Running News Daily is edited by Bob Anderson in Los Altos California USA and team in Thika Kenya, La Piedad Mexico, Bend Oregon, Chandler Arizona and Monforte da Beira Portugal. Send your news items to bob@mybestruns.com Advertising opportunities available. Train the Kenyan Way at KATA Kenya. (Kenyan Athletics Training Academy) in Thika Kenya. KATA Portugal at Anderson Manor Retreat in central portugal. Learn more about Bob Anderson, MBR publisher and KATA director/owner, take a look at A Long Run the movie covering Bob's 50 race challenge.
Index to Daily Posts · Sign Up For Updates · Run The World Feed
Articles tagged #Mike Foppen
Today's Running News
Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo returns to the NN Zevenheuvelenloop (Seven Hills Run) on Sunday, November 17, aiming to defend his title in the 15km race, which last year saw him match the world record.
Kiplimo, one of the brightest talents in distance running, will be joined by an elite lineup, including his half-brother, reigning marathon world champion Victor Kiplangat, adding extra competition to an already loaded field.
Other big names set for NN Zevenheuvelenloop Race
Great Britain’s Marc Scott, Belgian marathoner Koen Naert, and Nils Voigt of Germany are also set to compete, promising a highly contested race on the rolling hills of Nijmegen. A strong domestic lineup looks to challenge the Dutch record, with national runners such as Mike Foppen, Richard Douma, Filmon Tesfu, Khalid Choukoud, Frank Futselaar, and Gianluca Assorgia joining the field.
NN Zevenheuvelenloop Race women’s race will be hot
In the women’s race, Norway’s Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal leads a strong roster and will face Ethiopia’s Mizan Elam and Ireland’s Fionnula McCormack. Dutch hopefuls Diane van Es, Maureen Koster, and Jill Holterman will also race alongside Rachel Klamer, a seasoned Olympic triathlete representing the Netherlands.
The NN Zevenheuvelenloop’s hilly course and competitive field promise an exciting race as top international and local athletes chase records and titles in one of the Netherlands’ premier running events.
(11/14/2024) Views: 111 ⚡AMPThe NN Zevenheuvelenloop, also known as the nation's most beautiful and the world's fastest 15 kilometer race this year.The NN Zevenheuvelenloop has undergone a lot of development in the past 32 years.From a 'walk' with 500 men has grown into an event where almost 40,000 people register for it.This makes it the largest 15km race in the world and with...
more...On Sunday November 17, a strong group of Dutch runners will be on the hunt for the Dutch record on the 15 kilometers. Mike Foppen from Nijmegen is going for the record in his hometown and will face competition from Richard Douma, Filmon Tesfu, Khalid Choukoud, Frank Futselaar and Gianluca Assorgia, among others. In the women's race, Olympians Diane van Es and Maureen Koster will start.
Battle for the Dutch recordMike Foppen and Richard Douma are the runners with the fastest times on the 15 kilometers behind their name. Foppen has a best time of 43:21 and Douma of 43:18. Filmon Tesfu starts as one of the favorites after his successful marathon debut in Amsterdam (2:10:58). Last year he trumped Foppen in the final sprint and finished as the fastest Dutchman. Khalid Choukoud is the Dutch record holder with his time of 43:13 from 2019 and is also competing. The Dutch men will face competition from Belgium from Koen Naert (personal best 43:37) and from Germany from Nils Voigt (personal best 43:18).
Four Dutch Olympians in the women'srace Training mates Diane van Es and Maureen Koster are competing for the title of fastest Dutchwoman. Van Es competed in the 10,000 meters in Paris and finished sixteenth at that distance. Two months before the Olympics, the 25-year-old runner won silver on the longest track distance at the European Athletics Championships. In 2022, Diane van Es was the fastest Dutch rider at the NN Zevenheuvelen in 47:57.
Maureen Koster also competed at the Olympics in Paris. She finished tenth in her heat in the 5,000 meters. In 2018, the 32-year-old athlete ran her best time on the 15 kilometers at the NN Zevenheuvelenloop: 49:04. Just like her teammate Van Es, Koster has a European Championship medal in her cabinet: silver in the 3,000 meters indoor in 2015.
In addition to Van Es and Koster, Olympians Jill Holterman and Rachel Klamer will also be at the start. Holterman ran the Tokyo Marathon in 2021. Klamer has competed in the triathlon for the past four Olympic Games. In Tokyo, she achieved her best result with a fourth place.
