From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2011 European Cross Country Championships
Organisers EAA
Edition18th
Date11 December
Host city Velenje, Slovenia
Events6
Distances9870 m – Men
8170 m – Women
8170 m – U23 men
6070 m – U23 women
6070 m – Junior men
3970 m – Junior women
Official website Velenje 2011

The 2011 European Cross Country Championships was the 18th edition of the cross country running competition for European athletes which was held in Velenje, Slovenia on 11 December.

Atelaw Yeshetela of Belgium won the men's title to become the country's first ever champion at the competition. The French men's team retained their title from 2010. [1] Fionnuala Britton was the winner in the senior women's race, becoming Ireland's second champion in the history of the event after Catherina McKiernan (who won the inaugural race in 1994). [2] [3] The senior women's team race was won by Great Britain. [4]

Preparation

The city won the rights to the event at the 120th meeting of the European Athletics Council in 2007. It was the second time that Velenje hosted the event, following its hosting of the 1999 edition. [5] The event mascot, Ligi (an anthropomorphic black mole), returned after its introduction in 1999. In the intervening years, the mascot was used for a number of events in the city and represents the importance of lignite (brown coal) in the city's economy. [6]

Alongside international television broadcasts, European Athletics broadcast the event live on the governing body's official website. [7]

The 2010 champion Jéssica Augusto was absent from the competition.

The championships featured six races: there were senior, under-23, and under-20 junior categories for each of the sexes. The men's senior race had a 9870-metre distance, while the women's senior and men's under-23 races were held over 8040 m. The men's junior race and women's under-23 contests were over 6070 m. The junior women had a 3970 m distance to cover. [8] The course for the competition was based near the grounds of the Atletski Klub Velenje (Velenje Athletics Club). It had a relatively flat race profile with no significant inclines and comprises two loops (a 1500 m loop and a shorter 300 m circuit). [9]

Five European Athletics permit meetings preceded the championships on the weekend of 26–27 November: the Skanzen meeting in Budapest, the Cross de l'Acier in Leffrinckoucke, the Warandecross in Tilburg, the Lotto CrossCup van West-Vlaanderen in Roeselare, and the Cross Internacional Valle de Llodio in Llodio. [10] These races and national-level trial events were the primary means of athletes gaining selection for the championships.

Ukraine's Serhiy Lebid returned to defend his 2010 title and the nine-time champion was the pre-race favourite. The 2010 women's champion, Jéssica Augusto, did not enter the competition as she was still recovering from her outing at the 2011 New York City Marathon. [11] The other leading finishers from 2010 – Binnaz Uslu, Ana Dulce Félix and Fionnuala Britton – were among the favourites for the women's race. [12]

Race results

Atelaw Yeshetela became the first Belgian to win the competition.

Senior men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Atelaw Yeshetela   Belgium 29:15
Ayad Lamdassem   Spain 29:20
José Rocha   Portugal 29:21
4 Hassan Chahdi   France 29:22
5 Joseph Sweeney   Ireland 29:23
6 Javier Guerra   Spain 29:24
7 Morhad Amdouni   France 29:26
8 Khalid Choukoud   Netherlands 29:27
9 Andy Vernon   Great Britain 29:39
10 Morten Toft Munkholm   Denmark 29:42
11 Mohktar Benhari   France 29:43
12 Benjamin Malaty   France 29:44
Teams
Rank Team Points
  France
Chahdi
Amdouni
Mokhtari
Malaty
34
  Great Britain
Vernon
Ryan McLeod
James Walsh
Mark Draper
59
  Spain
Lamdassem
Guerra
Ricardo Serrano
Yousseff Aakaou
67
4   Portugal 76
5   Italy 84
6   Ireland 116
7   Denmark 135
8   Germany 160
  • Totals: 76 entrants, 76 starters, 73 finishers, 10 teams. [13]

Senior women

Ireland's Fionnuala Britton won the women's title.
Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Fionnuala Britton   Ireland 25:55
Ana Dulce Félix   Portugal 26:02
Gemma Steel   Great Britain 26:04
4 Nadia Ejjafini   Italy 26:13
5 Adriënne Herzog   Netherlands 26:34
6 Sophie Duarte   France 26:36
7 Roxana Bârcă   Romania 26:39
8 Leonor Carneiro   Portugal 26:39
9 Simret Restle   Germany 26:40
10 Valeria Straneo   Italy 26:42
11 Christine Bardelle   France 26:50
12 Freya Murray   Great Britain 26:51
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Steel
Murray
Julia Bleasdale
Elle Baker
42
  Portugal
Félix
Carneiro
Anália Rosa
Ana Dias
51
  Germany
Restle
Sabrina Mockenhaupt
Verena Dreier
Susanne Hahn
83
4   France 83
5   Romania 88
6   Italy 101
7   Spain 116
8   Ireland 133
  • Totals: 54 entrants, 54 starters, 49 finishers, 8 teams. [14]

