European Cross Country Championships

The European Cross Country Championships is an annual international cross country running competition. Organised by the European Athletic Association, it is the area championships for the region and is held in December each year. The championships was inaugurated in 1994 in Alnwick and the venue for the championships changes each year.

European Cross Country Championships
Action from the men's race in 2010
Statusactive
Genresports event
Date(s)December
Frequencyannual
Location(s)various
Inaugurated1994 (1994)
Organised byEAA

Unlike the World Championships for the sport, the European Cross Country Championships consists of six races in age categories, with separate senior, under-23, and junior races for both men and women. There are individual and national team medals awarded in each race. In the team competition, the top three from a team of up to six are scored.[1]

History

The first edition of the competition featured only senior races and 180 athletes took part. Men's and women's junior (under-20) races were introduced at the third edition in 1996 and under-23 races were added to the programme in 2006.[2]

Editions

#YearCityCountryDatesVenueRaces/EventsCountriesAthletes[nb]
1 1994 Alnwick  United Kingdom10 December2/423180
2 1995 Alnwick  United Kingdom2 December2/423186
3 1996 Charleroi  Belgium15 December2/425175
4 1997 Oeiras  Portugal14 December4/826138
5 1998 Ferrara  Italy13 December4/826139
6 1999 Velenje  Slovenia12 December4/827141
7 2000 Malmö  Sweden10 December4/831150
8 2001 Thun   Switzerland9 December4/827155
9 2002 Medulin  Croatia8 December4/827157
10 2003 Edinburgh  United Kingdom14 December4/827135
11 2004 Heringsdorf  Germany12 December4/827165
12 2005 Tilburg  Netherlands11 December4/827164
13 2006 San Giorgio su Legnano  Italy10 December6/1221125
14 2007 Toro  Spain9 December6/1226103
15 2008 Brussels  Belgium14 DecemberLaeken Park6/1233142
16 2009 Dublin  Ireland13 DecemberSantry Demesne6/1230116
17 2010 Albufeira  Portugal12 DecemberAçoteias Cross Country Course6/1234123
18 2011 Velenje  Slovenia11 December6/1233130
19 2012 Szentendre  Hungary9 December6/1235146
20 2013 Belgrade  Serbia8 December6/1236155
21 2014 Samokov  Bulgaria14 DecemberBorovets6/1235137
22 2015 Hyères-Toulon  France13 DecemberHippodrome de Hyères6/1232147
23 2016 Chia  Italy11 December6/12153
24 2017 Šamorín  Slovakia10 DecemberŠamorín x-bionic® sphere7/1337157
25 2018 Tilburg  Netherlands9 December7/1338555
26 2019 Lisbon  Portugal8 December7/13
2020 Dublin  Ireland13 December Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]
27 2021 Dublin  Ireland12 December
28 2022 Turin  Italy11 December La Mandria Park
  • nb Country and athlete figures for senior races only

Senior

Individual

Multiple champion Serhiy Lebid winning in 2008
Hayley Yelling winning the 2009 women's race
Year Men's senior race Women's senior race
1994  Paulo Guerra (POR)  Catherina McKiernan (IRL)
1995  Paulo Guerra (POR)  Annemari Sandell (FIN)
1996  Jon Brown (GBR)  Sara Wedlund (SWE)
1997  Carsten Jørgensen (DEN)  Joalsiae Llado (FRA)
1998  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Paula Radcliffe (GBR)
1999  Paulo Guerra (POR)  Anita Weyermann (SUI)
2000  Paulo Guerra (POR)  Katalin Szentgyörgyi (HUN)
2001  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Yamna Belkacem (FRA)
2002  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Helena Javornik (SLO)
2003  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Paula Radcliffe (GBR)
2004  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Hayley Yelling (GBR)
2005  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Lornah Kiplagat (NED)
2006  Mo Farah (GBR)  Tetyana Holovchenko (UKR)
2007  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Marta Domínguez (ESP)
2008  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Hilda Kibet (NED)
2009  Alemayehu Bezabeh (ESP)  Hayley Yelling (GBR)
2010  Serhiy Lebid (UKR)  Jessica Augusto (POR)
2011  Atelaw Yeshetela (BEL)  Fionnuala Britton (IRL)
2012  Andrea Lalli (ITA)  Fionnuala Britton (IRL)
2013  Alemayehu Bezabeh (ESP)  Sophie Duarte (FRA)
2014  Polat Kemboi Arikan (TUR)  Gemma Steel (GBR)
2015  Ali Kaya (TUR)  Sifan Hassan (NED)
2016  Aras Kaya (TUR)  Yasemin Can (TUR)
2017  Kaan Kigen Özbilen (TUR)  Yasemin Can (TUR)
2018  Filip Ingebrigtsen (NOR)  Yasemin Can (TUR)
2019  Robel Fsiha (SWE)  Yasemin Can (TUR)
2021  Jakob Ingebrigtsen (NOR)  Karoline Grøvdal (NOR)[4]

