Sifan Hassan (
Oromo: Siifan Hassan; born 1 January 1993[7]) is an Ethiopian-born Dutch
middle- and
long-distance runner. She is most recognized for her versatility in running championship and world leading performances in widely disparate distances. She completed an unprecedented triple at the
2020 Tokyo Olympics, winning gold medals in both the
5,000 metres and
10,000 metres and a bronze medal for the
1,500 metres. Hassan is the only athlete in Olympic history to win medals across a middle-distance event and both long-distance races in a single Games. She is only the second woman to complete an Olympic distance double.[8][9]
Sifan Hassan was born in
Adama,
Oromia, Ethiopia and raised in the countryside of
Kersa in the
Munesa district of the
Arsi Zone of Oromia.[16][17] She was a recreational runner there. She left Ethiopia as a refugee and arrived in the
Netherlands in 2008 at age fifteen.[18][19] She began running while undertaking studies to become a nurse.[20]
Sifan (R) at the 2012 Gouden Spike meeting held in
Leiden (NL).
Affiliated with Eindhoven Atletiek,[22] Hassan entered the Eindhoven
half marathon in 2011 and won the race with a time of 77:10 minutes. She was also runner-up at two
cross country races (Sylvestercross and Mol
Lotto Cross Cup). She won those races in 2012, as well as the
3000 m at the
Leiden Gouden Spike meet.[23]
2013–2014
Sifan Hassan (L) with her silver for the 5000 m at the
2014 European Athletics Championships held in
Zürich. She won her first European senior title at the event with a 1500 m victory.
Hassan made her breakthrough in the 2013 season. She ran an
800 metres best of 2:00.86 minutes to win at the
KBC Night of Athletics and took wins in the
1500 m at the Nijmegen Global Athletics and
Golden Spike Ostrava meets. On the
2013 IAAF Diamond League circuit she was runner-up in the 1500 m at
Athletissima with a personal best of 4:03.73 minutes and was third at the
DN Galan 3000 m with a best of 8:32.53 minutes—this time ranked her the fourth-fastest runner in the world that year.[23][24]
Hassan became a Dutch citizen in November 2013, too late for competing at the
2013 World Championships, and the following month she made her first appearance for the Netherlands. At the
2013 European Cross Country Championships she won the gold medal in the under-23 category and helped the Dutch team to third in the rankings.[25] She also won the Warandeloop and
Lotto Cross Cup Brussels races that winter.[26]
At the beginning of 2014 she ran a world leading time of 8:45.32 minutes for the 3000 m at the
Weltklasse in Karlsruhe,[27] then broke the Dutch indoor record in the 1500 m with a time of 4:05.34 minutes at the
Birmingham Indoor Grand Prix.[28]
Hassan won her heat in the 1500 m in the
2016 Rio Olympics in 4:06.64 before
Faith Kipyegon. In the semifinals she placed second in 4:03.62 after
Genzebe Dibaba who won in 4:03.06. In the final Kipyegon took the Olympic gold medal with 4:08.92, Dibaba was the runner up with 4:10.27 and
Jennifer Simpson took the bronze medal in 4:10.53. Hassan placed fifth in a time of 4:11.23.[30]
On 13 July, she broke the European record for 5000 metres by finishing second at the Rabat Diamond League in 14:22.34.[31] A few days later, Hassan won the first
Millicent Fawcett Mile at the 2018
London Anniversary Games in a time of 4:14.71, the fourth-fastest result at the time.[32]
On 16 September, she broke the European record for the half marathon with a time of 65:15, winning the Copenhagen Half Marathon.[33]
2019
On 17 February, Hassan set the world record for a
5 km road race stopping the clock at 14:44 in Monaco. It has since been broken, first by
Beatrice Chepkoech, then by
Ejgayehu Taye.[34][35] The 5 km road race has been a world record event since 1 November 2017.[36] At the
Prefontaine Classic in June, she broke the European 3000 m record with a time of 8:18.49.[37]
Mile world record
Hassan races 10,000 m at the Payton Jordan Invitational in
Palo Alto, CA in 2019.
On 12 July, Hassan entered the
mile run at the
Herculis meet in
Fontvieille, Monaco.
Olha Lyakhova was the pace setter, taking the field through the first two laps (measured at the start line, not the quarter-mile splits) in 64.26 and 63.94 (2:08.20). As is typical for Hassan, she was last off the start line, but over the next 150 metres, slowly eased herself around the field on the outside into the marking position behind Lyakhova.
Gabriela DeBues-Stafford soon moved through the field in between Hassan and Lyakhova for the next lap before Hassan and
Gudaf Tsegay separated from the field as the only chasers. Between 800 and 1000 metres, Lyakhova strained to keep on pace, but Hassan and Tsegay were moving forward. After Lyakhova stepped out, the two found themselves 15 metres ahead of the pack. At 1200 metres, Hassan was looking back at her close chaser Tsegay in 3:10.13 (a 61.93 lap). Hassan accelerated, opening a 5-metre gap over the next 100 metres. Continuing at this pace, she passed 1500 metres in about 3:55. Hassan covered the last 409.344 metres in 62.20, her final time of 4:12:33 breaking
Svetlana Masterkova's almost 23-year-old
world record.[38] The athletes trailing Hassan rewrote the all-time top 25 list, with
Laura Weightman moving into position #15, DeBues-Stafford into #17, and after #5 all-time Tsegay faded into the pack she was followed by
Rababe Arafi,
Axumawit Embaye,
Winnie Nanyondo and
Ciara Mageean moving into positions #20–23.
