IAU European 24 Hour Championships

The IAU European 24 Hour Championships is a biennial long-distance running competition in the 24-hour run for athletes from Europe. Organised by the International Association of Ultrarunners, it was first held in 1992 as an annual competition known as the IAU European 24 Hours Challenge. The establishment of the IAU 24 Hour World Championship in 2003 saw the European event staged within the global race until the competitions were each recast as separate, biennial championships, with the world event in odd years and the European one in even years.[1][2][3] The competition is typically a road running one, though the championships was contested on the track in 1999.[4]

IAU European 24 Hour Championships
Sport24-hour run
Founded1992

Editions

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  Edition held within the IAU 24 Hour World Championship
Ed. Year City Country Dates No. of
nations
No. of
athletes
1 1992 Apeldoorn Netherlands 29–30 May
2 1993 Basel Switzerland 1–2 May
3 1994 Szeged Hungary 21–22 May
4 1996 Courçon France 21–22 September
5 1997 Basel Switzerland 3–4 May
6 1998 Fleurbaix-Marquette France 29–30 August
7 1999 San Giovanni Lupatoto Italy 25–26 September
8 2000 Uden Netherlands 20–21 October
9 2001 Apeldoorn Netherlands 25–26 May
10 2002 Gravigny France 7–8 September
11 2003 Uden Netherlands 11–12 October
12 2004 Brno Czech Republic 23–24 October
13 2005 Wörschach Austria 16–17 July
14 2006 Verona Italy 23–24 September
15 2007 Madrid Spain 5–6 May
16 2009 Bergamo Italy 2–3 May
17 2010 Brive-la-Gaillarde France 13–14 May
18 2012 Katowice Poland 9–10 September
19 2013 Steenbergen Netherlands 11–12 May
20 2015 Turin Italy 11–12 April
21 2016[5] Albi France 22–23 October
22 2018[6] Timișoara Romania 26–27 May
23 2020 Cancelled[7]
24 2022[8] Verona Italy 17–18 September

Medallists

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Men's individual

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Year Gold Silver Bronze
1992   Helmut Schieke (GER) 250.698   Peter Samulski (GER) 241.583   Valery Klement (GER) 237.326
1993   Helmut Dreyer (GER) 259.265   Milan Tuhovcak (CZE) 257.965   Gennadiy Groshev (RUS) 247.900
1994   Janos Bogar (HUN) 261.122   Jean-Pierre Guyomarch (FRA) 254.018   Valery Klement (GER) 252.110
1996   Ferenc Györi (HUN) 259.922   Michael Maier (GER) 250.999   Jean-Pierre Guyomarch (FRA) 240.614
1997   Vladimir Tivikov (RUS) 249.039   Serge Flohic (FRA) 245.221   Marcel Foucat (FRA) 242.200
1998   Lucien Taelman (BEL) 267.626   Tomas Rusek (CZE) 263.144   Michael Maier (GER) 259.067
1999   Yiannis Kouros (GRE) 262.324   Lubomir Hrmo (SVK) 249.239   Alain Prual (FRA) 234.823
2000   Lubomir Hrmo (SVK) 259.273   Andrey Kazantsev (RUS) 257.760   Alain Prual (FRA) 255.510
2001   Paul Beckers (BEL) 260.559   Jens Lukas (GER) 258.907   Vladimir Kurbatov (RUS) 252.801
2002   Jens Lukas (GER) 267.294   Alain Prual (FRA) 264.796   Jean-Pierre Guyomarch (FRA) 255.726
2003   Paul Beckers (BEL) 270.087   Etienne van Acker (BEL) 264.967   Andrei Kazantsev (RUS) 258.037
2004   Lubomir Hrmo (SVK) 259.064   Mohamed Magroun (FRA) 257.881   Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) 248.595
2005   Anatolii Kruglikov (RUS) 268.065   Ewald Eder (AUT) 263.810   Jens Lukas (GER) 256.369
2006   Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) 254.774   Geert Stynen (BEL) 248.642   Antonio Mammoli (ITA) 248.440
2007   Anatolii Kruglikov (RUS) 257.358   Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) 251.631   Jose Luis Posado Perez (ESP) 247.937
2009   Henrik Olson (SWE) 257.042   Ralf Weis (GER) 244.492   Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) 240.605
2010   Ivan Cudin (ITA) 263.841   Vladimir Bychkov (RUS) 258.534   Fabien Hoblea (FRA) 256.256
2012   Florian Reuss (GER) 261.718   Ludovic Dilmi (FRA) 258.819   Piotr Sawicki (POL) 254.093
2013   Florian Reuss (GER) 259.939   Anatolii Kruglikov (RUS) 257.040   Timur Ponomarev (RUS) 256.666
2015   Florian Reuss (GER) 263.899   Pawel Szynal (POL) 261.181   Robbie Britton (GBR) 261.140
2016   Dan Lawson (GBR) 261.843   Ondrej Velicka (CZE) 258.661   Stephan Ruel (FRA) 257.296
2018   Andrzej Radzikowski (POL) 265.419   Stephane Ruel (FRA) 263.540   Aleksandr Sorokin (LTU) 260.991
2022   Aleksandr Sorokin (LTU) 319.614   Andrzej Piotrowski (POL) 301.859   Marco Visintini (ITA) 288.438

