Six incredible moments from the Roma 1974 European Championships

Fifty years after Rome last staged the European Athletics Championships, we revisit some of the most memorable and incredible moments from the Roma 1974 European Athletics Championships, waiting for Roma 2024 scheduled from 7 to 12 June (buy your tickets here).

Distance running history for Holmen

Finland is a country renowned for its history in men’s distance running events but their sole gold medal in the distance events in Roma 1974 came in the inaugural edition of the women’s 3000m.
Previously no Finnish female had ever placed higher than sixth in a track final at the European Athletics Championships but Nina Holmen ran her way into the history books, breaking away from a pack of six and winning the title courtesy of a 61.9 last lap in 8:55.10 – the second fastest time in history at that stage.

Holmen out-sprinted a notable field which included the Soviet world record-holder Lyudmila Bragina (8:56.09) and Brit Joyce Smith (8:57.39) who was making her major international track debut at the age of 36 some 14 years after just missing out on a place on the British 800m team at the 1960 Olympic Games – which also took place in Rome – and 10 years before competing in the inaugural Olympic marathon in Los Angeles at the age of 46.

And the Holmen family legacy at the European Athletics Championships continued into the 2000s. Her son Janne won the marathon title at the 2002 European Athletics Championships in Munich.

Szewinska sparkles in the sprints

Eight years after winning three gold medals at the 1966 European Championships, Irena Szewinska stood on top of the podium again after achieving a sprint double against an athlete who had amassed an incredible win streak of 90 races between 1970 and 1974, including a 100/200m double at the 1971 European Championships.

But East Germany’s Renate Stecher had to cede both titles to Szewinska who was back to her best after trailing home in sixth behind Stecher in 1971. Szewinska began her remarkable week by winning her first European 100m title in 11.13 into a 1.2 m/s headwind before achieving the sprint double, reeling in Stecher in the home straight to win the 200m in 22.51 against a headwind of 2.7 m/s!

Szewinska added to her tally with bronze in the 4x100m before concluding her campaign with a blazing 48.5 leg in the 4x400m. Despite her best efforts, the Poles just fell short of a medal in fourth but Szewinska’s split was the fastest ever split recorded in a 4x400m at the time.

Susanj’s unstoppable sprint finish

The men’s 800m final in Roma 1974 featured three of the event’s most talented and mercurial exponents which made for an instant classic.

As British magazine Athletics Weekly reported: “Was there ever an 800m runner possessed with such devastating acceleration as Luciano Susanj? Was there ever such a brilliant 800m competitor, at the age of 18, as Steve Ovett? And was there ever an 800m star so hero-worshipped as Marcello Fiasconaro? The combined efforts of these three remarkable runners made this a race to remember.”

Buoyed on by a partisan home crowd, Fiasconaro powered through 200m in 24.5 and 400m in 50.1 – described by Athletics Weekly as a “do or die effort” – but these heroics didn’t do anything to blunt the finishing speed of Susanj who accelerated into the lead with 180 metres and opened up a winning gap of 15 metres for victory in 1:44.07. This remains the second fastest winning time in European Athletics Championships history.

In the scrap for the minor medals, an 18-year-old Ovett battled to his first major medal with silver in a European U20 record of 1:45.76 with Finland’s Markku Taskinen taking the bronze in 1:45.89. A forlorn Fiasconaro faded back to sixth in 1:46.28, his front running efforts unrewarded.

“Fiasconaro started too fast,” said Susanj in the aftermath of his victory. “I knew he couldn’t keep it up. I’m not ready for a world record now, but perhaps next year.”

Last on that day was West Germany’s Willi Wulbeck who would go on to win the inaugural world 800m title in Helsinki 1983.

Foster front runs to 5000m gold

It only took Brendan Foster eight seconds to hit the front of the 5000m in Roma 1974 in earnest and the Brit didn’t relinquish the lead. “It was front running at its best: positive, unflinching, challenging,” as described by Athletics Weekly.

Defying the 85 percent humidity and high air temperatures in the Italian capital, Foster ground his rivals into submission, including 1972 Olympic 5000m and 10,000m champion Lasse Viren from Finland who bravely stuck with Foster before coming apart after the Brit cranked out an eighth lap of 60.2.

Foster’s winning time of 13:17.21 was a championship record and he won by six seconds from East Germany’s Manfred Kuschmann (13:23.93) and Viren (13:24.57) whose bronze medal in the 5000m was the sole European medal of his career which saw him win four Olympic gold medals.