She was the double 2019 Diamond League champion, winning both the 1500 and 5000 metres Trophies.[39]
In the 1500 m final of the
2019 Doha World Championships, Hassan defeated
Faith Kipyegon, who had returned after giving birth in previous year.The fastest women in the world over the 1500 m in 2019 (L–R): Kipyegon, Hassan and
Gudaf Tsegay.At the 2019 World Championships, Sifan Hassan completed the 1500 m/10,000 m golden double, the first such in history of global championships.
On 28 September, she became the
2019 World Champion in the 10,000 metres in her second race for that distance. Her first race at the event was in Stanford in a time of 31:18.12, just fast enough to achieve the qualifying standard for the World Championships. The winning time of 30:17.62 was the best time of the year on the track. Alina Reh (Germany) led the field after 3000 m in 9:29.69. The front runner reached the halfway point in 15:32.70.
Letesenbet Gidey finished in 30:21.23, with
Agnes Tirop (Kenya) coming in third place in 30:25.50. The second half of the run was covered in 14:45.[40] Hassan also won the 1500 metres race with a time of 3:51.95 (sixth place on the
1500 m all-time list), setting a new
championships and
European records. The second-placed finisher was Faith Kipyegon in 3:54.22, a new Kenyan national record, and the third place went to Gudaf Tsegay with 3:54.38.[41]
2020–2021
On 10 October, Hassan set a European record for the women's 10,000 metres in a time of 29:36.67, breaking the best set by Great Britain's
Paula Radcliffe in 2002 by more than 24 seconds.[42]
On 6 June 2021, she bettered her performance at the event to set a world record of 29:06.82 in
Hengelo, beating 2016 record of Ethiopian
Almaz Ayana by more than 10 seconds. Hassan lost the record two days later, however, when Ethiopia's Letesenbet Gidey achieved a time of 29:01.03 at the same stadium.[43][44]
Hassan won gold in the
5000 metres and
10,000 metres at the delayed
2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. She also won bronze in the
1500 metres. She became the only athlete ever to medal in the 1500, 5000, and 10,000 metres events at the same Olympics. Her 5000 m winning time was 14:36.79 ahead of
Hellen Obiri from Kenya with 14:38.36, while Gudaf Tsegay won a bronze medal in a time of 14:38.87. Her gold medal win made her the first Dutch woman with an Olympic athletics medal in a long-distance event. She was the first non-Kenyan or Ethiopian athlete to win the event since
Gabriela Szabo won in the
2000 Sydney Olympics.[45]
On 23 April, on her debut over the classic
marathon distance, the 30-year-old won the
London Marathon with a time of 2:18:33. She lost contact with the leaders after stopping to stretch her leg twice about 19 km into the race, and was 28 seconds behind at the 25 km mark. Despite this, Hassan caught up with the slowing lead quartet with four kilometres to go and prevailed in a sprint finish on the final straight, four seconds ahead of
Alemu Megertu. "It was really amazing. I never thought I would finish a marathon", said Hassan.[46][47]
On 3 June, just 41 days after her marathon debut, Hassan made her return to outdoor track in Hengelo, Netherlands. She competed in the 10,000 metres and the 1500 metres, winning both events; the 10,000 metres with a time of 29:37.80, and the 1500 metres in 3:58.12.
On 8 October, Sifan Hassan won the
Chicago Marathon with a time of 2:13:44.[48] This is a new course record for the Chicago Marathon as well as the second-fastest women's marathon of all time.[49]
Coach
Sifan Hassan achieved her first career breakthroughs while under the direction of Dutch national coach Honore Hoedt. Hassan decided to search for other coaching options at the end of 2016 after injuries hampered her buildup to the Rio Olympics.
In July 2018, the Nike Oregon project hired Tim Rowberry as a coach—primarily to oversee the training of Sifan Hassan and her fellow team member Yomif Kejelcha—while Salazar remained the head coach over all athletes in the Nike Oregon Project.
In October 2019 Salazar began serving a four-year ban from athletics for doping violations dating from before he started coaching Hassan. According to court rulings which upheld Salazar’s ban, there was “no evidence put before the CAS as to any effect on athletes competing at the elite level within the
Nike Oregon Project.” [52]
The aftermath of Salazar’s ban caused the Nike Oregon Project to dissolve leading Hassan and Kejelcha to form a new training group under coach Tim Rowberry.
Hassan's current coach is Tim Rowberry. After her partnership with Rowberry began in 2018, she has set new personal best times in the 1500m, 3k, 5k, 10k, half marathon, and marathon. Hassan's training partner Yomif Kejelcha remained in the group until his departure to Adidas in 2021.[53][54][55]