Men's team

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Year Gold Silver Bronze
1993   Germany 732.560   Russia 699.397   Czech Republic 679.637
1994   France 712.895   Russia 692.754   Germany 691.609
1996   Germany 712.477   France 703.248   Belgium 679.699
1997   France 726.933   Russia 721.747   Slovakia 655.218
1998   France 746.897   Germany 734.429   Czech Republic 714.714
2000   France 752.642   Russia 731.880   United Kingdom 667.688
2001   Russia 730.208   Germany 718.446   France 695.814
2002   France 771.278   Germany 719.796   Russia 662.573
2003   Belgium 791.901   Russia 739.569   France 715.792
2004   France 745.725   Russia 704.876   Slovakia 672.143
2005   Russia 731.229   Italy 725.897   Austria 722.476
2009   Russia 693.445   Germany 689.111   Sweden 684.333
2010   Italy 758.932   France 751.835   United Kingdom 742.777
2012   Germany 759.457   France 756.710   Poland 741.267
2013   Germany 752.007   Russia 748.162   Italy 715.739
2015   United Kingdom 770.777   Germany 745.075   France 736.237
2016   France 763.291   United Kingdom 743.269   Germany 720.006
2018   France 754.625   United Kingdom 735.155   Germany 725.963
2022   Poland 825.526   Lithuania 817.916   Spain 800.017

Women's individual

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Year Gold Silver Bronze
1992   Sigrid Lomsky (GER) 231.008   Helga Backhaus (GER) 224.164   Anna Dyck (GER) 213.332
1993   Sigrid Lomsky (GER) 243.657   Helga Backhaus (GER) 223.647   Anna Dyck (GER) 214.980
1994   Sigrid Lomsky (GER) 231.482   Rimma Paitseva (RUS) 202.276   Gisela Fricke (GER) 201.850
1996   Marie Bertrand-Mayeras (FRA) 231.049   Elena Sidorenkova (RUS) 227.287   Eleanor Robinson (GBR) 223.129
1997   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 236.284   Elena Sidorenkova (RUS) 230.862   Marie Bertrand-Mayeras (FRA) 223.720
1998   Marie Bertrand-Mayeras (FRA) 226.457   Colette Musy (FRA) 223.378   Christiane Lecerf (FRA) 220.966
1999   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 223.763   Helga Backhaus (GER) 209.678   Rimma Paitseva (RUS) 202.082
2000   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 225.418   Joelle Semur (FRA) 219.260   Rimma Paitseva (RUS) 216.299
2001   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 226.635   Irina Koval (RUS) 222.650   Helga Backhaus (GER) 212.692
2002   Edit Berces (HUN) 232.284   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 226.825   Irina Koval (RUS) 225.036
2003   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 237.052   Galina Eremina (RUS) 232.050   Joelle Semur (FRA) 227.279
2004   Galina Eremina (RUS) 235.013   Edit Berces (HUN) 217.665   Irina Reutovich (RUS) 214.633
2005   Lyudmila Kalinina (RUS) 242.228   Galina Eremina (RUS) 239.874   Irina Koval (RUS) 227.469
2006   Irina Koval (RUS) 229.452   Michaela Dimitriadu (CZE) 225.228   Edit Berces (HUN) 211.218
2007   Lyudmila Kalinina (RUS) 233.307   Monica Casiraghi (ITA) 217.989   Rosario Munoz Olivares (ESP) 210.721
2009   Anne-Cecile Fontaine (FRA) 243.644   Brigitte Bec (FRA) 234.977   Monica Casiraghi (ITA) 223.848
2010   Anne-Cecile Fontaine (FRA) 239.797   Monica Casiraghi (ITA) 231.390   Julia Alter (GER) 230.258
2012   Michaela Dimitriadu (CZE) 244.232   Emily Gelder (GBR) 238.875   Cecile Nisson (FRA) 234.524
2013   Anne-Marie Vernet (FRA) 229.393   Cecile Nisson (FRA) 227.618   Sharon Law (GBR) 226.107
2015   Maria Jannson (SWE) 238.964   Patrycja Bereznowska (POL) 233.395   Annika Nilrud (SWE) 230.054
2016   Maria Jannson (SWE) 250.647   Patrycja Bereznowska (POL) 241.633   Agata Matejczuk (POL) 232.285
2018   Patrycja Bereznowska (POL) 243.355   Stine Rex (DEN) 241.921   Małgorzata Pazda-Pozorska (POL) 240.697
2022   Patrycja Bereznowska (POL) 256.250   Stéphanie Gicquel (FRA) 253.581   Małgorzata Pazda-Pozorska (POL) 251.806

Women's team

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Year Gold Silver Bronze
2016   Poland 701.429   Sweden 691.656   France 655.332
2018   Poland 720.454   Germany 656.245   United Kingdom 645.069
2022   Poland 754.822   France 731.729   Germany 719.584

References

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  1. ^ Walker, Hilary (24 March 2015). "IAU 24H World and European Championships, Turin, 11/12th April 2015. Update". International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  2. ^ 24 Hour European Championships 2016[permanent dead link]. International Association of Ultrarunners. Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  3. ^ Walker, Hilary (8 March 2017). "12th IAU 24H World Championships, Belfast, Northern Ireland, 1st July 2017 & 1st WMA 24H World Championships". IAU. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  4. ^ IAU European 24 Hours Challenge. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  5. ^ Sorokin & Jansson strong favourites ahead of 21st IAU 24 Hour European Championships. European Athletics (2016-10-21). Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  6. ^ Bereznowska and Steene the favourites for IAU 24-Hour European Championships . IAAF (2018-05-24). Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  7. ^ 2020 IAU 24 Hour European Championship - cancelled. IAU (2020-06-30).
  8. ^ 2022 IAU 24H European Championship . IAU (2021-07-23). Retrieved 2022-06-08.
Results