This is Stuart Weir’s first column from Rome, the host of the 2024 European Athletics Championships, June 7-12, 2024. Stuart Weir is in Rome, and yours truly is in Wisconsin. The Wi-Fi died in Fort Atkinson at midnight local time, making it challenging to watch. Stuart kept us up to date, and the European Broadcasting new Sport app is wonderful! Great commentating; do not miss it!
And here is our friend, Stuart, in the morning session.
First morning thoughts
The European Athletics Championships, Roma 2024, started, as TS Eliot might have said had he been here: not with a bang but a whimper. The magnificent Stadio Olimpico, which has hosted a World Football World Cup Final and the 1960 Olympics, was all but empty at 9.35am when the first discus was thrown. As the week progresses, there will be bigger crowds, but filling a 60,000 stadium for a track and field event anywhere in Europe outside of the UK will always be a tall order.
On a hot morning, the British athletes picked Jemma Reekie, who won her heat with the minimum of effort. Normally, an 800m runner, Jemma, who was running 15 mainly to help her 800 stamina, finished in 4:06.68. Afterward, she said, “I’ve felt no pressure here, just that I want to do well. I’m relatively happy. I just wanted to stay out of trouble and get through those rounds because I had never gotten out of a 1500m round before. The first job is to get that done. They kept clipping me from the back, so I thought, ‘Do you know what, I’m going to move. Everyone starts panicking, and then it’s like you end up swamped. 800 races always go out at a decent enough pace that it’s not crowded, the 1500m; however, if it goes slow, everyone is involved!”
Georgia Bell, Katie Snowden, and Ireland’s Ciara Mageean and Sarah Healy reached the final, meaning that five of the twelve finalists are from the British Isles. Elliot Giles and Thomas Randolph made the men’s 800 m semi-finals, and Lizzie Bird qualified for the 3000m steeplechase final. Two field-eventers, Jacob Fincham-Dukes (long jump) and Lawrence Okoye (Discus), also made the finals.
European Athletics has adopted the policy of giving the top 12 in the shorter races a bye into the second round. Personally, I have never been a fan of this policy. Firstly, surely a championship should be fair,4 with all athletes having to run the same number of races to win rather than giving an advantage to some by requiring them to run one race less. Secondly, at a time when you are struggling to sell the tickets, is it a good idea to make the early sessions less attractive by excluding, by definition, your best athletes in a number of disciplines?
Author
Since 2015, Stuart Weir has written for RunBlogRun. He attends about 20 events a year including all most global championships and Diamond Leagues. He enjoys finding the quirky and obscure story.
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