Under-23 men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Florian Carvalho   France 23:44
James Wilkinson   Great Britain 23:47
Sondre Nordstad Moen   Norway 23:48
4 Richard Ringer   Germany 23:48
5 Siarhei Platonau   Belarus 23:51
6 Abdi Nageeye   Netherlands 23:54
7 Simon Denissel   France 23:56
8 Mitch Goose   Great Britain 23:57
9 Sindre Buraas   Norway 24:02
10 Cihat Ulus   Turkey 24:03
11 Patrick Nasti   Italy 24:04
12 Jesper Van Der Wielen   Netherlands 24:04
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Norway
Moen
Buraas
Henrik Ingebrigtsen
Hans Kristian Fløystad
58
  Great Britain
Wilkinson
Goose
Derek Hawkins
Phillip Berntsen
76
  France
Carvalho
Denissel
Mattheiu Garel
Bryan Cantero
94
4   Spain 97
5   Russia 107
6   Belgium 128
7   Germany 131
8   Ukraine 141
  • Totals: 99 entrants, 98 starters, 97 finishers, 15 teams. [15]

Under-23 women

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Emma Pallant   Great Britain 19:57
Naomi Taschimowitz   Great Britain 20:02
Corrina Harrer   Germany 20:03
4 Stephanie Twell   Great Britain 20:03
5 Anna Hahner   Germany 20:05
6 Viktoriya Pohoryelska   Ukraine 20:08
7 Hannah Walker   Great Britain 20:12
8 Clémence Calvin   France 20:16
9 Carla Salomé Rocha   Portugal 20:20
10 Jennifer Wenth   Austria 20:26
11 Laura Suur   Estonia 20:28
12 Lisa Hahner   Germany 20:31
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Pallant
Taschimowitz
Twell
Walker
14
  Germany
Harrer
A. Hanher
L. Hahner
Jana Soethout
41
  Portugal
Rocha
Catarina Ribeiro
Daniela Cunha
Sónia Catarina Lima
77
4   France 99
5   Turkey 101
6   Spain 102
  • Totals: 43 entrants, 43 starters, 42 finishers, 6 teams. [16]

Junior men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Ilgizar Safiullin   Russia 17:49
Richard Goodman   Great Britain 17:51
Vladimir Nikitin   Russia 17:51
4 Roman Collenot-Spiret   France 17:53
5 Pieter-Jan Hannes   Belgium 17:58
6 Rui Pinto   Portugal 18:01
7 Andrey Rusakov   Russia 18:07
8 Jonathan Hay   Great Britain 18:09
9 Kieren Clements   Great Britain 18:10
10 Yehor Zhukov   Ukraine 18:10
11 Niall Fleming   Great Britain 18:18
12 Daniel Arce   Spain 18:20
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Goodman
Hay
Clements
Fleming
30
  Russia
Safiulin
Nikitin
Rusakov
Mikhail Strelkov
60
  France
Collenot-Spiret
Djilali Bedrani
Julien Detre
Francois Barrer
103
4   Ukraine 109
5   Belgium 118
6   Denmark 120
7   Germany 127
8   Spain 134
  • Totals: 114 entrants, 112 starters, 109 finishers, 19 teams. [17]

Junior women

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Emelia Gorecka   Great Britain 13:13
Ioana Doaga   Romania 13:14
Amela Terzić   Serbia 13:22
4 Gulshat Fazlitdinova   Russia 13:24
5 Zenobie Vangansbeke   Belgium 13:32
6 Annabel Gummow   Great Britain 13:34
7 Svetlana Ryazantseva   Russia 13:37
8 Esma Aydemir   Turkey 13:41
9 Gesa-Felicitas Krause   Germany 13:42
10 Maya Rehberg   Germany 13:47
11 Elena Burkard   Germany 13:50
12 Mariya Hodakyvska   Ukraine 13:51
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Gorecka
Gummow
Gemma Kersey
Katie Holt
40
  Russia
Fazlitdinova
Ryazantseva
Alexandra Gulyaeva
Vera Vasilyeva
43
  Germany
Krause
Rehberg
Burkard
Jannika John
50
4   Romania 75
5   Netherlands 117
6   Belgium 122
7   Spain 126
8   Turkey 132
  • Totals: 93 entrants, 93 starters, 92 finishers, 16 teams. [18]

