1962 European Athletics Championships

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
7th European Athletics Championships
Dates12 – 16 September
Host cityBelgrade, Yugoslavia
VenueJNA Stadium
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events36
Participation670 athletes from
29 nations

The 7th

IAAF council approved the use glass fibre poles for pole vaulting. As a consequence, competitors were able to use them during the meet if they wished.[6]

Medal summary

Complete results were published.[7]

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
 Claude Piquemal (FRA) 10.4  Jocelyn Delecour (FRA) 10.4  Peter Gamper (FRG) 10.4
200 metres
details
 Owe Jonsson (SWE) 20.7 CR  Marian Foik (POL) 20.8  Sergio Ottolina (ITA) 20.8
400 metres
details
 Robbie Brightwell (GBR) 45.9 CR  Manfred Kinder (FRG) 46.1  
Joachim Reske
 (FRG)
46.4
800 metres
details
 Manfred Matuschewski (GDR) 1:50.5  
Valeriy Bulyshev
 (URS)
1:51.2  
Paul Schmidt
 (FRG)
1:51.2
1500 metres
details
 Michel Jazy (FRA) 3:40.9 CR  Witold Baran (POL) 3:42.1  Tomáš Salinger (TCH) 3:42.2
5000 metres
details
 Bruce Tulloh (GBR) 14:00.6  Kazimierz Zimny (POL) 14:01.8  Pyotr Bolotnikov (URS) 14:02.6
10,000 metres
details
 Pyotr Bolotnikov (URS) 28:54.0 CR  Friedrich Janke (GDR) 29:01.6  Roy Fowler (GBR) 29:02.0
110 metres hurdles
details
 
Anatoly Mikhailov
 (URS)
13.8  Giovanni Cornacchia (ITA) 14.0  
Nikolay Berezutskiy
 (URS)
14.2
400 metres hurdles
details
 Salvatore Morale (ITA) 49.2 CR, WR  Jörg Neumann (FRG) 50.3  Helmut Janz (FRG) 50.5
3000 metres steeplechase
details
 Gaston Roelants (BEL) 8:32.6 CR  Zoltan Vamoș (ROU) 8:37.6  Nikolay Sokolov (URS) 8:40.6
4 × 100 metres relay
details
 West Germany
Klaus Ulonska
Peter Gamper
Hans-Joachim Bender
Manfred Germar
39.5 CR  Poland
Jerzy Juskowiak
Andrzej Zieliński
Zbigniew Syka
Marian Foik
39.5  
David Jones
39.8
4 × 400 metres relay
details
 
Joachim Reske
Manfred Kinder
3:05.8 CR  Great Britain
Barry Jackson
Ken Wilcock
Adrian Metcalfe
Robbie Brightwell
3:05.9  
Hans-Rüdi Bruder
3:07.0
Marathon
details
 Brian Kilby (GBR) 2:23:18.8  Aurèle Vandendriessche (BEL) 2:24:02.0  Viktor Baykov (URS) 2:24:19.8
20 kilometres walk
details
 Ken Matthews (GBR) 1:35:54.8  Hans-Georg Reimann (GDR) 1:36:14.2  
Vladimir Golubnichiy
 (URS)
1:36:37.6
50 kilometres walk
details
 Abdon Pamich (ITA) 4:19:46.6  Grigoriy Panichkin (URS) 4:24:35.6  Donald Thompson (GBR) 4:29:00.2
High jump
details
 Valeriy Brumel (URS) 2.21 m CR  Stig Pettersson (SWE) 2.13 m  Robert Shavlakadze (URS) 2.09 m
Pole vault
details
 Pentti Nikula (FIN) 4.80 m CR  Rudolf Tomášek (TCH) 4.60 m  Kauko Nyström (FIN) 4.60 m
Long jump
details[nb]
 Igor Ter-Ovanesyan (URS) 8.19 m (+3.2)
(7.87 m CR)
 Rainer Stenius (FIN) 7.85 m  Pentti Eskola (FIN) 7.85 m
Triple jump
details
 Józef Szmidt (POL) 16.55 m CR  Vladimir Goryaev (URS) 16.39 m  
Oleg Fyodoseyev
 (URS)
16.24 m
Shot put
details
 Vilmos Varjú (HUN) 19.02 m CR  Viktor Lipsnis (URS) 18.38 m  Alfred Sosgórnik (POL) 18.26 m
Discus throw
details
 
Vladimir Trusenyev
 (URS)
57.11 m CR  
Kees Koch
 (NED)
55.96 m  Lothar Milde (GDR) 55.47 m
Javelin throw
details
 Jānis Lūsis (URS) 82.04 m CR  Viktor Tsybulenko (URS) 77.92 m  Władysław Nikiciuk (POL) 77.66 m
Hammer throw
details
 Gyula Zsivótzky (HUN) 69.64 m CR  Aleksey Baltovskiy (URS) 66.93 m  Yuriy Bakarinov (URS) 66.57 m
Decathlon
details
 