TheUgandan athlete Jacob Kiplimo defends his title at the NN Zevenheuvelenloop. Last year, the 23-year-old athlete equalled the world record in the 15 kilometres in Nijmegen. This year he will compete with his half-brother Victor Kiplangat, reigning world champion in the marathon. In the women's race, European half marathon champion Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal is on the start list.
The 15 kilometres of the 39th NN Zevenheuvelenloop are sold out with 28,000 participants. With more than 10,000 registrations, the 10th Night of the Seven Hills has a record number of registrations.Below are the start lists of the 39th NN Zevenheuvelenloop.
(11/07/2024) Views: 160 ⚡AMPThe NN Zevenheuvelenloop, also known as the nation's most beautiful and the world's fastest 15 kilometer race this year.The NN Zevenheuvelenloop has undergone a lot of development in the past 32 years.From a 'walk' with 500 men has grown into an event where almost 40,000 people register for it.This makes it the largest 15km race in the world and with...
more...A little over 14 hours after being run out of the medals in the 1,500 metres final, Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen was back on the Olympic track on Wednesday in the heats of the 5,000m, where he looked strong as the fastest qualifier.
The defending champion over 1,500m finished fourth in a race won by long-shot American Cole Hocker and, understandably, did the minimum necessary on Wednesday to advance to Saturday’s final.
After going out hard from the start on Tuesday night, he sat comfortably at the back of a 20-man field before easing to the front two laps out and leading it home in 13 minutes 51.59.
The Norwegian bounced back from defeat in the last two world championship 1,500m finals to win the 5,000 and would obviously love to make that a hat-trick.
Ingebrigtsen has been outspoken in his criticism of Briton Josh Kerr, who took silver in the 1,500, but was magnanimous in defeat, writing on his Instagram page: "Well, I guess he (Kerr) did show up after all. Cole Hocker, (bronze medallist) Yared Nuguse and Josh Kerr outsmarted me. They were 'the best guys' when it really mattered. And I want to congratulate them all on a great performance."
There was great support from the crowd as home favourites Hugo Hay and Jimmy Gressier made the early running in a slow and eventually chaotic first heat.
The pedestrian pace meant that the entire 21-man field was together heading into the final lap, with the inevitable clashes, leading to four men falling in the final straight mayhem.
Narve Gilje Nordas, who finished seventh, in the 1,500m final, kept clear of it by hitting the front and led it home in a "fast-walk" 14:08.16, ensuring there will be two Norwegians in the final.
He even had time to fist-bump second-placed finisher Hagos Gebrhiwet of Ethiopia, who became the second-fastest man ever over the distance earlier this year, before they crossed the line.
Grant Fisher, still on a high from his bronze in the 10,000, will look to extend the United States' impressive middle and long-distance showing in Paris after also progressing.
Canada’s Tokyo silver medallist Mohammed Ahmed did not make it after falling earlier in the first heat, but the four who went down at the end of it - Dominic Lokinyomo Lobalu, George Mills, Mike Foppen and Thierry Ndikumwenayo - were all added to the final lineup after appeals.
(08/07/2024) Views: 244 ⚡AMPDouble Olympic champion Sifan Hassan and triple European champion Femke Bol will represent the Netherlands in multiple disciplines at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23.
Hassan has been entered in the 1500m, 5000m and 10,000m – the same three disciplines she contested at the Tokyo Olympic Games, where she landed two gold medals and a bronze.
Bol, meanwhile, will have her sights set on gold in the 400m hurdles, having recently reduced her own European record to 51.45. As was the case at the past two global championships, she is also in the pools for the women’s and mixed 4x400m events.
