This is part 2 of 3 of our exclusive interview with Sifan Hassan
Sifan Hassan is one of the world’s most popular and fascinating athletes! In all of our social media for Paris 2024, Sifan Hassan was the most popular global athlete from Paris 2024!
Sifan has always raced across the spectrum. Early in her career, she ran from 800 meters to the half marathon to cross country. In December 2013, Sifan Hassan took gold in the European Athletics U 23 Cross Country champs and helped the Netherlands team take the bronze medal! That was the first time she represented her new country, the Netherlands.
Sifan held the world record in the mile from 2019 to 2023 (4:12). She also held the 10,000m world record for two days and still holds the World record for the hour run (18,930 meters is 11.7623 miles), which is brutal!
In terms of European records? Sifan Hassan holds European records at 1,500m, 3,000m, 5,000m, 10,000m, half marathon and marathon!
Sifan Hassan is a tremendously talented athlete who works hard, laughs, and races with abandon. On RunBlogRun’s global audience, she is one of our most popular, judging by social media response, and the article reads.
Personally, her European record at the 2023 Bank of America Chicago marathon, the current European record, of 2:13.44 is quite impressive, but her one hour run world record blows my mind, as she is one quarter mile from having run perfect five minute miles for one hour! Sifan’s mental strength is something to behold!
We reached out to Brett Holts at NIKE sports marketing and asked if he could help us reach Sifan Hassan. Not only did Brett Holts get it done, but the speed with which the interview came back was incredible!
We hope you enjoy these insights into Sifan Hassan, who just won bronze at the 5,000 meters, 10,000 meters, and then gold in the marathon! Those are her fourth, fifth, and sixth Olympic medals.
Here are Questions 5-8!
Paris 2024
5. RunBlogRun: The longer the race, the better you seem to do; tell us how tough the Paris triple was?
Sifan Hassan: I was terrified but also inquisitive about what might happen. I took it one step at a time, staying grateful, resting as much as possible, and focusing on my nutrition. The 5000m was where I felt the most uncertain, but the heat gave me confidence, and I was thrilled with the result in the final. Once that was done, I could focus on the 10,000m and the…
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