European Cup 10,000m

The European Cup 10,000m is an annual 10,000 metres race for European athletes which was first held in 1997. The competition is organised by the European Athletics Association and first began as the European 10000 Metres Challenge after the event was removed from the European Cup programme. The competition has roots in the Iberian 10,000 metres Championships – a competition between Spanish and Portuguese athletes that was held between 1991 and 1996 – and the first five editions of the European 10000 Metres Challenge were held in the Iberian Peninsula. The event was first held under its current title in 2005.[1]

Editions

Edition Year Host city Host country Date No. of athletes
1st 1997 Barakaldo Spain 5 April
2nd 1998 Lisbon Portugal 4 April
3rd 1999 Barakaldo Spain 10 April
4th 2000 Lisbon Portugal 1 April
5th 2001 Barakaldo Spain 7 April
6th 2002 Camaiore Italy 6 April
7th 2003 Athens Greece 12 April
8th 2004 Maribor Slovenia 3 April
9th 2005 Barakaldo Spain 2 April
10th 2006 Antalya Turkey 15 April
11th 2007 Ferrara Italy 7 April
12th 2008 Istanbul Turkey 12 April
13th 2009 Ribeira Brava Portugal 6 June
14th 2010 Marseilles France 5 June
15th 2011 Oslo Norway 4 June 45 men, 33 women
16th 2012 Bilbao Spain 3 June 46 men, 41 women
17th 2013 Pravets Bulgaria 8 June 31 men, 30 women
18th 2014 Skopje Macedonia 7 June 43 men, 41 women
19th 2015 Cagliari Italy 6 June 41 men, 36 women
20th 2016 Mersin Turkey 5 June 25 men, 23 women

Champions

Year Men Women
Individual Team Individual Team
1997  Dieter Baumann (GER)  Portugal  Julia Vaquero (ESP)  Portugal
1998  Fabián Roncero (ESP)  Portugal  Fernanda Ribeiro (POR)  Portugal
1999  Alberto García (ESP)  Spain  Paula Radcliffe (GBR)  Portugal
2000  Enrique Molina (ESP)  Spain  Fatima Yvelain (FRA)  Portugal
2001  José Ríos (ESP)  Spain  Paula Radcliffe (GBR)  Spain
2002  Dieter Baumann (GER)  Italy  Mihaela Botezan (ROM)  Portugal
2003  Ismaïl Sghyr (FRA)  Portugal  Fernanda Ribeiro (POR)  Portugal
2004  José Manuel Martínez (ESP)  Spain  Margaret Maury (FRA)  France
2005  Juan Carlos de la Ossa (ESP)  Spain  Sabrina Mockenhaupt (GER)  Portugal
2006  Mokhtar Benhari (FRA)  France  Elvan Abeylegesse (TUR)  Belgium
2007[2]  André Pollmächer (GER)  Spain  Elvan Abeylegesse (TUR)  Spain
2008[3]  Selim Bayrak (TUR)  Russia  Elvan Abeylegesse (TUR)  Belarus
2009[4]  José Manuel Martínez (ESP)  Portugal  Inês Monteiro (POR)  Portugal
2010[5]  Mo Farah (GBR)  France  Inês Monteiro (POR)  Portugal
2011[6]  Yousef el Kalai (POR)  Spain  Sara Moreira (POR)  Italy
2012[7]  Polat Arıkan (TUR)  Spain  Sara Moreira (POR)  Great Britain
2013  Sergio Sánchez (ESP)  Italy  Sabrina Mockenhaupt (GER)  Spain
2014  Polat Arıkan (TUR)  Turkey  Clémence Calvin (FRA)  Portugal
2015  Polat Arıkan (TUR)  Italy  Trihas Gebre (ESP)  Great Britain
2016  Daniele Meucci (ITA)  Italy  Esma Aydemir (TUR)  Great Britain

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/8/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.