World University Cross Country Championships

The World University Cross Country Championships is an international biennial cross country running competition for student athletes, organised by the International University Sports Federation (FISU). The 2012 edition of the competition featured 76 male and 61 female athletes from 23 countries.[1] Over the history of the event, 64 countries have competed but only three (France, Great Britain and Spain) have been present at all editions of the championships.[2]

First established in 1968 as a men's only event, a women's race was added in 1976 and FISU gave the event its official sanctioning two years later.[3] The programme of each championship consists of one men's and one women's race, with prizes being available for individuals and national teams.[4] The team races are decided by comparing the sum of the finishing places of each nation's top four finishers (for men) or top three finishers (for women). Each country may enter up to six male athletes and five female athletes.[5][6] A mixed-sex relay was introduced at the 2022 edition.[7]

The 2020 edition set for Marrakech was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8]

All editions of the competition up to 2006 were hosted by Western European countries. Algiers became the first African nation to host the event in 2006 and Kingston, Ontario brought it to North America for the first time in 2010. Although the competition is limited to athletes studying at university level, the championships has nevertheless attract top level competitors, including: World Championship medallists Steve Moneghetti and Mariem Alaoui Selsouli, as well as World Cross Country team medallists Antonio Serrano and Iulia Olteanu.[4]

Editions

Edition Year City Country Date Countries Athletes
1968Ghent Belgium
1970Bern  Switzerland
1972Guildford Great Britain
1974Madrid Spain
1976Leuven Belgium
1st1978Lausanne  Switzerland
2nd1980Coleraine Great Britain
3rd1982Darmstadt West Germany
4th1984Antwerp Belgium
5th1986Graz Austria
6th1988Bologna Italy
7th1990Poznań Poland
8th1992Dijon France
9th1994Limerick Ireland
10th1996Albufeira (Açoteias) Portugal
11th1998Luton Great Britain
12th2000Jena Germany
13th2002Santiago de Compostela Spain
14th2004Collegno Italy
15th2006Algiers Algeria
16th2008Forges-les-Eaux France
17th2010Kingston, Ontario Canada11 April1496[9]
18th2012Łódź Poland14 April23137[1]
19th2014Entebbe Uganda22 March18103[10]
20th2016Cassino Italy12 March19120[11]
21st2018St. Gallen  Switzerland7 April20124[12]
22nd2020Marrakesh Morocco
23rd2022Aveiro Portugal12 March[13][14]

Medallists

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1968  Frank Briscoe (GBR)?  John Rix (GBR)? ??
1970  René Goris (BEL)?  Georgi Tikhov (BUL)?  Alistair Blamire (GBR)?
1972  Jack Lane (GBR)28:08  Andy Holden (GBR)28:46  René Goris (BEL)28:54
1974  Michael Karst (FRG)24:38  Franco Fava (ITA)24:44  Ian Gilmour (GBR)24:55
1976  Laurie Reilly (GBR)25:16  Vlastimil Zwiefelhofer (TCH)25:16  Michael Lederer (FRG)25:24
1978  Antonio Prieto (ESP)30:38  Peter Baker (GBR)30:56  Mehmet Yurdadön (TUR)31:02
1980  David James (GBR)33:57  Nick Brawn (GBR)33:58  Michael Karst (FRG)34:21
1982  Frank Zimmermann (FRG)36:50  Christoph Herle (FRG)37:04  Valeriy Gryaznov (URS)37:45
1984  Michael Scheytt (FRG)33:13  Gerhard Krippner (FRG)33:29  Wiesław Furmanek (POL)33:33
1986  Steve Moneghetti (AUS)40:17  Lars Sörensen (FIN)40:18  Jiu Shangxuan (CHN)40:19
1988  Antonio Serrano (ESP)24:29  Anacleto Jiménez (ESP)24:38  Paolo Donati (ITA)24:42
1990  Ian Hamer (GBR)28:02  Antonio Serrano (ESP)28:09  Haydar Dogan (TUR)28:11
1992  Shaun Creighton (AUS)32:22  Vítor Almeida (POR)32:25  Bobby Quinn (GBR)32:27
1994  Spencer Duval (GBR)38:49  Piotr Gładki (POL)38:51  Martin Jones (GBR)39:02
1996  Daniel Njenga (KEN)30:01  John Mitai Mborothi (KEN)30:05  Bernard Lagat (KEN)30:10
1998  Juan Puerta (ESP)38:23  Iván Sánchez (ESP)38:26  Mohamed Afaadas (MAR)38:29
2000  Günther Weidlinger (AUT)35:47  Aziz Driouche (MAR)35:54  Rachid Boulahdid (MAR)35:54
2002  Abdellah Bay (MAR)35:01  Aziz Driouche (MAR)35:03  Günther Weidlinger (AUT)35:09
2004  Günther Weidlinger (AUT)32:17  Karim El Mabchour (MAR)32:26  Brahim Chettah (ALG)32:39
2006  Mohamed Fadil (MAR)27:59  Abdelkebir Lamachi (MAR)28:10  Abdelaziz Azzouzi (MAR)28:21
2008  Najim El Qady (MAR)36:14  Liam Adams (AUS)36:19  Stephan Hohl (GER)36:24
2010  Tetsuya Yoroizaka (JPN)30:08  Liam Adams (AUS)30:09  Christian Glatting (GER)30:11
2012  Abdelmadjed Touil (ALG)29:11  Yuta Shitara (JPN)29:15  Daichi Motomura (JPN)29:22
2014  Joshua Cheptegei (UGA)31:07  Daniel Muindi (KEN)31:13  Mark Lokwanamoi (KEN)32:34
2016  Hicham Amghar (MAR)33:46  Reda Jaafar (MAR)33:49  Youssef Ben Had (MAR)33:51
2018  El Hocine Zourkane (ALG)30:21  Rantso Alfred Mokopane (RSA)30:30  Thamsanga Lukhanyo Theophilus Khonco (RSA)30:33
2022  Dismas Yeko (UGA)28:00  Markus Görger (GER)28:07  Brian Wangwe (UGA)28:12

