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1969 European Athletics Championships

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9th European Athletics Championships
Dates16–21 September
Host cityPiraeus, Greece
VenueGeorgios Karaiskakis Stadium
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events38
Participation674 athletes from
30 nations

The 1969 European Athletics Championships were the ninth European Athletics Championships which were held from 16–21 September 1969 at the Georgios Karaiskakis Stadium in Piraeus, Greece. New at these championships were the women's 1500 metres and the women's 4×400 metres relay event. Moreover, women's 80 metres hurdles was replaced by women's 100 metres hurdles. Contemporaneous reports on the event were given in the Glasgow Herald.[clarification needed][1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

Former East German runner Jürgen May, who had defected, was not allowed to compete for his new country, West Germany, due to IAAF rules requiring him to live there for at least three years; he had competed for East Germany in the 1966 championships.[2] West German officials promptly withdrew their athletes from all individual events in protest, but decided to compete in the relay races as a symbolic gesture to show their respect for the Greek organisers.[3]

The Dutch decathlete Edward de Noorlander was disqualified for the use of amphetamine, the first disqualification for doping in athletics.[8][9]

Medal summary

[edit]

Complete results were published.[10]

Men

[edit]
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
 Valeriy Borzov (URS) 10.4  Alain Sarteur (FRA) 10.4  Philippe Clerc (SUI) 10.5
200 metres
details
 Philippe Clerc (SUI) 20.6 CR  Herman Burde (GDR) 20.9  Zenon Nowosz (POL) 20.9
400 metres
details
 Jan Werner (POL) 45.7 CR  Jean-Claude Nallet (FRA) 45.8  Stanisław Grędziński (POL) 45.8
800 metres
details
 Dieter Fromm (GDR) 1:45.9 =CR  Jozef Plachý (TCH) 1:46.2  Manfred Matuschewski (GDR) 1:46.8
1500 metres
details
 John Whetton (GBR) 3:39.4 CR  Frank Murphy (IRL) 3:39.5  Henryk Szordykowski (POL) 3:39.8
5000 metres
details
 Ian Stewart (GBR) 13:44.8  Rashid Sharafetdinov (URS) 13:45.8  Alan Blinston (GBR) 13:47.6
10,000 metres
details
 Jürgen Haase (GDR) 28:41.6  Michael Tagg (GBR) 28:43.2  Nikolay Sviridov (URS) 28:45.8
110 metres hurdles
details
 Eddy Ottoz (ITA) 13.5 CR  David Hemery (GBR) 13.7  Alan Pascoe (GBR) 13.9
400 metres hurdles
details
 Vyacheslav Skomorokhov (URS) 49.7  John Sherwood (GBR) 50.1  Andrew Todd (GBR) 50.3
3000 metres steeplechase
details
 Mikhail Zhelev (BUL) 8:25.0 CR  Aleksandr Morozov (URS) 8:25.6  Vladimir Dudin (URS) 8:26.6
4 × 100 metres relay
details
 France
Alain Sarteur
Patrick Bourbeillon
Gérard Fenouil
François St.-Gilles
38.8 CR  Soviet Union
Aleksandr Lebedev
Vladislav Sapeya
Nikolay Ivanov
Valeriy Borzov
39.3  Czechoslovakia
Ladislav Kříž
Dionys Szogedi
Jiří Kynos
Luděk Bohman
39.5
4 × 400 metres relay
details
 France
Gilles Bertould
Christian Nicolau
Jacques Carette
Jean-Claude Nallet
3:02.3 CR  Soviet Union
Yevgeniy Borisenko
Boris Savchuk
Yuriy Zorin
Aleksandr Bratchikov
3:03.0  West Germany
Horst-Rüdiger Schlöske
Ingo Röper
Gerhard Hennige
Martin Jellinghaus
3:03.1
Marathon
details
 Ron Hill (GBR) 2:16:47.8  Gaston Roelants (BEL) 2:17:22.2  Jim Alder (GBR) 2:19:05.8
20 kilometres walk
details
 Paul Nihill (GBR) 1:30:48.0  Leonida Karaiosifoglu (ROU) 1:31:06.4  Nikolay Smaga (URS) 1:31:20.2
50 kilometres walk
details
 Christoph Höhne (GDR) 4:12:32.8 CR  Peter Selzer (GDR) 4:16:09.6  Veniamin Soldatenko (URS) 4:23:04.8
High jump
details
 Valentin Gavrilov (URS) 2.17 m  Reijo Vähälä (FIN) 2.17 m  Erminio Azzaro (ITA) 2.17 m
Pole vault
details
 Wolfgang Nordwig (GDR) 5.30 m CR  Kjell Isaksson (SWE) 5.20 m  Aldo Righi (ITA) 5.10 m
Long jump
details[nb1]
 Igor Ter-Ovanesyan (URS) 8.17 m w  Lynn Davies (GBR) 8.07 m w  Tõnu Lepik (URS) 8.04 m w
Triple jump
details
 Viktor Saneyev (URS) 17.34 m [nb2]  Zoltán Cziffra (HUN) 16.85 m  Klaus Neumann (GDR) 16.68 m
Shot put
details
 Dieter Hoffmann (GDR) 20.12 m CR  Heinz-Joachim Rothenburg (GDR) 20.05 m  Hans-Peter Gies (GDR) 19.78 m
Discus throw
details
 Hartmut Losch (GDR) 61.82 m CR  Ricky Bruch (SWE) 61.08 m  Lothar Milde (GDR) 59.34 m
Hammer throw
details
 Anatoliy Bondarchuk (URS) 74.68 m (WR) CR  Romuald Klim (URS) 72.74 m  Reinhard Theimer (GDR) 72.02 m
Javelin throw
details
 Jānis Lūsis (URS) 91.52 m CR  Pauli Nevala (FIN) 89.58 m  Janusz Sidło (POL) 82.90 m
Decathlon
details
 Joachim Kirst (GDR) 8041 pts CR  Herbert Wessel (GDR) 7828 pts  Viktor Chelnikov (URS) 7801 pts
  • nb1 Max Klauß from East Germany jumped 8.00 in the final, which was a new championship record.
  • nb2 Probably wind assisted. As of statistic handbooks Viktor Saneyev's mark wasn't ratified as a new championship record.