Medal table

Updated after 2019, including the team rankings for each category and the mixed relay.

# Country Total
1 Great Britain19211555
2 Portugal16161648
3 Spain14191851
4 France13151442
5 Turkey13070424
6 Ukraine10010314
7 Ireland04020309
8 Netherlands04010207
9 Russia03030107
10 Sweden0104049
11 Italy02010609
12 Romania01060310
13 Belgium01040207
14 Norway01010406
15 Finland01010103
16  Switzerland01010002
17 Hungary01000102
18 Denmark01000001
 Slovenia01000001
20 Germany00010304
21 Belarus00010102
 Poland00010102
23 Czech Republic00010001
24 Serbia00000505
Total (24 nations)107107107321

Under 23

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Great Britain17111240
2 France115723
3 Russia59519
4 Turkey4048
5 Belgium3328
6 Netherlands3317
7 Germany27514
8 Italy23611
9 Norway2013
10 Denmark2002
11 Spain1539
12 Poland1247
13 Ireland1214
14 Hungary1001
 Romania1001
16 Serbia0325
17 Bulgaria0202
18 Ukraine0112
19 Portugal0011
 Sweden0011
Totals (20 nations)565656168

Under 20

Men

EditionIndividualTeam
1997 Gert-Jan Liefers Günther Weidlinger Mustafa Mohamed  Spain Portugal Romania
1998 Yousef El Nasri Ovidiu Tat Gareth Turnbull  Spain United Kingdom Romania
1999 Hans Janssens Guillaume Eraud Turo Inkiläinen  United Kingdom France Ireland
2000 Wolfram Müller Christopher Thompson Martin Pröll  Portugal United Kingdom France
2001 Vasyl Matviychuk Mo Farah Stefano Scaini  United Kingdom Portugal France
2002 Yevgeniy Rybakov Anatoliy Rybakov Halil Akkaş  Russia France Italy
2003 Yevgeniy Rybakov Anatoliy Rybakov Aleksey Reunkov  Russia Romania Spain
2004 Barnabás Bene Yevgeniy Rybakov Anatoliy Rybakov  Russia Ireland United Kingdom
2005 Barnabás Bene Andrew Vernon Dušan Markešević  Poland United Kingdom Romania
2006 Andrea Lalli Siarhei Chebiarak Ciprian Suhanea  Italy Spain France
2007 Mourad Amdouni Florian Carvalho Dmytro Lashyn  France United Kingdom Germany
2008 Florian Carvalho Sondre Nordstad Moen Hassan Chahdi  France Norway United Kingdom
2009 Jeroen D'Hoedt Nick Goolab James Wilkinson  United Kingdom France Norway
2010 Abdelaziz Merzougui Nemanja Cerovac Rui Pinto  United Kingdom Portugal Russia
2011 Ilgizar Safiullin Richard Goodman Vladimir Nikitin  United Kingdom Russia France
2012 Szymon Kulka Mitko Tsenov Kieran Clements  Russia France United Kingdom
2013 Ali Kaya Isaac Kimeli Mikhail Strelkov  France Russia Italy
2014 Yemaneberhan Crippa Carlos Mayo Said Ettaqy  Italy Spain Turkey
2015 Yemaneberhan Crippa Fabien Palcau El Madhi Lahoufi  France Italy United Kingdom
2016 Jakob Ingebrigtsen Yohanes Chiappinelli Mahamed Mahamed  France Spain United Kingdom
2017 Jakob Ingebrigtsen Ramazan Barbaros Louis Gilavert  Spain France Turkey
2018 Jakob Ingebrigtsen Ouassim Oumaiz Elzan Bibić  Norway United Kingdom Germany
2019 Jakob Ingebrigtsen Ayetullah Aslanhan Efrem Gidey  United Kingdom Norway Portugal
2020 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Women