Mennea roared to Italy’s first and only gold

After settling for silver in the 100m final behind reigning champion Valeriy Borzov, Pietro Mennea was roared to the 200m title from lane two in front of 60,000 pertisan fans who had packed into the Stadio Olimpico.

“I come from a small town called Barletta. They nearly tore it apart last month when I won the national championship. I imagine there will be chaos there tonight,” commented Mennea after winning Italy’s first and only gold medal of the 1974 European Athletics Championships.

In doing so, Mennea emulated his hero Livio Berutti who had sprinted to Olympic 200m gold in the same stadium at the 1960 Olympic Games. Mennea himself would follow suit by winning Olympic 200m gold in 1980.

The arrival of two of Italy’s greats


While it might not have been a vintage championships for hosts Italy who will be looking to better the five medals they won in 1974 this June, the international careers of two of Italy’s greatest female athletes began in earnest in the Stadio Olimpico in 1974.

Sara Simeoni won bronze in the women’s high jump final some four years before winning gold at the 1978 European Athletics Championships, equalling the world record of 2.01m. Like Mennea, Simeoni would go on to win Olympic high jump gold in 1980.

And only two months after celebrating her 17th birthday, Gabriella Dorio progressed through to the 1500m final – just the second time the event had been staged at a European Athletics Championships – where she finished a creditable ninth.

Dorio would also go on to win Olympic gold in her famed career although she would have a decade-long wait before clinching 1500m gold at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

Femke Bol targets 400m hurdles defence at Roma 2024

Dutch phenomenon Femke Bol has committed to defend her women’s 400m hurdles title at the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships which take place on 7-12 June (buy your tickets here).

Since winning gold in the 400m flat, 400m hurdles and 4x400m relay two years ago at the Munich 2022 European Athletics Championships, Bol has gone from strength to strength. 

Last year she won the women’s 400m hurdles at the Budapest 2023 World Athletics Championships before famously anchoring the Dutch team to a glorious 4x400m gold. 

She has continued in the same winning vein indoors, bettering her own 400m short track world record in winning gold in 49.17 at the World Indoor Championships in Glasgow in March, where she once again ran the last leg for the Netherlands to win 4x400m gold.

As one of the true superstars of the sport today, her presence in Rome will add huge excitement to this year’s European Athletics Championships. And Bol shares in the excitement.

“I’m really looking forward to it,” she said. “I always love Rome. I had one of my first Diamond Leagues there in COVID times. There was this huge stadium and just two people I think in the crowd because it wasn’t allowed. 

“Another year I was there and Tamberi (Italy’s Olympic high jump gold medallist Gianmarco Tamberi) was jumping and the crowd went crazy. The Italians go crazy. There are so loud which is so nice. So, I am really looking forward to being able to compete there. I think it is a great stadium and track. It will be nice to be able to test myself also over the 400m hurdles.

“I love the warm up track with the big statues around it. There is such a nice vibe and the weather is good. I must say the Italians are also really nice. I have run a few times there and they cheer for everyone and want everyone to do their best.”

With the Paris Olympic Games later in the summer, Bol will not be tackling the 400m double over flat and the hurdles as she did two years ago. But she also welcomes the expectation on her to defend at least one of her titles. 

“I won’t do a double of 400m and 400m hurdles because that is too much right now,” she says. 

“But I think that is also nice. It gives a nice pressure. It also shows you ‘Okay I have the medal, because I have already done it once – I know how I have done it back then. I have learned from it.’ This is also something that helps, I think. A bit of pressure is never something bad.”

The full interview with Femke Bol can be heard on the European Athletics new’ Ignite podcast series due to be released on 18 April, where she talks in-depth about her life and career in the sport, Roma 2024 and the Paris Olympic Games.

The women’s 400m hurdles final will take place on Tuesday 11 June at the Stadio Olimpico.

Credit photo: Colombo/FIDAL

Communications leaders prepare for Roma 2024

With two months to go until the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships (tickets on sale here) European Athletics hosted a Communication Managers Seminar in the Italian capital. 37 Member Federations were represented at the biennial gathering.

The three days included an overview from European Athletics leaders on continent-wide communications plans, updates from the Roma 2024 Local Organising Committee (EuroRoma 2024 Foundation), presentations from external experts and networking opportunities for communications colleagues to share best practice in the modern media environment.

