Bram Som

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Bram Som
Personal information
Full nameBram Som
Born (1980-02-20) 20 February 1980 (age 44)
Terborg, Netherlands
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight67 kg (148 lb)
Medal record
European Championships
Gold medal – first place
2006 Gothenburg
800 metres
Updated on 9 September 2009

Bram Som (born 20 February 1980, in Terborg) is a Dutch runner who specializes in the 800 metres. His personal best time of 1:43.45 minutes, achieved in August 2006 in Zürich, is also the current Dutch National Record. He missed the 2005 season, but returned in 2006 to win the national Dutch championship for the fifth time since 2000. Later that year he won the European championship.

Som participated in the 2000 Summer Olympics as well as the 2004 Summer Olympics. In 2000 he was eliminated in the first round as his time of 1:48.58 was not enough to advance. Four years later he would reach the semi-finals in which he came fifth with a time of 1:45.52.

He is currently an 800m pacemaker, as of the 2016 Diamond League.[1] He is the co-creator and operational director of Wavelight, a pacemaking tool originally designed for training and now used in some actual racing.[2]

Achievements

Som at the 2007 World Championships
Year Competition Venue Position Notes
Representing the  Netherlands
1998 World Junior Championships
Annecy, France
5th 1:48.36
1999 European Junior Championships
Riga, Latvia
3rd 1:50.96
2000 Olympic Games
Sydney, Australia
42nd (h) 1:48.58
2001 World Indoor Championships
Lisbon, Portugal
11th (sf) 1:49.34
European U23 Championships
Amsterdam, Netherlands
5th 1:47.84
World Championships
Edmonton, Canada
13th (sf) 1:47.40
2002 European Indoor Championships
Vienna, Austria
11th (h) 1:49.08
European Championships
Munich, Germany
6th 1:48.56
2003 World Indoor Championships
Birmingham, United Kingdom
5th 1:47.00
World Championships
Paris, France
10th (sf) 1:46.63
2004 World Indoor Championships
Budapest, Hungary
11th (h) 1:48.55
Olympic Games
Athens, Greece
7th (sf) 1:45.52
World Athletics Final
Monte Carlo, Monaco
3rd 1:46.33
2006
European Championships
Gothenburg, Sweden
1st. 1:46.56
World Cup
Athens, Greece
2nd
1:45.13
World Athletics Final
Stuttgart, Germany
2nd. 1:47.10
2007 World Championships
Osaka, Japan
37th (h) 1:46.81
2009 World Championships
Berlin, Germany
7th 1:45.86
2011 World Championships
Daegu, South Korea
17th (sf) 1:46.69

Personal Best times

Distance Time
100m 10.97
200m 21.56
400 m 46.55
600m 1:14.4
800m 1:43.45
1000m 2:17.01
1500m 3:42.75
10 km 31:01

References

  1. ^ http://monaco.diamondleague.com/en/programme_resultats_monaco_en/#baseFrame Archived 2016-07-16 at the Wayback Machine#/live/outputs/results/iaaf/atResults/js/mappings/discipline/disciplineRoot#DisciplineInit#Monaco2016_TIMING_ATMA08101_json##main-frame_content#/live/outputs/results/iaaf/atResults/js/mappings/discipline/run#RunSubFrame#Monaco2016_TIMING_ATMA08101_json
  2. ^ Bloom, Ben (June 23, 2023). "Want to Run a World-Record Time? Follow the Green Lights". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 June 2023.

External links

Awards
Preceded by Men's Dutch Athlete of the Year
2006
Succeeded by