EditionIndividualTeam
1997 Sonja Stolić Monica Rosa Judith Heise  Germany Serbia and Montenegro United Kingdom
1998 Katalin Szentgyörgyi Inês Monteiro Sonja Stolić  Turkey Belgium Romania
1999 Inês Monteiro Nicola Spirig Ane Marie Moutsinga  Turkey Portugal Belgium
2000 Jessica Augusto Nicola Spirig Elvan Can  United Kingdom Turkey Sweden
2001 Elvan Abeylegesse Tatyana Chulakh Snezana Kostić  Russia United Kingdom Turkey
2002 Charlotte Dale Elina Lindgren Galina Yegorova  United Kingdom Russia Belgium
2003 Inna Poluškina Snežana Kostić Charlotte Dale  United Kingdom Russia Germany
2004 Binnaz Uslu Ancuţa Bobocel Marta Romo  Romania United Kingdom Russia
2005 Ancuţa Bobocel Emily Pidgeon Susan Kuijken  United Kingdom Romania Russia
2006 Stephanie Twell Karoline Bjerkeli Grovdal Ancuţa Bobocel  United Kingdom Russia Romania
2007 Stephanie Twell Danuta Urbanik Charlotte Purdue  United Kingdom Russia Ukraine
2008 Stephanie Twell Charlotte Purdue Lauren Howarth  United Kingdom Ukraine Russia
2009 Karoline Grøvdal Gulshat Fazlitdinova Kate Avery  Russia United Kingdom Germany
2010 Charlotte Purdue Amela Terzić Emelia Gorecka  United Kingdom Germany Romania
2011 Emelia Gorecka Ioana Doaga Amela Terzić  United Kingdom Russia Germany
2012 Amela Terzić Emelia Gorecka Maya Rehberg  United Kingdom Germany Russia
2013 Emelia Gorecka Sofia Ennaoui Maruša Mišmaš  United Kingdom Sweden Germany
2014 Emine Hatun Tuna Jessica Judd Lydia Turner  United Kingdom France Germany
2015 Konstanze Klosterhalfen Harriet Knowles-Jones Alina Reh  Germany United Kingdom Denmark
2016 Konstanze Klosterhalfen Anna Emilie Møller Harriet Knowles-Jones  United Kingdom Germany Netherlands
2017 Harriet Knowles-Jones Lili Tóth Miriam Dattke  United Kingdom Italy Spain
2018 Nadia Battocletti Delia Sclabas İnci Kalkan  United Kingdom Netherlands Turkey
2019 Nadia Battocletti Klara Lukan Mariana Machado  United Kingdom Italy France
2020 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Medal table

Nadia Battocletti (Italy, pictured in 2019) won the Under-20 female race twice.
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Great Britain30181664
2 Russia9121031
3 France79723
4 Italy74415
5 Norway64111
6 Turkey63716
7 Spain55414
8 Germany531119
9 Portugal36312
10 Hungary3104
11 Romania25916
12 Serbia24511
13 Belgium2226
14 Poland2204
15 Netherlands1124
 Ukraine1124
17 Latvia1001
18  Switzerland0303
19 Sweden0224
20 Austria0213
21 Ireland0134
22 Denmark0112
 Finland0112
 Slovenia0112
25 Belarus0101
Totals (25 nations)929292276

References

  1. Event - SPAR European Cross Country Championships. European Athletics. Retrieved 2011-12-10.
  2. Cross country vital for athlete development, says President Wirz Archived 2012-01-11 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (2011-12-10). Retrieved 2011-12-10.
  3. "Coronavirus causes cancellation of Dublin's hosting of European Cross-Country Championships". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  4. World Athletics. (2021b, December 12). Worldathletics.Org. Retrieved December 18, 2021, from https://www.worldathletics.org/competition/calendar-results/results/7147621
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