Total medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Great Britain (GBR)65112
2  France (FRA)2024
3  Russia (RUS)1214
4  Norway (NOR)1012
5  Belgium (BEL)1001
  Ireland (IRL)1001
7  Portugal (POR)0224
8  Germany (GER)0134
9  Spain (ESP)0112
10  Romania (ROM)0101
11  Serbia (SRB)0011
Totals (11 entries)12121236
  • Note: Totals include both individual and team medals, with medals in the team competition counting as one medal. [19]

References

  1. ^ SENIOR MEN’S FINAL: Bekele from gun to tape Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (11 December 2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  2. ^ "Britton breezes to gold in Slovenia". RTÉ Sport. 11 December 2011. Archived from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  3. ^ "Fionnuala Britton wins gold in European cross-country championship". Irish Independent. 11 December 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  4. ^ SENIOR WOMEN'S FINAL: Fabulous Fionnuala Archived 8 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (11 December 2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  5. ^ Albufeira (POR) & Velenje (SLO) to host the SPAR European Cross Country Championships in 2010 & 2011. European Athletics (2007). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  6. ^ Ligi the mole unveiled as SPAR European Cross Country Championships mascot Archived 1 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (10 July 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  7. ^ European Athletics to stream live SPAR European Cross Country Championships Archived 10 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (5 December 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  8. ^ Timetable EXCCH Velenje 2011. Velenje 2011 (21 November 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  9. ^ Competition Venue. Velenje 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  10. ^ Calendar 2012 – Cross Country Archived 23 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  11. ^ Ramsak, Bob (9 December 2011). Lebid looking to add to his continental legend in Velenje – European XC champs preview. IAAF. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  12. ^ Senior women's preview: Who will succeed Augusto in Velenje? Archived 6 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (7 December 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  13. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Senior Men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  14. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Senior Women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  15. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Under-23 Men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  16. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Under-23 women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  17. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Junior men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  18. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Junior women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  19. ^ Medal Table. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2011 European Cross Country Championships
Organisers EAA
Edition18th
Date11 December
Host city Velenje, Slovenia
Events6
Distances9870 m – Men
8170 m – Women
8170 m – U23 men
6070 m – U23 women
6070 m – Junior men
3970 m – Junior women
Official website Velenje 2011

The 2011 European Cross Country Championships was the 18th edition of the cross country running competition for European athletes which was held in Velenje, Slovenia on 11 December.

Atelaw Yeshetela of Belgium won the men's title to become the country's first ever champion at the competition. The French men's team retained their title from 2010. [1] Fionnuala Britton was the winner in the senior women's race, becoming Ireland's second champion in the history of the event after Catherina McKiernan (who won the inaugural race in 1994). [2] [3] The senior women's team race was won by Great Britain. [4]

Preparation

The city won the rights to the event at the 120th meeting of the European Athletics Council in 2007. It was the second time that Velenje hosted the event, following its hosting of the 1999 edition. [5] The event mascot, Ligi (an anthropomorphic black mole), returned after its introduction in 1999. In the intervening years, the mascot was used for a number of events in the city and represents the importance of lignite (brown coal) in the city's economy. [6]

Alongside international television broadcasts, European Athletics broadcast the event live on the governing body's official website. [7]

The 2010 champion Jéssica Augusto was absent from the competition.

The championships featured six races: there were senior, under-23, and under-20 junior categories for each of the sexes. The men's senior race had a 9870-metre distance, while the women's senior and men's under-23 races were held over 8040 m. The men's junior race and women's under-23 contests were over 6070 m. The junior women had a 3970 m distance to cover. [8] The course for the competition was based near the grounds of the Atletski Klub Velenje (Velenje Athletics Club). It had a relatively flat race profile with no significant inclines and comprises two loops (a 1500 m loop and a shorter 300 m circuit). [9]

Five European Athletics permit meetings preceded the championships on the weekend of 26–27 November: the Skanzen meeting in Budapest, the Cross de l'Acier in Leffrinckoucke, the Warandecross in Tilburg, the Lotto CrossCup van West-Vlaanderen in Roeselare, and the Cross Internacional Valle de Llodio in Llodio. [10] These races and national-level trial events were the primary means of athletes gaining selection for the championships.

