Göteborg 2006 800 m reports and previews

[Final report]   [Semifinal reports]   [Heat reports]   [Preview]  

Göteborg 800 m final report
Som wins a close race in Göteborg
Fiegen (636), Ellis (403), Milkevics (619) and Som (678)
all lunge desperately for the finish

A tactical race was expected and a tight finish anticipated, and the 800 m final delivered exactly that. Less than 0.15 seconds made the difference between gold and a disappointing fourth place. And although speed and endurance are always useful, tactical awareness turned out to be just as important.

The race was never expected to be fast, so it was a bit of a surprise that Milkevics was apparently happy to take the lead and set a decent if not spectacular pace. The bell was reached in 53.07, Som, Rimmer and Longo were following the leader, Lacasse and Fiegen right behind them with Ellis and Quesada bringing up the rear. In the back straight Fiegen and Lacasse moved forward on the outside. With Milkevics tiring slightly the first five were all very close and Rimmer unluckily bumped into Som - the Dutchman nearly fell but was just able to keep going, but Rimmer lost his rhythm and hardly played any further part in the race. Around the bend Fiegen was shoulder to shoulder with the Latvian while Som and Lacasse were right behind them. Lacasse was on the outside, ready to strike, but couldn't find anything extra. Som was on the inside, waiting for a gap that never seemed to come. Fifty meters out Milkevics eventually drifted slightly to the outside and Som grabbed his chance and immediately squeezed through the narrowest of gaps, carefully avoiding any contact by holding his right arm up high. Milkevics arms swung out a bit though and Som lost his balance, having to take two steps on the grass with his left foot. With a final acceleration he passed Milkevics and in the last few metres he was just able to outlean Fiegen on the line. Ellis made a late run forward and as Milkevics was slowing they had another minor bump before the Englishman threw himself forward to deprive the Latvian even of the bronze medal. Lacasse had given up a few seconds earlier which allowed Quesada to move up to fifth place. Longo and Rimmer finished seventh and eighth respectively.

After the race Bram Som was happy and carefree. He felt the last 50 metres had been just crazy, and although gaps will always be there this time it had been really tight. He didn't feel he had anything to worry about, since there is always some pushing in a close 800 m race. He also felt he might as well make a protest himself since he was nearly brought down after 600.
A protest was nevertheless launched by the Latvians, because of Som's two steps on the grass, and Som must have been really worried as it took a long time before it was eventually decided that the result should stand and that Bram Som was the first Dutch European Champion since 1982.

Which also meant that David Fiegen had to be content with the silver. No hard feelings from him though. He was happy enough to go down in history as the first athlete from Luxembourg to get a medal of any colour at the European Championships. Although he declared he thought he was going to win it 20 metres before the finish he felt happy for his good friend Bram. And Sam Ellis was over the moon with his bronze medal at his first major championship. His tactics of keeping quiet until the final straight had worked out perfectly.

   Result:
1  Bram Som                NED 1:46.56
2  David Fiegen            LUX 1:46.59
3  Sam Ellis               GBR 1:46.64
4  Dmitrijs Milkevics      LAT 1:46.70
5  Miguel Quesada          ESP 1:46.91
6  Florent Lacasse         FRA 1:46.95
7  Andrea Longo            ITA 1:47.11
8  Michael Rimmer          GBR 1:47.66

Göteborg 800 m semifinal reports

From both semifinals the first three would qualify automatically. Two fastest losers would also make it to the final.

So the main favourites are now probably Lacasse, Som and Milkevics, they all looked quite comfortable. There will be two British runners in the final (which hasn't happened for some time) but both Ellis and Rimmer had to dig really deep to get this far. Longo has already seen an Olympic and World Championship final, so he will be the most experienced athlete in the final. For Fiegen on the other hand the final will be new territory. The Spaniards didn't have a great day, with two of their three runners going out, but at least Quesada won his semifinal.

All eight runners will fancy their chances to medal. No one in the heats or in the semifinals has been ready to set any decent pace. So the final looks likely to be quite slow, very tactical and it will probably all come down to being in the right spot after 700m to put in a final decisive burst on the home straight.


Göteborg 800 m heat reports

There were four heats. From each heat three runners would move directly into the semis, with the four fastest losers also qualifying. Mehdi Baala decided not to go for the 800/1500 double and did not start.

So the heats definitely caused a few major upsets. Herms out, Bogdanov out, Hill out. Bad day for the Russians, with just Aritkulov narrowly surviving. Lacasse, Rimmer, Som and Milkevics gave the best impression, and they look real contenders for the medals. Nobody looks a definite favourite for the gold though. It's still anybody's championship.


Göteborg 800 m preview

Forget the familiar names, forget the champions of the last few years. They have all retired, are injured or simply chose not to take part. Wilson Kipketer, European Champion of 2002 has retired. André Bucher and Nils Schumann took silver and bronze that year, but it looks doubtful whether either of them will ever reach international level again. Yuriy Borzakowski would be favourite, but inexplicably he has decided not to take part. Antonio Reina hasn't run all year, Pawel Czapiewski is nowhere near the form that made him world class a few years ago, Aissat and Okken, finalists four years ago, are absent as well.

So Sweden will see new reputations being built. New names will make the headlines, new stars will be born. Only a few participants have ever made a major final. So experience will hardly be a factor this year. No one can rely on reputation, many athletes will fancy their chances to score their first international medal.

The major candidates for the medals would appear to be:

Many athletes in Göteborg are as yet almost unknown but could score their first major success here. Among them Florent Lacasse (FRA), who has been on the verge of breaking through for many years now. With the Olympics in London in 2012 we may expect a new generation of British middle distance runners to do well, and Michael Rimmer, Richard Hill and Sam Ellis could all cause a major surprise. David Fiegen (LUX) recently improved his national record. Andrea Longo (ITA) is probably the most experienced man in the field. He has made several major finals, but at 31 may not have that stamina anymore. Finally there are two more competitive Spaniards (Miguel Quesada and Manual Olmedo), two strong Russians (Ivan Nesterov and Ramil Aritkulov, and a promising young Belgian (Thomas Matthys).