1988 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics

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III Ibero-American Championships
The host stadium in Mexico (shown here in 2008)
Dates22 – 24 July 1988
Host cityMexico City, Mexico
VenueEstadio Olímpico Universitario
Events40
Participation371 athletes from
20 nations
Records set26

The 1988

athletics competition between Ibero-American nations which was held in Mexico City, Mexico from 22–24 July. A total of forty events were contested, of which 22 by male and 18 by female athletes.[1]
A total of 371 athletes and 20 nations took part in the three-day competition.

All performances were set at high altitude, which aided athletes in most events (compared to performing at lower climes) with the exception of

race walk. The men's marathon race returned to the Ibero-American Championships after a break in 1986.[2]

Cuba topped the medal table for a third time, winning eighteen gold medals and 34 medals overall. The next best performing nation was Spain, which won nine events and had 28 medals. Mexico, the host nation, edged Brazil into fourth place with its tally of five golds and 19 medals, while the Brazilians had one less gold and two fewer in total.[3]

Three athletes remained undefeated at the championship, taking three straight wins:

José Alonso in the men's 400 m hurdles, Alberto Ruiz in the men's pole vault, and Ana Fidelia Quirot in the women's 400 m.[2] In the heats of the men's 100 metres Robson da Silva (who went on to win a 100/200 m double) ran a time of ten seconds flat – a new South American record time.[3]

Ana Fidelia Quirot completed a 400/800 m double.

track running and walking events, while the women also claimed the top two spots in the walks.[3]

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Robson da Silva (BRA) 10.08  Leandro Peñalver (CUB) 10.12  
Arnaldo de Oliveira
 (BRA)
10.13
200 metres  Robson da Silva (BRA) 20.05 CR  Leandro Peñalver (CUB) 20.22  
Roberto Hernández
 (CUB)
20.24
400 metres  
Roberto Hernández
 (CUB)
44.44 CR  
Gerson de Souza
 (BRA)
45.28  Jesús Malavé (VEN) 45.61
800 metres  Colomán Trabado (ESP) 1:47.16 CR  Mauricio Hernández (MEX) 1:47.38  Manuel Balmaceda (CHI) 1:47.66
1500 metres  Manuel Pancorbo (ESP) 3:52.11  Adelino Hidalgo (ESP) 3:53.10  Mauricio Hernández (MEX) 3:53.19
5000 metres  Arturo Barrios (MEX) 14:10.72  
Mauricio González
 (MEX)
14:25.78  
Antonio Serrano
 (ESP)
14:41.75
10,000 metres  Jesús Herrera (MEX) 29:51.09  Manuel Vera (MEX) 30:42.69  Franklin Tenorio (ECU) 31:50.60
110 metres hurdles  Emilio Valle (CUB) 13.71 CR  Carlos Sala (ESP) 13.80  Javier Moracho (ESP) 13.83
400 metres hurdles  
José Alonso
 (ESP)
49.20 CR  Domingo Cordero (PUR) 49.61  
Antônio Dias Ferreira
 (BRA)
50.12
3000 metres steeplechase  Martín Fiz (ESP) 9:05.21  Mauricio Fabián (MEX) 9:06.11  Germán Silva (MEX) 9:14.45
4×100 metres relay  Cuba (CUB)
Andrés Simón
Leandro Peñalver
Sergio Querol
Jaime Jefferson
38.86 CR   39.36  
Luis Barroso
39.63
4×400 metres relay  
Roberto Hernández
2:59.71 CR  Venezuela (VEN)
Charles Bodington
Aaron Phillips
Henry Aguiar
Jesús Malavé
3:04.56
NR[4]
 
Alvaro Silva
3:05.14
Marathon  Filemón López (MEX) 2:23:59 CR  Wilson Pérez (ECU) 2:24:27  Radamés González (CUB) 2:28:25
20 km walk  Carlos Mercenario (MEX) 1:21:47 CR  Ernesto Canto (MEX) 1:24:29  Daniel Plaza (ESP) 1:27:23
High jump  Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.35 m CR  Francisco Centelles (CUB) 2.31 m  Fernando Pastoriza (ARG) 2.25 m
NR
Pole vault  Alberto Ruiz (ESP) 5.30 m CR  
Javier García
 (ESP)
5.30 m CR  Efram Meléndez (PUR) 5.00 m
Long jump  Jaime Jefferson (CUB) 8.37 m CR  Ubaldo Duany (CUB) 8.18 m  Antonio Corgos (ESP) 8.08 m
Triple jump  Juan Miguel López (CUB) 16.98 m CR  Ernesto Torres (PUR) 16.84 m  Jorge da Silva (BRA) 16.81 m
Shot put  Paul Ruiz (CUB) 19.18 m  Marciso Boué (CUB) 18.98 m  Adilson Oliveira (BRA) 17.68 m
Discus throw  Luis Delís (CUB) 65.20 m  Juan Martínez (CUB) 63.72 m  José Araújo de Souza (BRA) 56.16 m
Hammer throw  Andrés Charadía (ARG) 68.46 m  Vicente Sánchez (CUB) 68.00 m  Raúl Jimeno (ESP) 67.52 m
Javelin throw  
Ramón González
 (CUB)
75.56 m  Juan de la Garza (MEX) 73.48 m  Julián Sotelo (ESP) 69.30 m

