Track Athletes Track Athletes

Athletes to look out for at European Cross Country Championships on Sunday

By: Elizabeth Egan

Published on: Dec 13, 2025

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Nadia Battocletti on her way to the Senior Women's title at the 2024 European Cross Country Championships in Lagoa. She'll be looking to add another title on Sunday. Photo credit: Eric Bellamy

Lagoa in the Algarve is set for what promises to be another classic edition of the European Cross Country Championships. More than 580 athletes are entered in the seven-race programme. Here are just some of the athletes to watch out for.


Senior Men

With just three of the top-10 from 2024 returning, the announcement on Monday that Jimmy Gressier, a three-time winner of the U23 race was a welcome addition to one of Europe’s premier endurance tests, especially once three-time senior champion Jackob Ingebrigtsen announced that he wouldn’t be defending his title. That, however, is not to say that the race lacks quality or big names. Either way, the race is guaranteed a first-time winner

Jimmy Gressier (FRA) waited until he opened his post-Tokyo account at a road race in Switzerland on Sunday before confirming his participation in the event. Gressier, who won the World 10,000m title in Tokyo in September, followed his U23 titles in 2017-19 with third in the senior race in 2021, but has not competed at the event since. He will be many people’s favourite for the title on Sunday.

Ruben Querinjean (LUX) finished 24th in 2024 but has made big strides over the steeplechase this summer, running a PB of 8:09.47 when winning the Brussels Diamond League before making the world final in Tokyo. The twisty course may well suit a steeplechase specialist accustomed to pace changes. Querinjean finished 3rd in the U23 race in 2021.

Spain placed four athletes in the top ten last year, and again look set to dominate the team competition. Their lead runner in 2024 was Thierry Ndikumwenayo, who won individual bronze. The Burundi-born athlete showed his truly world-class ability when he finished ninth at World Cross earlier in the year. Ndikumwenayo recently finished third at the World Cross Country Tour Gold meeting in Atapuerca.

Among the other Spanish hopefuls will be Abdessamad Oukhelfen, who has finished in the top 12 on each of the last four occasions (8th in 2024; 7th in 2023; 10th in 2022; 12th in 2021) and Aarón Las Heras who was 14th last year and 17th at the last World Cross Championships.

European 10,000m Champion and Olympic 5000m 4th placer Dominic Lokinyomo Lobalu (SUI) will be making his Euro Cross debut. With personal bests ranging from 7:27.68 (3000m) to 59:12 for the half-marathon, he certainly has the speed and endurance to contend at this level. How he’ll cope with the lumps and turns of the Lagoa course remains to be seen.

Other athletes to potentially watch out for include Magnus Tuv Myhre (NOR), who was second in Brussels two years ago, Italian marathon record holder Yohanes Chiappinelli, who finished eighth in 2022, and Scott Beattie, who looked sublime when winning the British trails three weeks ago.

The Irish team is packed with experience. Brian Fay finished tenth in this race in Dublin, and Cormac Dalton was eighth two years ago. Both will be hoping to repeat those performances. Both Efrem Gidey (U20 bronze, 2019) and Darragh McElhinney (U23 silver, 2021) already have Euro Cross medals to their name. Jack O'Leary, who finished sixth in the U20 race in 2016 completes the team.


Senior Women

Reigning champion Nadia Battocletti, will start Sunday’s race as red-hot favourite, but others, including four-time winner Jasmine Can, home favourite Mariana Machado, former U20 and U23 winner Megan Keith and others will look to challenge.

The 24-year-old Italian Nadia Battocletti hasn’t finished outside the top two at this event since finishing sixth in the U20 race in 2017. Since then she’s taken two U20 titles, two U23 titles, and silver and gold in the senior race, as well as collecting Olympic and World silver and two European titles on the track.

Megan Keith (GBR) has been chasing Battocletti home in World Cross Country Tour meetings across Europe this autumn. The 2023 U23 champion and 2021 U20 champion will be making her first appearance in the senior race alongside compatriot and 2024 U23 champion Phoebie Anderson.

