Spain now has a clear first picture for the half marathon at the World Athletics Road Running Championships Copenhagen 26. On June 16, 2026, the Spanish athletics federation, RFEA, announced the pre-selection of Carla Gallardo, Marta Galimany and Said Mechaal for the long race of the World Road Running Championships, scheduled for Sunday, September 20 in Copenhagen. This is not a final race-day storyline, and it is important to use the right word: pre-selection. But it is still a meaningful running story. It says a lot about the current level of Spanish half marathon running, the growing weight of road racing on the international calendar and the way performance is built beyond one bib and one result.
The Copenhagen event will bring together the road mile, 5K and half marathon, combining elite championship racing with mass participation. World Athletics presents Copenhagen 2026 as a major urban celebration of road running. For Spain, the half marathon starts with three very different profiles: a national record-holder still moving upward, an Olympic marathoner improving after motherhood, and a fast road specialist with national-level marks over 10K and 15K.
Who Spain has pre-selected
In the women’s race, the RFEA has named Carla Gallardo and Marta Galimany. Gallardo arrives as the Spanish half marathon record-holder after running 1:08:30 in Berlin at the end of March 2026. The federation notes that she has been focusing on the roads for three years and has already raced internationally on the surface, finishing 15th over 10 km at the European Road Running Championships in Leuven.
Galimany brings a different kind of value. She is a highly experienced marathoner with Olympic, World Championship and European Championship experience. According to the RFEA, after becoming a mother in 2024 she returned to competition and improved her personal bests after turning 40, including a 1:09:22 half marathon in Malaga in mid-March. Copenhagen would be her third World Half Marathon appearance, after Cardiff 2016 and Gdynia 2020.
On the men’s side, Spain has pre-selected Said Mechaal. The federation lists him as the current Spanish 10 km road record-holder with 27:25 in 2026 and the best Spanish 15 km performer with 42:02 in 2025. His half marathon personal best is 1:01:25, set in 2025. The interesting part is the transition: Copenhagen would be his first senior international road appearance after making his senior Spain debut at the 2025 European Cross Country Championships.
Why this matters for Spanish running
The half marathon is in a strong place in Spain. That is not only because of the country’s major urban races, but also because so many everyday runners now treat 21.097 km as a true target distance. It is long enough to demand real preparation, but not as life-consuming as a marathon. A World Road Running Championships that places the half marathon at the centre reinforces that idea: the 21K is not just a stepping stone to the marathon, it is a complete event in its own right.
The Spanish pre-selection also shows variety. Gallardo represents specific progression on the roads. Galimany represents competitive maturity and reinvention. Mechaal represents the transfer of speed and endurance from shorter distances into the half marathon. For an everyday runner, that mix is more useful than a simple list of times. It reminds us that there is no single path to running a strong half marathon: it can be built from the 10K, from the marathon, from cross country or from years of consistent training.
What the RFEA criteria say
The RFEA’s specific selection circular for Copenhagen 2026 sets a demanding framework. For the half marathon, the federation’s pre-selection standards are 1:01:15 for men and 1:10:10 for women, with performances valid from October 1, 2025 to June 14, 2026. The document also makes clear that meeting the mark does not automatically guarantee pre-selection. The federation may assess performance level, health, trajectory, head-to-head results, rankings, championship results and sporting projection.
That detail matters. At elite level, selection is not only about sorting a spreadsheet by time. The RFEA states that its priority is to maximise the performance of the national team, seek the best possible classification and aim for strong individual and team results. In the half marathon, where conditions, pacing groups, energy management and late-race decisions can heavily influence the outcome, that broader approach is understandable.
The practical lesson for everyday runners
An everyday runner does not need to train like Gallardo, Galimany or Mechaal to learn from this pre-selection. The first lesson is specificity. If the goal is a half marathon, target times matter, but the process matters more: sustainable volume, threshold work, comfortable aerobic running, progressive long runs and 10K or 15K races used as checkpoints rather than weekly exams.
- If you come from the 10K, do not rush the mileage jump: keep some speed and extend the long run gradually.
- If you come from the marathon, do not turn every half marathon into a hard long run: include faster rhythm work and protect recovery.
- If you are returning from a break, watch consistency before target pace: the best plan is the one you can repeat week after week.
- If you are a masters runner, Galimany’s example is a reminder that improvement does not vanish with age, but load management becomes more important.
Copenhagen gives the race extra context
World Athletics describes Copenhagen 2026 as a championship with six world titles across the road mile, 5K and half marathon, plus up to 65,000 recreational runners taking part in the wider event. The half marathon will be held on Sunday, September 20, after the mile and 5K on Saturday. That mix of elite and mass participation is one of the defining ideas of the World Road Running Championships: it brings the world’s best road runners closer to the same streets where thousands of amateurs can also race.
For Spain, Copenhagen also carries historical context. The RFEA notes that the city hosted this championship in 2014, when Ayad Lamdassem and Alessandra Aguilar were the top Spanish finishers and both ran personal bests at the time. Twelve years later, Spain returns to the same city with a more visible road-running culture and athletes who represent very different stages of a sporting career.
What we still do not know
Precision matters here: this is a pre-selection, not a result prediction or a medal promise. Between now and September, fitness, planning, possible withdrawals, technical decisions and the depth of other national teams can all shape the final picture. Spain’s full 5K and mile selections also follow a different qualification timeline.
Even so, the news already has value. It positions Carla Gallardo, Marta Galimany and Said Mechaal as Spanish reference points for reading a World Half Marathon that will not only be an elite race, but also a mirror for thousands of runners: how progress is made, how distances are chosen, how long careers evolve and why a fast time is only one part of the story.