Women

[edit]
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
 Petra Vogt (GDR) 11.6  Wilma van den Berg (NED) 11.7  Anita Neil (GBR) 11.8
200 metres
details
 Petra Vogt (GDR) 23.2  Renate Meissner (GDR) 23.3  Val Peat (GBR) 23.3
400 metres
details
 Nicole Duclos (FRA) 51.7 (WR) (51.72) CR  Colette Besson (FRA) 51.7 (WR) (51.74)  Maria Sykora (AUT) 53.0
800 metres
details
 Lillian Board (GBR) 2:01.4 CR  Anneliese Damm Olesen (DEN) 2:02.6  Vera Nikolić (YUG) 2:02.6
1500 metres
details
 Jaroslava Jehličková (TCH) 4:10.7 (WR)  Maria Gommers (NED) 4:11.9  Paola Pigni (ITA) 4:12.0
100 metres hurdles
details
 Karin Balzer (GDR) 13.29  Bärbel Podeswa (GDR) 13.68  Teresa Nowak (POL) 13.77
4 × 100 metres relay
details
 East Germany
Regina Hofer
Renate Meissner
Bärbel Podeswa
Petra Vogt
43.63 CR  West Germany
Bärbel Hohnle
Jutta Stock
Rita Jahn-Wilden
Ingrid Becker
44.09  Great Britain
Anita Neil
Denise Ramsden
Sheila Cooper
Val Peat
44.39
4 × 400 metres relay
details
 Great Britain
Rosemary Stirling
Pat Lowe
Janet Simpson
Lillian Board
3:30.8 (WR)  France
Bernadette Martin
Nicole Duclos
Eliane Jacq
Colette Besson
3:30.8 (WR)  West Germany
Christa Czekay
Antje Gleichfeld
Inge Eckhoff
Christel Frese
3:32.7
High jump
details
 Miloslava Rezková (TCH) 1.83 m =CR  Antonina Lazareva (URS) 1.83 m  Mária Mračnová (TCH) 1.83 m
Long jump
details
 Mirosława Sarna (POL) 6.49 m  Viorica Viscopoleanu (ROU) 6.45 m  Berit Berthelsen (NOR) 6.44 m
Shot put
details
 Nadezhda Chizhova (URS) 20.43 m (WR) CR  Margitta Gummel (GDR) 19.58 m  Marita Lange (GDR) 19.56 m
Discus throw
details
 Tamara Danilova (URS) 59.28 m CR  Lyudmila Muravyova (URS) 59.24 m  Karin Illgen (GDR) 58.66 m
Javelin throw
details
 Angéla Németh (HUN) 59.76 m CR  Magda Vidos (HUN) 58.80 m  Valentina Evert (URS) 56.56 m
Pentathlon
details
 Liese Prokop (AUT) 5030 pts CR  Meta Antenen (SUI) 4793 pts  Mariya Sizyakova (URS) 4773 pts