Dutch team for Budapest
WOMEN 100m: N’Ketia Seedo
200m: Tasa Jiya
400m: Lieke Klaver
1500m: Sifan Hassan
5000m: Sifan Hassan, Maureen Koster
10,000m: Sifan Hassan, Diane van Es
100m hurdles: Maayke Tijn A-Lim, Nadine Visser
400m hurdles: Femke Bol, Cathelijn Peeters
Long jump: Pauline Hondema
Shot put: Jessica Schilder, Alida van Daalen, Jorinde van Klinken
Discus: Jorinde van Klinken
Heptathlon: Sofie Dokter, Emma Oosterwegel, Anouk Vetter
4x100m: Tasa Jiya, Lieke Klaver, Jamile Samuel, N’Ketia Seedo, Marije van Hunenstijn, Nadine Visser
4x400m: Femke Bol, Lisanne de Witte, Lieke Klaver, Cathelijn Peeters, Eveline Saalberg, Zoe Sedney
MEN 100m: Raphael Bouju
200m: Taymir Burnet
400m: Liemarvin Bonevacia
1500m: Niels Laros
5000m: Mike Foppen
Marathon: Abdi Nageeye
High jump: Douwe Amels
Pole vault: Menno Vloon
Hammer: Denzel Comenentia
Decathlon: Rik Taam
4x100m: Raphael Bouju, Taymir Burnet, Nsikak Ekpo, Churandy Martina, Xavi Mo-Ajok, Hensley Paulina
4x400m: Terrence Agard, Ramsey Angela, Isayah Boers, Liemarvin Bonevacia, Isaya Klein Ikkink, Nick Smidt
Mixed 4x400m: athletes drawn from men’s and women’s 4x400m pools.
(08/05/2023) Views: 698 ⚡AMPFrom August 19-27, 2023, Budapest will host the world's third largest sporting event, the World Athletics Championships. It is the largest sporting event in the history of Hungary, attended by athletes from more than 200 countries, whose news will reach more than one billion people. Athletics is the foundation of all sports. It represents strength, speed, dexterity and endurance, the...
more...The Dutch team for the Tokyo Olympic Games has been announced, with double world champion Sifan Hassan named for three events.
The 28-year-old won world 1500m and 10,000m titles in Doha in 2019 and for Tokyo has been selected for both of those events as well as the 5000m, but may not decide to contest all three.
European indoor 400m champion Femke Bol has set 11 national records so far this season and has been selected to make her Olympic debut in the 400 hurdles, women’s 4x400m and mixed 4x400m.
Two-time world champion Dafne Schippers is named for the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay, while world-leader Jorinde van Klinken’s discus selection is confirmed.
Dutch team for Tokyo
WOMEN
100m: Jamile Samuel, Dafne Schippers, Marije van Hunenstijn
200m: Jamile Samuel, Dafne Schippers
400m: Lisanne de Witte, Lieke Klaver
1500m: Sifan Hassan
5000m: Sifan Hassan, Diane van Es
10,000m: Sifan Hassan, Susan Krumins
Marathon: Andrea Deelstra, Jill Holterman
3000m steeplechase: Irene van der Reijken
100m hurdles: Zoe Sedney, Nadine Visser
400m hurdles: Femke Bol
Shot put: Jessica Schilder
Discus: Jorinde van Klinken
Heptathlon: Nadine Broersen, Emma Oosterwegel, Anouk Vetter
4x100m: Lieke Klaver, Jamile Samuel, Dafne Schippers, Naomi Sedney, Marije van Hunenstijn, Leonie van Vliet, Nadine Visser
4x400m: Andrea Bouma, Laura de Witte, Lisanne de Witte, Lieke Klaver, Hanneke Oosterwegel, Anne van de Wiel
MEN
200m: Taymir Burnet
400m: Liemarvin Bonevacia, Jochem Dobber
800m: Tony van Diepen
5000m: Mike Foppen
Marathon: Khalid Choukoud, Abdi Nageeye, Bart van Nunen
400m hurdles: Nick Smidt
Pole vault: Rutger Koppelaar, Menno Vloon
Decathlon: Pieter Braun
4x100m: Solomon Bockarie, Taymir Burnet, Christopher Garia, Joris van Gool, Churandy Martina, Hensley Paulina,
4x400m: Terrence Agard, Ramsey Angela, Liemarvin Bonevacia, Jochem Dobber, Nout Wardenburg, Tony van Diepen
MIXED
4x400m: Terrence Agard, Ramsey Angela, Liemarvin Bonevacia, Andrea Bouma, Femke Bol, Laura de Witte, Lisanne de Witte, Jochem Dobber, Lieke Klaver, Hanneke Oosterwegel, Nout Wardenburg, Anne van de Wiel, Tony van Diepen
(07/04/2021) Views: 1,292 ⚡AMPKenyan athlete Daniel Simiu and Ethiopian Yalemzerf Yehualaw were proclaimed winners of the 56th edition of the Nationale-Nederlanden San Silvestre Vallecana on Thursday, after dominating their respective races with authority.
