December 8, 2006 - San Giorgio su Legnano, Italy --As
European athletics attention turns to this weekend's 13th
edition of the SPAR European Cross Country
Championships, the primary question to be answered on
Sunday is this: Can anyone end Sergey Lebid,s reign as the
continent,s undisputed King of Cross Country?While a record 509 athletes--275 men and 243 women--
from 30 countries will compete this weekend, it will be the
31-year-old Ukrainian,s bid for a sixth consecutive title ^ and
seventh overall ^ that will captivate the attention of the large
crowd expected to attend the six races at the Sports Centre
Angelo Alberti in this small town in west Lombardy, about 20
kilometers from Milan.
The race to dethrone the King - Men's Senior Race
Nothing short of an institution in European cross country,
Lebid has raced in each of the 12 previous editions of the
championships, half of which he has won: first in1998
before taking the last five. Indeed, if there,s anything in the
least bit predictable about Sunday,s championships, it,s
that the 31-year-old, who also raced to silver in 2000 and
bronze in 1997, will arrive on the start line extremely well
prepared.
As has now become his routine, Lebid prepared for his first
outing of the winter with a high-altitude training stint in the
Caucasus Mountains near Kislovodsk, Russia. His
dominating performances the previous two years provided
ample evidence that a lack of racing sharpness obviously
didn,t dull his racing ability. In the 2004 race in Heringsdorf,
Germany, he won by a whopping 26 seconds; last year he
produced a comfortable 12 second margin of victory.
This year, the challenge to Lebid,s supremacy will be led by
23-year-old Mo Farah, who is aiming to become only the
second Briton to claim an individual title. The first and last
was Jon Browne, the winner in 1996. The Somali-born
Farah, who took 5000m silver in a close race at last
summer,s European Championships, out-sprinted Kenyan
Micah Kogo at the Cross de L,Acier in Leffrinckroucke,
France on 26 November, to show he,s well prepared to take
on Lebid in San Giorgio su Legnano. Kogo, Farah,s training
partner and housemate, was this year,s fastest man over
10,000m.
At 37, Driss Maazouzi may be the second oldest to toe the
line on Sunday, but as a two-time defending bronze, the
Frenchman must be considered as a serious podium
threat. In his lone major outing prior to the championships,
he finished just out of the top-ten at the Cross National le
Maine Libre in Allones, France, on 19 November.
Juan Carlos De La Ossa, the runner-up in 2003 and 2004,
returns to lead a strong Spanish squad with ambitions to
end France,s three year run as team champion. The
runner-up behind Lebid in 2003 and 2004, he was a
disappointing ninth last year after being spiked midway
through the race. While hamstring and back problems may
have affected his build-up this fall, he has performed
admirably on the international circuit thus far this autumn,
most recently with a sixth place finish ^ and the first
European ^ at the Cross Internacional de la Constitucion in
Alcobendas last Sunday. A week earlier he was seventh at
the Llodio IAAF Permit race, also the first among
Europeans.
Jose Manuel ,,Chemao/oo Martinez, who won silver in the
10,000 at August,s European Championships, joins de la
Ossa on a strong Spanish team. The 35-year-old has raced
sparingly thus far, but did produce a fifth place showing at
the Cross Internacional de Soria last month.
One of the biggest surprises at last year,s championship
was produced by Swede Johanna Nilsson, who just two
weeks after winning the U.S. collegiate title, bounced back
with an impressive bronze medal showing in Tilburg. This
year, Irishman Martin Fagan, who competes for Providence,
hopes to preserve the form that led him to a fifth place finish
at last month,s NCAA championships.
Women,s Senior Race
Unlike the men's senior race, no female medallists from
2005 will be returning. And with few competitions under their
belts this year, the race is wildly unpredictable.
Among the favorites on paper is Russian Inga Abitova, the
surprise winner of last summer,s European 10,000m title.
Most recently a member of the Russian runner-up squad at
the Chiba Ekiden, the 24-year-old was seventh last year in
Tilburg, leading the Russian women to the team title.
Fourth last year, Olivera Jevtic returns as last year,s leading
finisher. Known primarily as a marathoner these days ^ the
29-year-old was second in Gothenburg in August ^ the
Serbian took four consecutive bronze medals in the
continental championship beginning in 1997. A fierce
competitor, Jevtic was fourth in last month,s Tokyo
International Ladies Marathon.