European Athletics Vice President and Development Commission Chair Karin Grute Movin opened the conference. 

She welcomed all the delegates, articulated the European Athletics Strategic Roadmap 2024-2027 and delivered a presentation on ‘Growing the Athletics Community,’ including the role of communications within Member Federations.

European Athletics team members Biljana Danicic (Head of Communications), Peter Sanderson (Television, Digital and Creative Consultant) and Marko Vasic (Running Unit Director) delivered presentations on European Athletics communication priorities, the ‘Road to Rome’ campaign and the ‘European Running Strategy’ respectively.

Fabio Guadagnini, Director of Communications led a team from the LOC proving an in-depth presentation on the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships spanning communication, promotion, ticketing, venue, village and medal plaza, TV, broadcast, volunteer programme and merchandising. 

The LOC also hosted a tour of the competition venue including the historic Stadio Olimpico and the marble Stadio dei Marmi which will be used as a warm-up track and form part of the race walk course.

Delegates also learned from keynote speaker Lazar Dzamic, a creative strategist and former Google ZOO Head of Brand Planning for North and Central Europe (NACE). Who introduced the digital content pillars of ‘hero’, ‘help’ and ‘hub’ for delegates planning their national communications strategies for athletics.

European Athletics strategic partner European Broadcast Union (EBU) were represented by Andreas Aristodemou, Head of Summer Sports. He presented the new direct to consumer streaming platform Eurovision Sport, its coverage of athletics in the coming year and how Membership Federations can engage audiences through the platform’s content across multiple channels.

“The EBU and European Athletics have a long standing and excellent relationship which started more than 40 years ago and it’s going from strength to strength,” said Aristodemou. “We have seen that athletics remains the number one Olympic sport. 

“The ongoing and future discussions are always interesting looking for innovations, strengthening the audiences and the development of the sport of athletics.” 

There was also a presentation by Michelle Sammet of World Athletics providing insight and analysis of social media across Member Federations across the year.

Karin Grute Movin said: “The European Athletics Strategic Roadmap 2024-27 is built around three key priorities of Competition, Digitalisation & Innovation and Community. So, communication has a fundamental role in delivering on our priorities and for Member Federations to deliver on their national objectives in an ever-evolving media landscape.

“Within the European Athletics Development Commission, our current priorities are around leadership, health & wellbeing and sustainability, and it was a valuable experience to share work with a receptive audience who can really help programmes come to life through communication in their territories.”

“It was a really fruitful gathering of expertise from inside and outside our sport to share best practice, enhance collaboration between Member Federations and meet the collective challenges around reaching and engaging all aspects of our wonderful sport to existing and new audiences,” said European Athletics Head of Communications Biljana Danicic.

“Thanks to the LOC for hosting the Communication Managers Seminar with typically warm Italian hospitality and we look forward to our whole community of communication professionals collaborating to help make Roma 2024 the big success we all know it can be.”  

Jacobs to race over 100m in Rome. And the mass race is coming

The European and Olympic 100m champion Marcell Jacobs will contest the 100m at the Rome Sprint Festival at the Stadio dei Marmi – the warm-up track for the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships from 7-12 June – on 18 May.

“On a mental level I am fine, I am very relaxed and very focused on training,” said Jacobs, “and in September I will be happy if I will confirm my two titles, the Olympic and the European one.”
 
Marcell is expected to compete in Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships on Saturday evening, 8 June, on the new Olympic Stadium track in the 100-metre final, while the 4×100 relay is scheduled for the final session on 12 June.
 
“I am happy to make my debut in Italy in Rome, a city that I love,’ Jacobs concluded, ‘and where I will move soon.”
 
Tickets and subscriptions for the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships are on sale here

Meanwhile, Italtain athletics federation (FIDAL) Technical Director Antonio La Torre appeared at the Milano Running Festival, ahead of this Sundays’s (7) Milano Marathon in a talk dedicated to Roma 2024.

“It will be great to see Jacobs again at the Stadio dei Marmi,” added La Torre. “He will be able to start breathing the atmosphere of the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships in the stadium named (after) Pietro Mennea (1980 Olympic 200m champion).” 