Men's team

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1968  Great Britain13  Belgium47  Italy64
1970  Great Britain?  Italy?  Bulgaria?
1972  Great Britain12  Belgium43   Switzerland62
1974  Italy24  West Germany38  Great Britain38
1976  Great Britain37  Finland43  West Germany43
1978  Great Britain29  West Germany41  Spain51
1980  Great Britain13  West Germany23  France65
1982  Soviet Union18  West Germany26  Great Britain53
1984  West Germany20  Great Britain52  Poland57
1986  Soviet Union37  China43  Australia69
1988  Spain47  West Germany50  Soviet Union51
1990  Spain30  Great Britain46  Soviet Union67
1992  Spain35  Australia38  Great Britain58
1994  Great Britain29  Spain58  Italy77
1996  Morocco41  Kenya45  South Africa59
1998  Spain17  Portugal59  Great Britain81
2000  Morocco14  Great Britain63  Spain75
2002  Spain32  Morocco41  Great Britain78
2004  Morocco35  South Africa36  Spain46
2006  Morocco10  Algeria38  Spain66
2008  France38  Great Britain61  Australia66
2010  Japan30  Spain31  Great Britain71
2012  Japan36  Ukraine57  Algeria61
2014  Kenya14  Uganda29  Japan47
2016  Morocco10  Japan31  Turkey62
2018  South Africa33  Japan35  Morocco40
2022  Morocco (MAR)21  Uganda (UGA)24  Germany (GER)30

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1976  Vera Kemper (FRG)14:09  Moira O'Boyle (GBR)14:57  Caroline Simpson (GBR)15:06
1978  Kathryn Binns (GBR)17:50  Renate Kieninger (FRG)17:58  Cherry Hanson (GBR)18:05
1980  Jill Clarke (GBR)22:34  Cherry Hanson (GBR)22:42  Fionnuala Morrish (IRL)22:54
1982  Yelena Tsukhlo (URS)15:14  Valentina Ilyinykh (URS)15:30  Marina Rodchenkova (URS)15:44
1984  Asunción Sinovas (ESP)16:41  Ute Jamrozy (FRG)16:45  Zita Ágoston (HUN)16:47
1986  Anne Viallix (FRA)18:34  Krishna Wood (AUS)18:35  Tatjana Smolnikar (YUG)19:01
1988  Viorica Ghican (ROM)18:42  Iulia Besliu (ROM)18:48  Helen Titterington (GBR)18:51
1990  Julia Vaquero (ESP)15:44  Mónica Gama (POR)16:00  Annette Hüls (FRG)16:05
1992  Iulia Ionescu (ROM)20:01  Vikki McPherson (GBR)20:05  Irena Czuta (POL)20:08
1994  Iulia Negura (ROM)19:59  Silvia Sommaggio (ITA)20:03  Julia Vaquero (ESP)20:28
1996  Lelia Deselnicu (ROM)20:45  María Abel (ESP)20:49  Natalie Harvey (AUS)20:50
1998  Natalie Harvey (AUS)21:51  Céline Rajot (FRA)22:03  Liz Talbot (GBR)22:05
2000  Anália Rosa (POR)20:03  Denisa Costescu (ROM)20:06  Cristina Casandra (ROM)20:10
2002  Denisa Costescu (ROM)20:06  René Kalmer (RSA)20:08  Inês Monteiro (POR)20:13
2004  Mariem Alaoui Selsouli (MAR)22:06  Louise Damen (GBR)22:11  Sonia Bejarano (ESP)22:16
2006  Souad Aït Salem (ALG)18:54  Kate Reed (GBR)19:04  Eleanor Baker (GBR)19:33
2008  Faye Fullerton (GBR)22:36  Fionnuala Britton (IRL)22:39  Ikram Zouglali (MAR)22:41
2010  Sara Moreira (POR)16:29  Jessica Sparke (GBR)16:41  Joanne Harvey (GBR)16:48
2012  Ancuța Bobocel (ROM)15:48  Carla Salomé Rocha (POR)15:54  Roxana Bârcă (ROM)15:56
2014  Winnie Nanyondo (UGA)20:334  Dorcus Ajok (UGA)21:02  Prim Twikiriza (UGA)21:07
2016  Sevilay Eytemis (TUR)21:57  Moeno Shimizu (JPN)22:00  Maki Izumida (JPN)22:01
2018  Catarina Granz (GER)34:53  Rika Kaseda (JPN)34:58  Soukaina Atanane (MAR)35:13
2022  Izzy Fry (GBR)31:53  Saskia Millard (GBR)32:01  Yayla Günen (TUR)32:14