Hungary,s Aniko Kalovics has gradually become one of
Europe,s leading racers on the road, but has also produced
several fine performances in Cross Country over the past
several seasons, and should also be in the hunt. The
bronze medallist in 2003 and fifth last year, the 29-year-old
finished a respectable third late last month in Llodio, just a
month after making ^ and winning ^ her marathon debut in
Carpi.
After a pair of back-to-back runner-up finishes in the team
race, Jo Pavey will be looking to help return the British
women back to the podium top step for just the second
time.
The continent,s fastest 5000m runner on the track for two
years running, Pavey prepped for the race with a
commanding win at the British trials two weeks ago, where
she battled horrendously muddy conditions. The 33-year-old
was the bronze medallist in 2004.
Joining Pavey is Hayley Yelling, the surprise winner in 2004.
After wining a pair of domestic races, Yelling struggled in
her last outing, where she finished a distant seventh in
Llodio.
Junior races ^ Rematch on the women,s side
Defending champion Ancuta Bobocel of Romania will aim to
become the first back-to-back women,s junior winner.
Bobucel, 19, who is the continent,s junior record holder in
the 3000m Steeplechase, moved up a notch from her
runner-up finish in 2004 with a narrow two-second victory of
Briton Emily Pidgeon last year. Last month, the Romanian
took top honors at the Omer Besim Memorial EAA Permit
race in Istanbul, winning the senior 8 km race by 38
seconds.
Pidgeon, still only 17, will be aiming to make amends in the
chase for individual honors after leading the British junior
women to the team title last year. She,ll be joined by another
17-year-old, Stephanie Twell, a finalist at 1500m at August,s
World Junior Championships in Beijing. At last month,s
British trials, Twell upset Pidgeon winning by nine seconds.
Another rising star in 18-year-old Azra Eminovic of Serbia,
the fastest European in Beijing in August, where she
finished sixth.
After four years of back-to-back winner, the only certainty in
the men,s junior race is that a new champion will be
crowned. Among the favorites is 19-year-old Spaniard
Mohamed Elbenadir, who was fourth last year.
Mugdat Ozturk of Turkey, the reigning European junior
champion in the 10,000, could also be a factor. Last month
he was third at the Omer Besim Memorial EAA Permit race
in Istanbul. Algerian-born Noureddine Smail of France was
a finalist in the 5000 in Beijing, finishing eighth. Laszlo Toth
has his sights set on picking up where Barnabas Bene left
off last year, by keeping the title in Hungary. In August, he
was eighth in the 3000m Steeplechase in Beijing.
New this year ^ Under-23 competition
To ease the transition between junior and senior
competition, a pair of Under-23 races have been added to
the program this year, which not surprisingly look to be the
domain for a slew of former junior champions.
Among the favorites in the men's U23 race is Hungary's
Barnabas Bene, who last year successfully defended his
continental junior title. The 20-year-old is adjusting well to
senior competition, with several top-ten finishes in road and
cross country races. Russian Anatoliy Rybakov, whom Bene
upset at the 2004 junior race, is also a former two-time
junior champion. The 21-year-old was fourth at the Russian
national championships in October, won by his twin brother
Yevgeniy, who twice finished second to Anatoliy in junior
races at the European championships. Dusan Markesevic
of Serbia also returns after his bronze medal showing in the
junior race last year.
Binnaz Uslu took the women,s junior title in 2004 for Turkey,
and is expected to fare much better here than she did in last
year,s senior race, where she came home 28th. Primarily a
1500m runner, the shorter distance certainly fits the
21-year-old. Adelina De Soccio, the reigning continental
3000m champion, is the host nation,s leading candidate for
a medal. Still only 20, De Soccio was a respectable fourth at
the Cross Valle Del Chiese, her first race since last
summer,s national championships on the track, while Volha
Minina of Belarus, fourth and fifth in the 2003 and 2004
junior races, is aiming to become her country,s first
medallist.
The Championships will be held in Italy for the second time.
In 1998, when Ferrara played host, Sergey Lebid won his
first title, and Briton Paula Radcliffe won the first of her two.
Competition begins at 11:00 with the junior women's race,
and concludes with the senior men's competition at 14:45.
The forecast for Sunday is favorable, calling for clear, sunny
skies and temperatures between 5 and 8 C.
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