Vasili Kuznetsov
 (URS)
8026 pts CR  Werner von Moltke (FRG) 8022 pts  Manfred Bock (FRG) 7835 pts
  • nb Igor Ter-Ovanesyan's championship record of 7.81 metres, set at the previous edition in 1958, was bettered by all the medalling athletes in 1962. Ter-Ovanesyan's winning jump of 8.19 metres was wind-assisted – although Finns Rainer Stenius and Pentti Eskola cleared 7.85 m, Ter-Ovanesyan's non-wind-assisted jump of 7.82 m in qualification round (13 September) and Ter-Ovanesyan's best non-wind-assisted jump of 7.87 m in final (14 September) were ratified as the new championship marks.[8]

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details[nb2]
(wind: +2.3 m/s)
 Dorothy Hyman (GBR) 11.3 w  Jutta Heine (FRG) 11.3 w  Teresa Ciepły (POL) 11.4 w
200 metres
details
 Jutta Heine (FRG) 23.5 CR  Dorothy Hyman (GBR) 23.7  
Barbara Sobotta
 (POL)
23.9
400 metres
details
 Maria Itkina (URS) 53.4 CR  Joy Grieveson (GBR) 53.9  Tilly van der Zwaard (NED) 54.4
800 metres
details
 Gerda Kraan (NED) 2:02.8 CR  
Waltraud Kaufmann
 (GDR)
2:05.0  Olga Kazi (HUN) 2:05.0
4 × 100 metres relay
details
  44.5 CR  
Martha Pensberger
Maren Collin
Jutta Heine
44.6  Great Britain
Ann Packer
Dorothy Hyman
Daphne Arden
Mary Rand
44.9
80 metres hurdles
details
 Teresa Ciepły (POL) 10.6 CR  Karin Balzer (GDR) 10.6  Maria Piątkowska (POL)
 Erika Fisch (FRG)
10.6
High jump
details
 
Iolanda Balaş
 (ROU)
1.83 m CR  Olga Gere (YUG) 1.76 m  Linda Knowles (GBR) 1.73 m
Long jump
details
 Tatyana Shchelkanova (URS) 6.36 m CR  Elżbieta Krzesińska (POL) 6.22 m  Mary Rand (GBR) 6.22 m
Shot put
details
 Tamara Press (URS) 18.55 m CR  
Renate Garisch
 (GDR)
17.17 m  Galina Zybina (URS) 16.95 m
Discus throw
details
 Tamara Press (URS) 56.91 m CR  
Doris Müller
 (GDR)
53.60 m  Jolán Kontsek (HUN) 52.82 m
Javelin throw
details
 Elvīra Ozoliņa (URS) 54.93 m  Maria Diaconescu (ROU) 52.10 m  Alevtina Shastitko (URS) 51.80 m
Pentathlon
details
 Galina Bystrova (URS) 4833 pts CR  Denise Guénard (FRA) 4735 pts  Helga Hoffmann (FRG) 4676 pts
  • nb2 The women's 100 metres silver medallist Jutta Heine bettered the championship record twice in qualifying, running 11.5, then 11.4 seconds. Both times were ratified as championship records. In the final Dorothy Hyman and Heine ran 11.3 but this was wind-assisted.[9]

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)1361029
2 Great Britain (GBR)53614
3 West Germany (FRG)35715
4 Poland (POL)35513
5 France (FRA)2204
6 Italy (ITA)2114
7 Hungary (HUN)2024
8 East Germany (GDR)1618
9 Romania (ROU)1203
10 Finland (FIN)1124
11 Netherlands (NED)1113
12 Belgium (BEL)1102
 Sweden (SWE)1102
14 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0112
15 Yugoslavia (SFR Yugoslavia)0101
16  Switzerland (SUI)0011
Totals (16 entries)363637109

Participation

According to an unofficial count, 668 athletes from 29 countries participated in the event, two athletes less than the official number of 670 as published.[10] There was a joint German team comprising athletes from both East and West Germany. Assignment to their respective country was accomplished using the database of Deutsche Gesellschaft für Leichtathletik-Dokumentation 1990 e.V.[11]

References

  1. ^ Athletics - European Games Prospects,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 12, 1962, p. 5, retrieved September 1, 2014
  2. ^ European Games - Matthews Wins Gold Medal in Walking - First Event Decided,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 13, 1962, p. 4, retrieved September 1, 2014
  3. ^ Athletics - Miss Hyman's Gold Medal in 100 Metres - European Games Success,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 14, 1962, p. 6, retrieved September 1, 2014
  4. ^ European Games - 400 Metres Gold Medal for Brightwell,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 15, 1962, p. 5, retrieved September 1, 2014
  5. ^ European Games - Marathon Gold Medal for Kilby,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 17, 1962, p. 4, retrieved September 1, 2014
  6. ^ Federation's Approval,
    Glasgow Herald
    , September 12, 1962, p. 5, retrieved September 1, 2014
  7. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF),
    European Athletics Association
    , pp. 391–397, retrieved 13 August 2014
  8. ^ Main > Men, Long Jump > European Championships Records Progression. Track and Field Brinkster. Retrieved on 2014-01-04.
  9. ^ Women, 100 m > European Championships Records Progression. Track and Field Brinkster. Retrieved on 2014-01-04.
  10. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF),
    European Athletics Association
    , p. 4, retrieved 13 August 2014
  11. ^ Ausgewählte LA-Statistiken der DGLD - deutsche Athleten/Innen: Endkampfteilnahme: OS, WM, EM (in German), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Leichtathletik-Dokumentation 1990 e.V., retrieved 30 August 2014
Results

External links