Janne Holmén
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Personal information | |||||||||
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Birth name | Janne Holmén | ||||||||
Full name | Janne Sven-Åke Holmén | ||||||||
Nationality | Finnish | ||||||||
Born | (1977-09-26) 26 September 1977 (age 46) Jomala, Åland, Finland | ||||||||
Height | 1.77 m (5 ft 10 in) | ||||||||
Weight | 59 kg (130 lb; 9.3 st) | ||||||||
Sport | |||||||||
Country | ![]() | ||||||||
Sport | Running | ||||||||
Event | Marathon | ||||||||
Club | Jomala IK/IF Åland | ||||||||
Coached by | Rune Holmén | ||||||||
Retired | 3 July 2009 | ||||||||
Achievements and titles | |||||||||
Olympic finals | 2004: Marathon 22nd 2008: Marathon 19th | ||||||||
World finals | 2005: Marathon DNF 2007: Marathon 9th | ||||||||
Regional finals | 2002: Marathon ![]() 2006: Marathon 7th | ||||||||
Personal best(s) | 5000 m: 13:35.62 (2001) 10,000 m: 28:09.94 (2003) 10 km road 28:31 (2002, NR) Half marathon: 1:02:35 (2007) Marathon: 2:10:46 (2008, NR) | ||||||||
Medal record
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Janne Sven-Åke Holmén (born 26 September 1977) is a Finnish former long-distance runner.[1]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6b/Holmen_Kack_Sylta.jpg/220px-Holmen_Kack_Sylta.jpg)
Holmén's biggest achievement was winning the marathon event in the 2002 European Championships in Athletics in Munich, Germany, finishing in 2:12:14. In the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, Holmén finished in 22nd place, with the time 2:17:50. In the 2006 European Championships in Athletics in Gothenburg, Sweden, Holmén finished in seventh place with a time of 2:13:10. In the 2007 World Championships in Athletics Janne Hólmen took ninth place with time of 2:19:36. In the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China, Holmén finished in 19th place, with the time 2:14:44.
Holmén concentrated mainly on championship marathons where he generally succeeded well. His personal record time is 2:10:46, run in Rotterdam 2008. This is also the current Finnish record. He ended his athletics career in 2009 and concentrated on an academic career.
Holmén comes from a family of runners; his mother Nina was herself a European champion in 3000 metres in the 1974 European Championships, and his father Rune served as his trainer, in addition to being a former runner.[1] Holmén lives in Uppsala, Sweden,[1] with wife Laila Skah (sister of Khalid Skah) and three sons. He has converted to Islam.
Holmén has been studying at the University of Uppsala, and in 2006 he obtained a doctoral degree for his thesis Den politiska läroboken: Bilden av USA och Sovjetunionen i norska, svenska och finländska läroböcker under Kalla kriget, a study of Scandinavian school books and their portrayal of the U.S. and the Soviet Union during the Cold War.[1]
Personal bests
- 5000m 13:35.62 (Lappeenranta 15.7.2001)
- 10000m 28:09.94 (Turku 15.6.2003)
- 10 km road 28:31 (NR) (Madrid 2002)
- Half marathon 1:02:35 (Sevilla 16.12.2007)
- Marathon 2:10:46 (NR) (Rotterdam 13.4.2008)
References
- ^ a b c d Isaksson, Janne (28 June 2020). ""Eller vad säger du, Janne, ska du bli en idrottsman?" Maratonmiraklet i München – Janne Holmén visste redan som sjuåring vad han ville" ["Or what do you say, Janne, are you going to be an athlete?" The marathon miracle in Munich - Janne Holmén already knew as a seven-year-old what he wanted]. Svenska.yle.fi (in Swedish).
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)
- Janne Holmén at World Athletics
- Tilastopaja profile for Janne Holmen (in Finnish)
- v
- t
- e
- 1934:
Armas Toivonen (FIN)
- 1938:
Väinö Muinonen (FIN)
- 1946:
Mikko Hietanen (FIN)
- 1950:
Jack Holden (GBR)
- 1954:
Veikko Karvonen (FIN)
- 1958:
Sergei Popov (URS)
- 1962:
Brian Kilby (GBR)
- 1966:
Jim Hogan (GBR)
- 1969:
Ron Hill (GBR)
- 1971:
Karel Lismont (BEL)
- 1974:
Ian Thompson (GBR)
- 1978:
Leonid Moseyev (URS)
- 1982:
Gerard Nijboer (NED)
- 1986:
Gelindo Bordin (ITA)
- 1990:
Gelindo Bordin (ITA)
- 1994:
Martín Fiz (ESP)
- 1998:
Stefano Baldini (ITA)
- 2002:
Janne Holmén (FIN)
- 2006:
Stefano Baldini (ITA)
- 2010:
Viktor Röthlin (SUI)
- 2014:
Daniele Meucci (ITA)
- 2018:
Koen Naert (BEL)
- 2022:
Richard Ringer (GER)
- 2016:
Tadesse Abraham (SUI)
- 2024:
Yemaneberhan Crippa (ITA)