Ingrid Kristiansen (née Christensen on 21 March 1956) is a Norwegian former athlete. She was one of the best female long-distance runners during the 1980s. She is a former world record holder in the 5000 metres, 10,000 metres and the marathon (at one point in time she held those records simultaneously). Kristiansen was a World Champion on the track, roads and cross-country, becoming the first athlete to win World titles on all three surfaces. At the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, she finished fourth in the first women's Olympic marathon. At the 1988 Seoul Olympics, she dropped out of the 10,000 metres final while leading. Early in her career, she was also an elite cross country skier, winning several Norwegian titles and a European junior championships.

Kristiansen's 1986 world record in the 10,000 m was not broken for 5 years. Her 1985 London Marathon 2:21:06 was the record marathon time for 13 years.

Career

Ingrid Kristiansen started her career quite unremarkably, running 2:30 to 2:40 for her first few marathons. She won the bronze medal in the 3000 metres at the 1980 World Championships in Athletics and won the 1983 Houston Marathon in 2:33:27 while two months pregnant—a fact she didn't know until two months later. It was not until she gave birth to her first son, Gaute, that her times began to improve. After winning the Houston Marathon again and the London Marathon in 1984, she placed fourth in the first Olympic women's marathon in Los Angeles. She won the Chicago Marathon, once again in hot and humid conditions, running 2:27:08. She ended the year winning the 10,000 m event at European Championships,

Achievements

{|

|-

!colspan="6"|Representing

|-

|rowspan=3|1982

|Stockholm Marathon

|Stockholm, Sweden

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:34:26

|-

|European Championships

|Athens, Greece

|bgcolor="cc9966" | 3rd

|Marathon

|2:36:38

|-

|New York City Marathon

|New York, United States

|5th

|Marathon

|2:33:36

|-

|1983

|Houston Marathon

|Houston, United States

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:33:27

|-

|rowspan=4|1984

|Houston Marathon

|Houston, United States

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:27:51

|-

|World Cross Country Championships

|New York, United States

|4th

|

|

|-

|London Marathon

|London, United Kingdom

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:24:26

|-

|Olympic Games

|Los Angeles, United States

|4th

|Marathon

|2:27:14

|-

|rowspan=3|1985

|World Cross Country Championships

|Lisbon, Portugal

|bgcolor="cc9966" | 3rd

|

|

|-

|London Marathon

|London, United Kingdom

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:21:06

|-

|Chicago Marathon

|Chicago, United States

|bgcolor="silver" | 2nd

|Marathon

|2:23:05

|-

|rowspan=3|1986

|Boston Marathon

|Boston, United States

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:24:55

|-

|European Championships

|Stuttgart, West Germany

|bgcolor=gold|1st

|10,000 m

|30:23.25

|-

|Chicago Marathon

|Chicago, United States

|bgcolor=gold|1st

|Marathon

|2:27:08

|-

|rowspan=4|1987

|World Cross Country Championships

|Warsaw, Poland

|bgcolor="cc9966" | 3rd

|

|

|-

|London Marathon

|London, United Kingdom

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:22:48

|-

|World Championships

|Rome, Italy

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|10,000 m

|31:05.85

|-

|World Road Race Championships

|Monte Carlo, Monaco

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|15 km

|47:17

|-

|rowspan=4|1988

|World Road Race Championships

|Adelaide, Australia

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|15 km

|48:24

|-

|World Cross Country Championships

|Auckland, New Zealand

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|

|

|-

|London Marathon

|London, United Kingdom

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:25:41

|-

|Olympic Games

|Seoul, South Korea

|—

|10,000 m

|DNF

|-

|rowspan=2|1989

|Boston Marathon

|Boston, United States

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:24:33

|-

|New York City Marathon

|New York, United States

|bgcolor="gold" | 1st

|Marathon

|2:25:30

|-

|1991

|World Championships

|Tokyo, Japan

|7th

|10,000 m

|32:10.75

|}

Note: The 1987 World Road Race Championship was held in November while the 1988 edition was held in March.

World Records

  • 5000 m world record with 14:58.89 in Oslo, 28 June 1984 – first woman to run under 15 minutes
  • 5000 m world record with 14:37.33 in Stockholm, 5 August 1986. This time improved the world record by over 10 seconds and stood for nearly 9 years.
  • 10,000 m world record with 30:59.42 in Oslo, 27 July 1985 – first woman to run under 31 minutes
  • 10,000 m world record with 30:13.74 in Oslo, 5 July 1986
  • Marathon world record with 2:21:06 in London, 21 April 1985 – record stood for 13 years.

Other

  • 24 individual Norwegian championships
  • 1992 Egebergs Ærespris

Personal bests

{| class="wikitable" style=" text-align:center; font-size:95%;" width="70%"

|-

! Distance

! Mark

! Date

! Location

|-

| 3,000 m || align=right | 8:34.10 || align=right | 13 August 1986 || Zürich

|-

| 5,000 m || align=right | 14:37.33 || align=right | 5 August 1986 || Stockholm

|-

| 10,000 m || align=right | 30:13.74 || align=right | 5 July 1986 || Oslo

|-

| 10 km (road) || align=right | 30:59 || align=right | 9 April 1989 || Boston

|-

| 15 km (road) || align=right | 47:17 || align=right | 21 November 1987 || Monaco

|-

| Half Marathon* || align=right | 1:06:40 || align=right | 19 March 1987 || Sandnes

|-

| Marathon || align=right | 2:21:06 || align=right | 21 April 1985 || London

|}

* Because of a measurement error this run doesn't qualify for record purposes.

Cross-country skiing results

World Championships

{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:95%; text-align:center; background:#ffffff;"

! style="background-color:#369; color:white; width:60px;"| Year 

! style="background-color:#369; color:white; width:40px;"| Age 

! style="background-color:#4180be; color:white; width:75px;"|  5 km 

! style="background-color:#4180be; color:white; width:75px;"|  10 km 

! style="background-color:#4180be; color:white; width:75px;"|  20 km 

! style="background-color:#4180be; color:white; width:75px;"| &nbsp;4&nbsp;×&nbsp;5&nbsp;km&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;relay&nbsp;

|-

| 1978 || 21 || 21 ||— || — ||—

|-

|}

References