Ukraine's Serhiy Lebid returned to defend his 2010 title and the nine-time champion was the pre-race favourite. The 2010 women's champion, Jéssica Augusto, did not enter the competition as she was still recovering from her outing at the 2011 New York City Marathon. [11] The other leading finishers from 2010 – Binnaz Uslu, Ana Dulce Félix and Fionnuala Britton – were among the favourites for the women's race. [12]

Race results

Atelaw Yeshetela became the first Belgian to win the competition.

Senior men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Atelaw Yeshetela   Belgium 29:15
Ayad Lamdassem   Spain 29:20
José Rocha   Portugal 29:21
4 Hassan Chahdi   France 29:22
5 Joseph Sweeney   Ireland 29:23
6 Javier Guerra   Spain 29:24
7 Morhad Amdouni   France 29:26
8 Khalid Choukoud   Netherlands 29:27
9 Andy Vernon   Great Britain 29:39
10 Morten Toft Munkholm   Denmark 29:42
11 Mohktar Benhari   France 29:43
12 Benjamin Malaty   France 29:44
Teams
Rank Team Points
  France
Chahdi
Amdouni
Mokhtari
Malaty
34
  Great Britain
Vernon
Ryan McLeod
James Walsh
Mark Draper
59
  Spain
Lamdassem
Guerra
Ricardo Serrano
Yousseff Aakaou
67
4   Portugal 76
5   Italy 84
6   Ireland 116
7   Denmark 135
8   Germany 160
  • Totals: 76 entrants, 76 starters, 73 finishers, 10 teams. [13]

Senior women

Ireland's Fionnuala Britton won the women's title.
Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Fionnuala Britton   Ireland 25:55
Ana Dulce Félix   Portugal 26:02
Gemma Steel   Great Britain 26:04
4 Nadia Ejjafini   Italy 26:13
5 Adriënne Herzog   Netherlands 26:34
6 Sophie Duarte   France 26:36
7 Roxana Bârcă   Romania 26:39
8 Leonor Carneiro   Portugal 26:39
9 Simret Restle   Germany 26:40
10 Valeria Straneo   Italy 26:42
11 Christine Bardelle   France 26:50
12 Freya Murray   Great Britain 26:51
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Steel
Murray
Julia Bleasdale
Elle Baker
42
  Portugal
Félix
Carneiro
Anália Rosa
Ana Dias
51
  Germany
Restle
Sabrina Mockenhaupt
Verena Dreier
Susanne Hahn
83
4   France 83
5   Romania 88
6   Italy 101
7   Spain 116
8   Ireland 133
  • Totals: 54 entrants, 54 starters, 49 finishers, 8 teams. [14]

Under-23 men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Florian Carvalho   France 23:44
James Wilkinson   Great Britain 23:47
Sondre Nordstad Moen   Norway 23:48
4 Richard Ringer   Germany 23:48
5 Siarhei Platonau   Belarus 23:51
6 Abdi Nageeye   Netherlands 23:54
7 Simon Denissel   France 23:56
8 Mitch Goose   Great Britain 23:57
9 Sindre Buraas   Norway 24:02
10 Cihat Ulus   Turkey 24:03
11 Patrick Nasti   Italy 24:04
12 Jesper Van Der Wielen   Netherlands 24:04
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Norway
Moen
Buraas
Henrik Ingebrigtsen
Hans Kristian Fløystad
58
  Great Britain
Wilkinson
Goose
Derek Hawkins
Phillip Berntsen
76
  France
Carvalho
Denissel
Mattheiu Garel
Bryan Cantero
94
4   Spain 97
5   Russia 107
6   Belgium 128
7   Germany 131
8   Ukraine 141
  • Totals: 99 entrants, 98 starters, 97 finishers, 15 teams. [15]

Under-23 women

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Emma Pallant   Great Britain 19:57
Naomi Taschimowitz   Great Britain 20:02
Corrina Harrer   Germany 20:03
4 Stephanie Twell   Great Britain 20:03
5 Anna Hahner   Germany 20:05
6 Viktoriya Pohoryelska   Ukraine 20:08
7 Hannah Walker   Great Britain 20:12
8 Clémence Calvin   France 20:16
9 Carla Salomé Rocha   Portugal 20:20
10 Jennifer Wenth   Austria 20:26
11 Laura Suur   Estonia 20:28
12 Lisa Hahner   Germany 20:31
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Pallant
Taschimowitz
Twell
Walker
14
  Germany
Harrer
A. Hanher
L. Hahner
Jana Soethout
41
  Portugal
Rocha
Catarina Ribeiro
Daniela Cunha
Sónia Catarina Lima
77
4   France 99
5   Turkey 101
6   Spain 102
  • Totals: 43 entrants, 43 starters, 42 finishers, 6 teams. [16]