The athletic event with which Madrid says goodbye to the year 2020 surely missed the 'magic' of its usual route and seeing how the streets are flooded with runners for the popular test, and the spectators who approached the Ensache de Vallecas did not witness the usual spectacle of a San Silvestre marked by the wind and by the great dominance of its two winners.
In the men's event, from the beginning, the small group of candidates for victory was formed and to which the rest of the participants could hardly get close, with the Spanish-Moroccan veteran Ayad Lamdassen setting the pace from the beginning and with Ebenyo , the American Paul Chelimo, the Dutch Mike Foppen, the Burundian Thierry Ndikumwenayo and the Spanish Ouassim Ouaziz.
All eyes were focused on Chelimo, but it was Simiu who made the move that dictated the future of the event. The Kenyan was brave and changed pace on the third lap to open a gap that would already be impossible for his rivals.
Simiu, who had a personal best of 27:18 last September in Berlin, did not slacken and took advantage of his tactic. The African gradually opened the distance with the rest and was able to win comfortably with a record of 27:41.
On the other hand, in the women's race, there was a bit more emotion, mainly because the two indicated as favorites, the Kenyan Ruth Chepngetich and the young Ethiopian Yalemzerf Yehualaw Densa, fought a beautiful heads up.
However, Densa, who had already beaten Chepntegich in the New Delhi Half Marathon, was again stronger than her rival with an acceleration in the third lap against which the Kenyan could do nothing.
The Ethiopian went solo and won with a time of 31:17, ostensibly improving her personal distance record (31:55) and condemning Chepntengich, who reached more than half a minute, again to second place in the vallecana race. The podium was completed by the French Alessia Zarbo, one place ahead of the best Spanish, Carolina Robles.
(01/02/2021) Views: 1,404 ⚡AMPEvery year on 31st December, since 1964, Madrid stages the most multitudinous athletics event in Spain.Sport and celebration come together in a 10-kilometre race in which fancy dress and artificial snow play a part. Keep an eye out for when registration opens because places run out fast! The event consists of two different competitions: a fun run (participants must be...
more...Kenya’s world 5000m finalist Nicolas Kimeli won the men’s 10,000m at the Gouden Spike meeting in Leiden, clocking a world-leading PB of 26:58.97.
The 21-year-old, contesting his first 10,000m race in three years, ran alongside compatriot Solomon Kiplimo Boit during the early stages, passing through 3000m just inside 8:12. Kimeli broke away from Boit just a couple of laps later and set off in pursuit of a sub-27-minute time.
Kimeli’s lead grew with each lap, while Boit continued running in no-man’s land. Further behind, Dutch runner Mike Foppen, making his debut over 10,000m, gradually detached himself from the main chase pack.
Kimeli forged on and started to sprint on the final lap when he realised a sub-27-minute performance was a possibility. He crossed the line in 26:58.97 to smash the meeting record by almost half a minute.
Boit finished second in 27:41.10, while Foppen placed third in 27:59.10. It was Foppen’s eighth PB of the year, having set two at 1500m, one at 2000m, two at 3000m, plus national records for 5000m and 5km.
As is tradition at this meeting, a golden spike trophy is presented to the top performer of the night. Unsurprisingly, Kimeli scooped that accolade.
Meanwhile, Menno Vloon won the pole vault with 5.76m, the second-best clearance of his career after his 5.85m national record in 2017. World champion Toshikazu Yamanishi stepped down in distance at the Japanese Inter-Corporate Championships in Kumagaya and won the 5000m race walk with an Asian record of 18:34.88.
Yamanishi had Eiki Takahashi, Tomohiro Noda and Satoshi Maruo for company in the early stages, but he gradually dropped them one by one before going on to win by almost 17 seconds. Takahashi finished second in 18:51.25.
Yamanishi’s winning time took four seconds off the previous Asian record set by Yusuke Suzuki back in 2015, just three months after he set a world record over 20km.
In a high-quality men’s 10,000m race in Netherlands, 2015 world U18 champion Richard Kimunyan emerged the winner in 27:01.42, finishing just one second ahead of Bernard Koech (27:02.39) with Bedan Karoki a close third (27:02.80). Kimunyan’s time was a world lead but lasted just eight hours at the top of the world list before it was bettered in Leiden.
(09/21/2020) Views: 1,392 ⚡AMP