Medal table

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany (GDR)117725
2 Soviet Union (URS)97824
3 Great Britain (GBR)64717
4 France (FRA)3407
5 Czechoslovakia (TCH)2125
6 Poland (POL)2057
7 Hungary (HUN)1203
8 Switzerland (SUI)1113
9 Italy (ITA)1034
10 Austria (AUT)1012
11 Bulgaria (BUL)1001
12 Finland (FIN)0202
 Netherlands (NED)0202
 Romania (ROU)0202
 Sweden (SWE)0202
16 West Germany (FRG)0123
17 Belgium (BEL)0101
 Denmark (DEN)0101
 Ireland (IRL)0101
20 Norway (NOR)0011
 Yugoslavia (SFR Yugoslavia)0011
Totals (21 entries)383838114

Participation

[edit]

According to an unofficial count, 675 athletes from 30 countries participated in the event, one athlete more than the official number of 674 as published.[11]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Marshall, Ron (September 15, 1969), British have talent and determination to win 12 medals, Glasgow Herald, p. 5, retrieved September 5, 2014
  2. ^ a b Athletics - May struck out of West German team, Glasgow Herald, September 16, 1969, p. 25, retrieved September 5, 2014
  3. ^ a b Nihill gives Britain her first gold medal, Glasgow Herald, September 17, 1969, p. 7, retrieved September 5, 2014
  4. ^ Anita Neil gives Britain unexpected bronze medal, Glasgow Herald, September 18, 1969, p. 6, retrieved September 5, 2014
  5. ^ Majestic run by Miss Board in 800 metres final, Glasgow Herald, September 19, 1969, p. 6, retrieved September 5, 2014
  6. ^ Steward dictates tactics in searing 5000 victory, Glasgow Herald, September 20, 1969, p. 4, retrieved September 5, 2014
  7. ^ Hill's thrilling marathon win gives Britain sixth gold medal, Glasgow Herald, September 22, 1969, retrieved September 5, 2014
  8. ^ Cashmore, Ellis; Cashmore, Ernest (2002), Sports Culture: An A-Z Guide, Taylor & Francis, 2003, p. 92, ISBN 978-0-415-28555-1, retrieved 6 September 2014
  9. ^ Sport & Santé - Dopage - Les amphétamines : exemples (in French), archived from the original on 17 September 2018, retrieved 6 September 2014
  10. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 405–412, retrieved 13 August 2014
  11. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, p. 4, retrieved 13 August 2014
Results
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