1992 European Athletics U23 Cup
International athletics championship event
I European Athletics U23 Cup | |
---|---|
Dates | 18–19 July |
Host city | Gateshead, United Kingdom Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France |
Level | U-23 |
Events | 35 (19 men, 16 women) |
The 1st European Athletics U23 Cup was held on 18–19 July 1992. The participating teams were classified in two divisions, A and B.
The competition was restricted to athletes that did not complete their 23rd birthday in 1992, i.e. born in 1970 or later (including junior athletes). This rule was interpreted differently by Bulgaria and Greece, sending also athletes born in 1969.[1]
Division A
The contest for division A took place in Gateshead, United Kingdom. The teams from the Commonwealth of Independent States and Poland were withdrawn.[1]
Team trophies
Men The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
| Women The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
|
Results
Winners and results were published.[1][2][3]
Men
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres[nb1] (wind: -3.5 m/s) | Christian Konieczny Germany | 10.92 | Andrea Amici Italy | 10.94 | Pedro Pablo Nolet Spain | 11.04 |
200 metres (wind: -2.6 m/s) | Giorgio Marras Italy | 21.17 | Alexander Lack Germany | 21.31 | Steve Gookey Great Britain | 21.31 |
400 metres | David Grindley Great Britain | 45.57 | Florian Hennig Germany | 46.90 | Thierry Jean-Charles France | 47.19 |
800 metres | Curtis Robb Great Britain | 1:49.46 | Davide Cadoni Italy | 1:49.78 | Mark Eplinius Germany | 1:49.91 |
1500 metres | Abdelkader Chékhémani France | 4:03.64 | Jörg Schneider Germany | 4:03.90 | Amos Rota Italy | 4:04.30 |
5000 metres | Francesco Bennici Italy | 13:31.79 | Carsten Eich Germany | 13:32.25 | Jon Brown Great Britain | 13:33.06 |
3000 metres steeplechase | Keith Cullen Great Britain | 8:37.74 | Kim Bauermeister Germany | 8:51.02 | Albert Casals Spain | 8:56.35 |
110 metres hurdles (wind: -1.3 m/s) | Mike Fenner Germany | 13.94 | Antti Haapakoski Finland | 13.97 | Laurent Ottoz Italy | 13.97 |
400 metres hurdles | Enzo Franciosi Italy | 50.76 | Ismo Hameenniemi Finland | 51.59 | Alain Droguet France | 51.67 |
4 × 100 metres relay[nb2] | Germany (GER) | 39.67 | Italy (ITA) | 39.96 | Spain (ESP) Frutos Feo Jose Carlos Rivas Luis Turón Pedro Pablo Nolet | 40.03 |
4 × 400 metres relay | Great Britain (GBR) David McKenzie David Greenling Mark Richardson Du'aine Ladejo | 3:01.03 | Germany (GER) | 3:07.93 | France (FRA) | 3:08.16 |
High jump | Steve Smith Great Britain | 2.25 m | Hendrik Beyer Germany | 2.25 m | Javier López-Barajas Spain | 2.15 m |
Pole vault | Tim Lobinger Germany | 5.50 m | Petri Peltoniemi Finland | 5.40 m | Gérald Baudouin France | 5.30 m |
Long jump | Georg Ackermann Germany | 7.94 m | Jean-Luc Poussin France | 7.62 m | Luca Passera Italy | 7.47 m |
Triple jump | Julian Golley Great Britain | 16.21 m | Hrvoje Verzi Germany | 16.03 m | Julio López Spain | 16.02 m |
Shot put | Markus Koistinen Finland | 18.65 m | Thorsten Herbrand Germany | 18.50 m | Matthew Simson Great Britain | 18.22 m |
Discus throw | Glen Smith Great Britain | 57.58 m | Cristian Ponton Italy | 55.08 m | Sven Schwarz Germany | 55.02 m |
Hammer throw | Jason Byrne Great Britain | 71.86 m | Karsten Kobs Germany | 70.16 m | David Chaussinand France | 69.18 m |
Javelin throw | Mika Parviainen Finland | 77.26 m | Myles Cottrell Great Britain | 71.36 m | Christian Benninger Germany | 71.36 m |
- nb1 : The 100 m event was initially won by Jason Livingston from the United Kingdom (10.72s), but he was disqualified for infringement of IAAF doping rules.
- nb2 : The 4 × 100 m relay event was initially won by the United Kingdom (39.11s), but the team was disqualified for infringement of IAAF doping rules by team member Jason Livingston.