Junior men

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Ilgizar Safiullin   Russia 17:49
Richard Goodman   Great Britain 17:51
Vladimir Nikitin   Russia 17:51
4 Roman Collenot-Spiret   France 17:53
5 Pieter-Jan Hannes   Belgium 17:58
6 Rui Pinto   Portugal 18:01
7 Andrey Rusakov   Russia 18:07
8 Jonathan Hay   Great Britain 18:09
9 Kieren Clements   Great Britain 18:10
10 Yehor Zhukov   Ukraine 18:10
11 Niall Fleming   Great Britain 18:18
12 Daniel Arce   Spain 18:20
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Goodman
Hay
Clements
Fleming
30
  Russia
Safiulin
Nikitin
Rusakov
Mikhail Strelkov
60
  France
Collenot-Spiret
Djilali Bedrani
Julien Detre
Francois Barrer
103
4   Ukraine 109
5   Belgium 118
6   Denmark 120
7   Germany 127
8   Spain 134
  • Totals: 114 entrants, 112 starters, 109 finishers, 19 teams. [17]

Junior women

Individual race
Rank Athlete Country Time ( m: s)
Emelia Gorecka   Great Britain 13:13
Ioana Doaga   Romania 13:14
Amela Terzić   Serbia 13:22
4 Gulshat Fazlitdinova   Russia 13:24
5 Zenobie Vangansbeke   Belgium 13:32
6 Annabel Gummow   Great Britain 13:34
7 Svetlana Ryazantseva   Russia 13:37
8 Esma Aydemir   Turkey 13:41
9 Gesa-Felicitas Krause   Germany 13:42
10 Maya Rehberg   Germany 13:47
11 Elena Burkard   Germany 13:50
12 Mariya Hodakyvska   Ukraine 13:51
Teams
Rank Team Points
  Great Britain
Gorecka
Gummow
Gemma Kersey
Katie Holt
40
  Russia
Fazlitdinova
Ryazantseva
Alexandra Gulyaeva
Vera Vasilyeva
43
  Germany
Krause
Rehberg
Burkard
Jannika John
50
4   Romania 75
5   Netherlands 117
6   Belgium 122
7   Spain 126
8   Turkey 132
  • Totals: 93 entrants, 93 starters, 92 finishers, 16 teams. [18]

Total medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Great Britain (GBR)65112
2  France (FRA)2024
3  Russia (RUS)1214
4  Norway (NOR)1012
5  Belgium (BEL)1001
  Ireland (IRL)1001
7  Portugal (POR)0224
8  Germany (GER)0134
9  Spain (ESP)0112
10  Romania (ROM)0101
11  Serbia (SRB)0011
Totals (11 entries)12121236
  • Note: Totals include both individual and team medals, with medals in the team competition counting as one medal. [19]

References

  1. ^ SENIOR MEN’S FINAL: Bekele from gun to tape Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (11 December 2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  2. ^ "Britton breezes to gold in Slovenia". RTÉ Sport. 11 December 2011. Archived from the original on 7 January 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  3. ^ "Fionnuala Britton wins gold in European cross-country championship". Irish Independent. 11 December 2011. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  4. ^ SENIOR WOMEN'S FINAL: Fabulous Fionnuala Archived 8 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (11 December 2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  5. ^ Albufeira (POR) & Velenje (SLO) to host the SPAR European Cross Country Championships in 2010 & 2011. European Athletics (2007). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  6. ^ Ligi the mole unveiled as SPAR European Cross Country Championships mascot Archived 1 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (10 July 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  7. ^ European Athletics to stream live SPAR European Cross Country Championships Archived 10 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (5 December 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  8. ^ Timetable EXCCH Velenje 2011. Velenje 2011 (21 November 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  9. ^ Competition Venue. Velenje 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  10. ^ Calendar 2012 – Cross Country Archived 23 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  11. ^ Ramsak, Bob (9 December 2011). Lebid looking to add to his continental legend in Velenje – European XC champs preview. IAAF. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  12. ^ Senior women's preview: Who will succeed Augusto in Velenje? Archived 6 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine. European Athletics (7 December 2011). Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  13. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Senior Men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  14. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Senior Women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  15. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Under-23 Men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  16. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Under-23 women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  17. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Junior men's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  18. ^ 2011 European XC Championships – Junior women's Final. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  19. ^ Medal Table. European Athletics (2011). Retrieved 11 December 2011.

External links


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