The Senior women's race at the 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Leopardstown Racecourse near Dublin, Ireland, on March 23, 2002. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times,[1][2] in the Herald,[3][4] and for the IAAF.[5]
Senior women's race at the 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships | |
---|---|
Organisers | IAAF |
Edition | 30th |
Date | March 23 |
Host city | Dublin, Leinster, Ireland |
Venue | Leopardstown Racecourse |
Events | 1 |
Distances | 7.974 km – Senior women |
Participation | 83 athletes from 21 nations |
Complete results for individuals,[6][7][8] for senior women's teams,[6][9][10] medallists,[11] and the results of British athletes who took part[12] were published.
Race results
editSenior women's race (7.974 km)
editIndividual
editTeams
edit- Note: Athletes in parentheses did not score for the team result (n/s: nonscorer)
Participation
editAccording to an unofficial count, 83 athletes from 21 countries participated in the Senior women's race. The announced athletes from Austria, Burundi, and Tajikistan did not show.[7][8]
- Belgium (5)
- Canada (6)
- Eritrea (1)
- Ethiopia (6)
- France (6)
- Ireland (6)
- Italy (5)
- Japan (4)
- Kenya (6)
- Mexico (1)
- New Zealand (2)
- Portugal (6)
- South Africa (1)
- Spain (6)
- Sri Lanka (3)
- Eswatini (1)
- Tanzania (1)
- Ukraine (1)
- United Kingdom (6)
- United States (6)
- Uzbekistan (4)
See also
edit- 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Senior men's race
- 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Men's short race
- 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Junior men's race
- 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Women's short race
- 2002 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Junior women's race
References
edit- ^ "PLUS: RUNNING; Briton Holds Off U.S. Challenge", The New York Times, March 24, 2002, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Clarey, Christopher (March 25, 2002), "TRACK AND FIELD : A gold sweep for Ethiopian 'in a class of his own'", The New York Times, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Gillon, Doug (March 25, 2001), "Radcliffe completes the double - Briton successfully defends world cross-country title", Herald, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Gillon, Doug (March 25, 2001), "Title joy second time around for youngster Bikele", Herald, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Wallace-Jones, Sean (March 23, 2001), Radcliffe runs away with 2nd World Cross gold, USA take silver and bronze, IAAF, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ a b
Magnusson, Tomas (July 4, 2007), IAAF World Cross Country Championships - 8.0km CC Women - Dublin Leopardstown Date: Saturday, March 23, 2002, Athchamps (archived), archived from the original on October 16, 2007, retrieved October 30, 2013
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ a b Official Results - CROSS LONG RACE Women - Saturday, March 23, 2002, IAAF, March 23, 2002, archived from the original on November 1, 2013, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ a b Results - 30th IAAF/Sport Ireland World Cross Country Championships - Dublin, IRELAND 23 MAR 2002 - 24 MAR 2002 - Long Race - women, IAAF, March 23, 2002, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Official Results - CROSS LONG RACE Women - Team - Saturday, March 23, 2002, IAAF, March 23, 2002, archived from the original on November 1, 2013, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ Results - 30th IAAF/Sport Ireland World Cross Country Championships - Dublin, IRELAND 23 MAR 2002 - 24 MAR 2002 - Long Race - women - Final - Team, IAAF, March 23, 2002, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS, Athletics Weekly, retrieved October 30, 2013
- ^ 36th IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS - EDINBURGH 2008 - FACTS & FIGURES - GREAT BRITAIN & NORTHERN IRELAND AT THE INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY & WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS (PDF), IAAF, p. 2ff, archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013, retrieved October 30, 2013