Alessandra Aguilar Explained

Birth Date:1978 7, df=yes
Weight:500NaN0
Sport:Athletics
Event:Marathon

Alessandra Aguilar Morán (born 1 July 1978 in Lugo) is a Spanish long-distance runner who specialises in marathon running. She represented her country in the event at the 2008 Summer Olympics and at the World Championships in Athletics the following year and then at the 2012 Summer Olympics and the World Championships following that.

Before focusing on the marathon, she competed mainly in cross country running competitions. She represented Spain at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships every year from 2000 to 2010, with the sole exception of 2007. Her best finish was twenty-fourth place at the 2009 edition.[1] She won a team gold medal with the Spanish women at the 2007 European Cross Country Championships in Toro, Spain via a seventeenth-place finish.[2] She also won a team bronze medal at the 2009 European Cross Country Championships.[3]

She has a best of 32:26 minutes for the 10K distance, set at the 2007 Great Manchester Run. At the 2008 Granollers Half Marathon she took second place behind Rahab Ndungu, running a personal best time of 1:11:33 for the distance.[4] She made her debut over the full distance at the Rotterdam Marathon that April and set a personal best of 2:29:03 to take third place.[5] She won the Hamburg Marathon title in 2009 with a time of 2:29:01, which was enough to gain her qualification into the 2009 World Championships in Athletics.[6] In the World Championship marathon she managed 25th place overall.[1] She ran at the San Silvestre Vallecana race on New Year's Eve and took fifth place just behind her compatriot Marta Domínguez.[7]

Following a win at the Venta de Baños Cross,[8] Aguilar competed for Spain at the 2010 European Athletics Championships, which was held in Barcelona, and managed seventh in the marathon – the best Spanish finisher in the race.[9] She set her sights on competing at the 2010 European Cross Country Championships in December and established herself as one of Spain's top contenders for the competition with a top five run at the Cross de Atapuerca and a win at the Cross Internacional Valle de Llodio.[10] [11] Her eighth-place finish at the European Championships was the best of the Spanish women and she led the national team to the bronze medals.[12]

She was also selected for the 2011 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, held on home turf in Punta Umbría, but finished outside the top forty while the Spanish women ended up eighth in the team competition.[13] She was in good form at the Rotterdam Marathon the following month and took fourth place and improved her best by two minutes, completing the distance in 2:27:00.[14] She represented Spain in the marathon at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics, but failed to finish the race.[15] Aguilar was suspended by the IAAF for 3 months from February 2012 to May 2012 for an unspecificed doping violation committed at a Cross Country race in Cantimpalos in December 2011.[16]

She qualified for the women's marathon at the 2012 Summer Olympics, finishing in 26th place.[17] She went on to finish 5th at the 2013 World Athletics Championships.[18]

Achievements

Representing
1999European U23 ChampionshipsGöteborg, Sweden9th5000 m16:03.75
2000World Cross Country ChampionshipsVilamoura, Portugal60th8 km race28:41
2001World Cross Country ChampionshipsVilamoura, Portugal48th8 km race30:59
UniversiadeBeijing, China6th10000 m33:31.49
2002World Cross Country ChampionshipsOstend, Belgium35th8 km race28:43
2003World Cross Country ChampionshipsLausanne, Switzerland29th8 km race28:04
2004World Cross Country ChampionshipsBrussels, Belgium47th8 km race29:52
2005World Cross Country ChampionshipsSaint-Galmier, France47th8 km race29:39
2006World Cross Country ChampionshipsFukuoka, Japan63rd8 km race28:11
2008World Cross Country ChampionshipsEdinburgh, United Kingdom35th8 km race27:13
Summer OlympicsBeijing, China54thMarathon2:39:29
2009World Cross Country ChampionshipsAmman, Jordan24th8 km race28:18
World ChampionshipsBerlin, Germany25thMarathon2:33:38
2010World Cross Country ChampionshipsBydgoszcz, Poland40th8 km race26:52
European ChampionshipsBarcelona, Spain5thMarathon2:35:04
2011World Cross Country ChampionshipsPunta Umbría, Spain42nd8 km race27:16
World ChampionshipsDaegu, South Korea-MarathonDNF
2012Summer OlympicsLondon, United Kingdom26thMarathon2:29:19
2013World ChampionshipsMoscow, Russia5thMarathon2:32:38
2014World Half Marathon ChampionshipsCopenhagen, Denmark21stHalf marathon1:10:56
European ChampionshipsZürich, Switzerland-MarathonDNF
2015World ChampionshipsBeijing, China17thMarathon
2016World Half Marathon ChampionshipsCardiff, United Kingdom-Half marathonDNF
European ChampionshipsAmsterdam, Netherlands27thHalf marathon1:13:28
Summer OlympicsRio de Janeiro, Brazil-MarathonDNF

Notes and References

  1. http://www.iaaf.org/athletes/biographies/letter=0/athcode=115481/index.html Aguilar Alessandra
  2. http://www.rfea.es/competi/2007toro/pdf/resultados.pdf 2007 European Cross Country Championships results
  3. http://www.sportresult.com/sports/la/framework/eaa2.asp?event_id=10400100000002&comp_id=47729&module=competition&show=RL&lang=en#round1310040 Results – Senior Women
  4. Valiente, Emeterio (4 February 2008). Wanjiru takes overwhelming 59:29 Half Marathon win in Granollers. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  5. van Hemert, Wim (13 April 2008). Kipsang sets 2:05:49 course record in Rotterdam. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  6. Wenig, Jorg (27 April 2009). Ethiopia’s Tsige and Spain’s Aguilar take Hamburg Marathon titles. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  7. Valiente, Emeterio (1 January 2010). Fulfilling favourite roles, Masai and Cheruiyot prevail in Madrid. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  8. Valiente, Emeterio (20 December 2010). Rotich and Aguilar nab thrilling victories in Venta de Baños. IAAF. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  9. http://www.sportresult.com/sports/la/ajax/user_files/2010/barcelona/pdf/re1450040.pdf 2010 European Athletics Championships Marathon Results
  10. Valiente, Emeterio (7 November 2010). Medhin and Dibaba outclass World champions in Atapuerca. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  11. Valiente, Emeterio (29 November 2010). Medhin and Aguilar reign in Llodio. IAAF. Retrieved on 2 December 2010.
  12. http://www.sportresult.com/sports/la/ajax/user_files/2010/albufeira/pdf/re1310040.pdf Senior Women – Results
  13. http://www.iaaf.org/wxc11/results/eventCode=4527/sex=W/discCode=XSE/combCode=hash/roundCode=f/team.html#det 2011 World XC – Official Team Results Senior Race – W
  14. van Hemert, Wim (10 April 2011). Chebet impresses with 2:05:27 victory in Rotterdam. IAAF. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
  15. http://daegu2011.iaaf.org/ResultsByEvent.aspx?/disctype=4/sex=W/discCode=MAR/combCode=hash/roundCode=f/results.html#detW_MAR_hash_f Marathon – W Final
  16. Web site: IAAF News Issue 133, 30 May 2012 . iaaf.org . International Association of Athletics Federations . 8 August 2016.
  17. Web site: London 2012 - Women's Marathon. 17 October 2014. www.olympic.org. IOC.
  18. Web site: 14th IAAF World Championships - Women's Marathon. 10 August 2013. 17 October 2014. www.iaaf.org. IAAF.