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2022 Munich Diary, Recap: TURKEY’S CAN RUNS AWAY WITH HER SECOND EUROPEAN 10,000M TITLE

2022 Munich Diary, Recap: TURKEY'S CAN RUNS AWAY WITH HER SECOND EUROPEAN 10,000M TITLE

This is the recap of the women’s 10,000 meters at the 2022 European Athletics Championships, held August 15-21, 2022, in Munich, Germany. The recap is courtesy of Race Results Weekly, which we use with the editor’s and photographer’s permission.

TURKEY’S CAN RUNS AWAY WITH HER SECOND EUROPEAN 10,000M TITLE
By David Monti, @d9monti
(c) 2022 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved, used with permission.

MÜNICH (16-Aug) — Like a skilled stone mason, Turkey’s Yasemin Can needed only to strike a single blow last night to break open the women’s 10,000m at the 25th European Athletics Championships and take home her second continental title at the distance. Can, the former Kenyan with the birth name Vivian Jemutai, ran a 68.3-second lap through the 7600-meter mark to scoot away from rivals Eilish McColgan of Great Britain, Lonah Chemtai Salpeter of Israel, and Konstanze Klosterhalfen of Germany and win going away in 30:32.57. She now has seven European Championships gold medals in both track and cross country.

“All my country was waiting for this medal, and they were expecting it from me, so I am very glad and happy I managed to get it today,” she said.

Can –whose name is pronounced like “Shawn”– took advantage of the early fast pace set by McColgan, who won the Commonwealth 10,000m title just 13 days before. From the 1200m mark, McColgan led the 25-lap race for nearly 15 laps, splitting 5000m in a swift 15:22.25. By the 3000m mark (9:17.00) McColgan’s quick pace had narrowed the field to just five women: Can, McColgan, Klosterhalfen, Britain’s Jessica Judd, and Salpeter.

Yasemin Can of Turkey in action during the ATHLETICS – WOMEN’S 10,000M FINAL at Olympiastadion during the European Championships 2022 on August 15, 2022, in Munich, Germany. Photo: Thomas Niedermueller / Munich2022

“I went hard after that first 1-K,” McColgan said. “I was doing 72’s for quite a lot of the race, but there were still four girls hanging on, so there were five of us.”

By the 4000m mark, Judd had fallen back (she would finish tenth and required assistance from medical personnel before leaving the track), and the pack was down to four. Running in the second position behind McColgan, Can waited for the 7200m point before surging, and neither McColgan, Klosterhalfen, nor Salpeter could respond.

“I tried to break the group too much as I could, but Can was just too strong tonight,” McColgan lamented.

Klosterhalfen…

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