Home favourite Mariana Machado, an age-group rival of Battocletti, finished sixth in Antalya, and will be looking  to utilise course familiarity and local support to add to her bronze medals at U20 (2019) and U23 level (2021).

Jasmine Can (TUR) won four titles between 2016 and 2019, and though she only finished 39th at the European Road Running Championships earlier this year, her bronze in Antalya suggests that she can never be completely ruled out.

Jana van Lent (BEL) was fifth last year, and will again be looking to be in the shake-up for the medals, along with Lisa Rooms who was sixth the year before and recently won the Belgian Championships ahead of van Lent.

Sarah Lahti (SWE), seventh last year, recently won the Warandecross in Tilburg for the fourth time, while Diane van Es (NED) set a European 5km record on the roads in February.

Niamh Allen was best of the Irish last year in tenth place. While the dry course may not play to the strengths of fellow Cork woman Fiona Everard, the two-time national champion will look to use all her experience from the previous two editions. Danielle Donegan looks to be building on the form that saw her finish eighth in the U23 race in Brussels two years ago.

Mary Muhare has twice been on medal-winning senior teams, and will bring consistency to the team in her fifth appearance in the senior race. Having represented Ireland in both the European Championships and the European Team Championships in the past 18 months, Emily Haggard-Kearney will be looking to make the most of her first Euro Cross experience.


U23 Men

Will Barnicoat (GBR) will be going for a fourth consecutive underage title in his final year as an U23. To do so he will need to again overcome Ireland’s Nick Griggs who he just edged in the U20 race in 2022 and the U23 title last year; European U23 10,000m champion Joel Ibler Lillesø, and Stefan Nillessen who won both the 1500m and steeplechase titles in Bergen and what is set to be the event of the championship.


U23 Women

Ilona Mononen (FIN) who won silver in this race in 2023 and was third last year, will be looking to add another continental U23 title to the steeplechase one she won on the track this summer. But Maria Forero (ESP) who was second last year, fifth the previous year and took 5000m gold at Euro U23s will have other ideas. Among those they’ll be competing against are European U23 10,000m champion Anika Thompson, Bergin 10,000m runner-up Kira Weis (GER), and Lisa Merkel (GER), who was actually the fastest European U23 over 10,000m this summer.


U20 Men

Håkon Moe Berg (NOR) took 1500m and 3000m gold at the European U20 Championships in Tampere earlier this summer and will be battling this one out against, among others, Karl Ottfalk who was fifth last year and fourth in 2023, fellow Norwegian Magnus Øyen who was fourth last year. European U20 steeplechase bronze medallist Andres Lara is among a bunch of talented Spaniards also hoping to put up a challenge. Irish U20 Champion Noah Harris and the experienced Cormac Dixon will be looking to lead the Irish challenge.


U20 Women

It’s difficult to see past the 2023 and 2024 Champion Innes Fitzgerald (GRB), who has been peerless both on the track and on the country in this age-group over the past 12 months, for this title. Just some of those who may challenge include Andrea Nygård Vie (NOR) who won the European U20 steeplechase title this summer, Shirin Kerber (SUI) who was fourth last year, Carmen Cernjul (SWE) who won 1500m & 3000m silver at Euro U20s and Turkey’s Edibe Yağiz who was 14th last year and took 5000m silver in Tampere. Ireland’s Anna Gardiner will be competing in this race for the fourth time and will be hoping to at least match her seventh-place finish in 2023.


Mixed relay

Ireland is just one of a half dozen teams with realistic hopes of mixed relay medals. Hosts Portugal have the World 1500m champion Isaac Nader among their quartet. Italy are the reigning champions, with three of last year’s team starting, along with Gaia Sabbatini who anchored them to the title in 2022. France, Spain and Great Britain are also among the title contenders.

 

Athletes Mentioned:

Jack O'Leary, Brian Fay, Cormac Dalton, Darragh McElhinney, Niamh Allen, Fiona Everard, Danielle Donegan, Emily Haggard-Kearney, Anika Thompson