The talk, conducted by the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships Communications Director Fabio Guadagnini, was also attended by the Italian sprinter Roberto Rigali, a 4x100m silver medallist at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23, the Roma 1987 World Athletics Championships 3000m steeplechase gold medallist Francesco Panetta, former AC Milan footballer and running lover Massimo Ambrosini and Sky Sport Italia journalist Nicola Roggero

“Roma 2024 will be a key moment to understand what role Italy team is going to play at the Olympics Games in Paris. For athletes like Roberto Rigali, it will be a unique opportunity to compete in front of the Italian passionate fans. The technical level of the European Athletics Championships will be high, with international stars as Duplantis, Bol and Ingebrigtsen joining the competition,” commented La Torre.

Rigali is also eagerly looking for the European Athletics Championships: “I am proud to be part of this group and of the Roma 2024 generation. Our secret is that we are stronger together. In Rome we want to give our best.” 

La Torre also said that plans are in pace for a mass participation race at Roma 2024. “On the morning of the half marathon, Sunday 9 June, there will be a 10km mass race opened to all runners, amateurs and professional will run together,” he said.

All details about the course and how to register for the Roma 2024 mass race will be announced in the coming days.

“Your Sport For Life” contest opens for Italian schools and young athletes

Today is starting a new contest to encourage children to play sports, to raise their interest in health issues and to involve them in one of the most important international sporting events of the year. These are the objectives of the ‘Your Sport For Life‘, a project promoted by the EuroRoma 2024 Foundation – organiser of the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships to be held in Rome from 7 to 12 June 2024 – in collaboration with UniCredit, Official Partner of the event.

The project is supported by the National Association of Italian Municipalities (Anci), the Federation of European Capitals and Cities of Sport (ACES Europe) and the Italian Athletics Federation (FIDAL). 

The project ‘Your Sport For Life‘ is inspired by the manifesto written by European Athletics to promote the values of athletics and sports in general, such as fair play, inclusiveness and healthy lifestyle. Inspired by the European campaign, the EuroRoma 2024 Foundation has opened a contest for Italian primary schools and young athletes from amateur athletics clubs and associations affiliated to FIDAL. Participants will work together with classmates, teachers and coaches to answer the question “What is sport for you?” in a creative way.

The subject of the ‘Your Sport For Life‘ contest will be photos, drawing and video contents, which will be produced in classrooms and collected by teachers, and within athletics clubs. The term for submitting materials is 14 May and all further information is available here.

A ‘best of’ of the contents will be shown on the big screens in the Olympic Stadium during the Roma 2024 European Athletics Championships, giving the children a unique opportunity to share their ideas with the entire stadium audience. The ‘best of’ will also be featured on the Roma 2024 digital channels.  All participants in the contest will receive free entry to the stadium, which can also be extended to the sisters and brothers of the participating children, valid to attend a morning session of the European Championships, which will start on 7 June to coincide with the end of the Italian school season.

“The Roma 2024 European Championships will be a celebration for everyone, especially the youngest. With this initiative we are promoting the creativity, imagination and enthusiasm of young athletes and Italian students to storytelling sports and its values in a new way,” explains Stefano Mei, president of FIDAL and the EuroRoma 2024 Foundation.

“We are proud to be the official partner of this event, one of the most eagerly awaited in athletics, and to support the ‘Your Sport For Life’ project, which involves students, teachers and tutors from primary schools in a proactive awareness-raising and orientation action to promote sport as a healthy lifestyle in schools, families and society as a whole. We care about social sustainability in the round, starting with young people and education, and we also want to demonstrate our commitment to promoting health and well-being,” says Remo Taricani, Deputy Head of Italy at UniCredit

“Solidarity, loyalty, respect for rules and for others are the basic principles of sport. Sport at school promotes team spirit, being full citizens of our community and our country, being an active part of a healthy community. Sport is a great school for life. That is why Anci believes in the project to promote – through young people and schools – the Rome 2024 European Athletics Championships,” said Roberto Pella, Vice President of Anci

“Increasing the practice of sport to promote ‘Sport for All’, a shared value that starts with schools and children across Europe: this is the sense of ACES Europe, proud partner of the Fondazione Roma 2024 in this initiative,” said Gian Francesco Lupattelli, President of ACES Europe.

“The European Athletics Championships are an international event that brings prestige to Rome, and the Your Sport For Life project features our country’s children and their creativity: it is only natural that ACES Italia joins the event, sharing the values of sport,” added Vincenzo Lupattelli, President of ACES Italia