Women's team

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1976  Great Britain9   Switzerland25  Belgium32
1978  Great Britain9  West Germany13  Belgium31
1980  Great Britain7  West Germany27  Ireland28
1982  Soviet Union6  West Germany23  Spain33
1984  Spain15  Great Britain16  West Germany23
1986  Great Britain22  Yugoslavia22  Soviet Union32
1988  Romania9  Spain24  West Germany36
1990  Spain12  West Germany25  Poland35
1992  Great Britain30  Spain36  Romania41
1994  Great Britain18  France31  Romania35
1996  Spain19  Romania26  Italy29
1998  Great Britain13  South Africa33  Spain38
2000  South Africa18  Romania19  Spain46
2002  South Africa23  Spain25  Romania29
2004  Great Britain14  Spain18  Finland37
2006  Great Britain9  Algeria29  Italy30
2008  Great Britain20  Australia30  Ireland33
2010  Great Britain13  Australia26  Canada33
2012  Japan21  Romania23  Poland45
2014  Uganda6  Japan15  Canada38
2016  Japan13  Great Britain22  Italy41
2018  Japan17  Germany49  Italy51
2022  Great Britain (GBR)8  Germany (GER)25  Spain (ESP)33

Mixed relay

Event Gold Silver Bronze
2022 (12K)[15]  France (FRA)
Alexa Lemitre
Benoit Campion
Bérénice Fulchiron
Quentin Malriq
35:02  Great Britain (GBR)
Alexandra Millard
Edward Potter
Sabrina Sinha
Justin Davies
35:23  Spain (ESP)
Marta Azpiazu
Pablo Sánchez
Mireya Lahoz
Alejandro Sánchez
35:31

See also

References

  1. Pierre, Christian (2012-04-16). Individual wins for Algeria and Romania; Japan rules team competitions at World University Cross Country Champs. IAAF. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  2. Participation at the World University Cross Country Championships 1978 – 2010. FISU. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  3. 2012 WUC Update: The 18th World University Cross-Country Championship to be organized in Lodz. FISU. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  4. World Student Cross Country Championship. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  5. Women's Team Results 2012. FISU. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  6. Men's Team Results 2012. FISU. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  7. Portugal set to host FISU World University Championship Cross Country. Inside The Games (2022-03-11). Retrieved 2022-03-13.
  8. World University Cross Country Championship in Morocco postponed. FISU (2020-02-28). Retrieved 2022-03-13.
  9. Cross Country 2010. XC2010. Retrieved on 2012-04-22.
  10. . FISU. Retrieved on 2016-02-26.
  11. . Organizers Webpage. Retrieved on 2016-03-23.
  12. . Official Timekeepers Webpage. Retrieved on 2018-04-09.
  13. 2022 WORLD UNIVERSITY CHAMPIONSHIP CROSS COUNTRY. FISU. Retrieved 2022-03-13.
  14. FISU Cross Country Championships Aveiro (POR) 12 MAR 2022. World Athletics. Retrieved 2022-03-13.
  15. FISU World University Championship Cross Country. Lap2Go. Retrieved 2022-03-13.
Editions and medallists.
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