Women
- nb3 The 400 m event was initially won by Manuela Derr from Germany (52.86s), but she was disqualified for infringement of IAAF doping rules.
- nb4 The 4 × 400 m relay event was initially won by Germany (3:32.69), but the team was disqualified for infringement of IAAF doping rules by team member Manuela Derr.
Division B
The competition for division B took place in Villeneuve-d'Ascq, France.
Team scores
Men The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
| Women The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
|
Results
Winners and results were published.[1]
Men
Women
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres (wind: -0.2 m/s) | Lucrécia Jardim Portugal | 11.44 | Petya Pendareva Bulgaria | 11.51 | Odiah Sidibé France | 11.52 |
200 metres (wind: -0.6 m/s) | Lucrécia Jardim Portugal | 23.28 | Petya Pendareva Bulgaria | 23.31 | Anita Mormand France | 23.32 |
400 metres | Francine Landre France | 52.43 | Ester Goossens Netherlands | 53.43 | Anna-Karin Svantesson Sweden | 54.15 |
800 metres | Patricia Djaté France | 2:08.08 | Susana Cabral Portugal | 2:08.92 | Marjo Piipponen Finland | 2:09.15 |
1500 metres | Malin Ewerlöf Sweden | 4:22.42 | Céline Martin France | 4:23.09 | Olga Jeleva Bulgaria | 4:23.42 |
3000 metres | Marina Bastos Portugal | 9:14.71 | Gunhild Halle Norway | 9:18.04 | H Nikkanen Finland | 9:26.13 |
100 metres hurdles (wind: -0.8 m/s) | Annette Simon France | 13.60 | Marika Salminen Finland | 13.75 | Sandra Barreiro Portugal | 13.89 |
400 metres hurdles | Frida Johansson Sweden | 56.08 | Carole Nelson France | 56.61 | Mari Bjone Norway | 58.50 |
4 × 100 metres relay | France (FRA) Anita Mormand Odiah Sidibé Florence Ropars Christine Arron | 44.54 | Bulgaria (BUL) Petya Pendareva D Petkova Desislava Dimitrova Ekaterina Tocheva | 44.89 | Netherlands (NED) Petra Huybrechtse Jacqueline Poelman Anoek van Diessen Elja den Os | 45.26 |
4 × 400 metres relay | France (FRA) Marie-Louise Bévis Nicole Hylaire F Borelys Francine Landre | 3:36.12 | Sweden (SWE) Anna-Karin Svantesson Monica Lundgren Asa Carlsson Marie Westerlund | 3:36.70 | Netherlands (NED) Ester Goossens Jorien Kranendijk Marianne de Vries Anoek van Diessen | 3:40.47 |
High jump | Desislava Aleksandrova Bulgaria | 1.87 m | Heidi Paesen Belgium | 1.85 m | Katja Kilpi Finland | 1.82 m |
Long jump | Iva Prandzheva Bulgaria | 6.62 m (wind: -1.2 m/s) | Erica Johansson Sweden | 6.58 m (wind: +1.6 m/s) | Cristina Morujão Portugal | 6.28 m (wind: +1.6 m/s) |
Triple jump | Caroline Honoré France | 13.37 m w (wind: +2.6 m/s) | Marika Salminen Finland | 13.18 m (wind: +0.2 m/s) | Lene Espegren Norway | 12.80 m w (wind: +2.2 m/s) |
Shot put | Corrie de Bruin Netherlands | 16.38 m | Marika Tuliniemi Finland | 16.12 m | Linda-Marie Mårtensson Sweden | 15.96 m |
Discus throw | Jacqueline Goormachtigh Netherlands | 58.36 m | Annika Larsson Sweden | 53.14 m | Atanaska Angelova Bulgaria | 50.50 m |
Javelin throw | Heli Rantanen Finland | 60.76 m | Nathalie Teppe France | 54.26 m | Helena Gouveia Portugal | 50.92 m |
References
- ^ a b c d "Évènement – Coupe d'Europe des moins de 23 ans – Des Françaises inspirées", L'Athlétisme (in French), 08 (N353), Fédération française d'athlétisme: 32–34, 1992, retrieved 14 October 2014
- ^ Athletics Weekly, EUROPEAN UNDER 23 CUP, Athletics Weekly, retrieved 14 October 2014
- ^ "Sport in Short: Athletics – EUROPEAN UNDER-23 CUP (Gateshead)", The Independent, 20 July 1992, archived from the original on 29 October 2014, retrieved 14 October 2014
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