^ Turnbull, Simon (2022-12-11). "Report | Ingebrigtsen is a man for all seasons as he triumphs again". European Athletics. Retrieved 2022-12-11.
- ^ Minshull, Phil (2022-12-11). "Report | Grøvdal shows her technical strength to retain her title". European Athletics. Retrieved 2022-12-11.
- ^ Turnbull, Simon (2022-12-11). "Report | Battocletti and Hicks reign again in the U23 races in La Mandria Park". European Athletics. Retrieved 2022-12-11.