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Sandra Myers (ESP) 11.47 CR  Cristina Pérez (ESP) 11.59  Inês Ribeiro (BRA) 11.67
200 metres  Blanca Lacambra (ESP) 23.04 CR  Cristina Pérez (ESP) 23.06  Maria Magnólia Figueiredo (BRA) 23.35
400 metres  Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) 50.54 CR  
Maria Figueirêdo
 (BRA)
51.74  Blanca Lacambra (ESP) 52.16
800 metres  Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) 2:01.52  Soraya Telles (BRA) 2:02.00  Rosa Colorado (ESP) 2:03.89
1500 metres  Soraya Telles (BRA) 4:28.91  Aurora Pérez (ESP) 4:39.21  Judith McLaughlin (GUA) 4:40.43
3000 metres  Estela Estévez (ESP) 9:46.35  Martha Tenorio (ECU) 9:46.66  Ruth Jaime Campos (PER) 9:58.99
10,000 metres  Martha Tenorio (ECU) 35:33.67 CR  Martha Jiménez (MEX) 36:08.54A  Gloria Ramírez (MEX) 36:23.00
100 metres hurdles  Odalys Adams (CUB) 13.28 CR  Sandra Taváres (MEX) 13.53  Beatriz Capotosto (ARG) 13.54
400 metres hurdles  Tania Fernández (CUB) 56.73 CR  Liliana Chalá (ECU) 57.12
NR
 Maria dos Santos (BRA) 57.64
4×100 metres relay  Spain (ESP)
Sandra Myers
Cristina Pérez
Yolanda Díaz
Lourdes Valdor
44.47 CR  Mexico (MEX)
Sandra Tavárez
Alma Delia Vásquez
Alejandra Flores
Guadalupe García
45.20
NR
  45.28
4×400 metres relay  Brazil (BRA)
Rosângela de Oliveira Souza
Suzette García Montalvão
Soraya Telles
Maria Magnólia Figueiredo
3:29.22 CR  Spain (ESP)
Montserrat Pujol
Rosa Colorado
Esther Lahoz
Blanca Lacambra
3:32.54   3:32.77
Marathon  Zoila Muñoz (ECU) 3:00:42 CR  Gloria Corona (MEX) 3:05:16  Maribel Durruty (CUB) 3:08:00
10,000 m track walk  María Colín (MEX) 51:08.1 CR  Graciela Mendoza (MEX) 51:09.8  María Reyes Sobrino (ESP) 52:00.4
High jump  Silvia Costa (CUB) 1.97 m CR  Cristina Fink (MEX) 1.88 m  Dania Fernández (CUB) 1.85 m
Long jump  Madeline de Jesús (PUR) 6.96 m CR
NR
 Niurka Montalvo (CUB) 6.55 m  Sandra Myers  (ESP) 6.38 m
Shot put  
Belsis Laza
 (CUB)
17.23 m CR  Lissete Martínez (CUB) 15.93 m  Margarita Ramos (ESP) 15.51 m
Discus throw  
Bárbara Hechevarría
 (CUB)
56.34 m  Olga Gómez (CUB) 55.38 m  María Isabel Urrutia (COL) 54.22 m
Javelin throw
(old model)
 Herminia Bouza (CUB) 62.48 m  Dulce García (CUB) 61.82 m  Sueli dos Santos (BRA) 56.10 m
  •  : GBR Athletics lists Colombia's Ximena Restrepo as the joint bronze medallist in the women's 200 m.[2] However, the official results show Restrepo finished in fourth with a time of 23.46 seconds.[3]

Medal table

Robson da Silva won two sprint golds for Brazil.
Cuba's Javier Sotomayor retained his men's high jump title from 1986.

  *   Host nation (Mexico)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Cuba (CUB)1811534
2 Spain (ESP)981128
3 Mexico (MEX)*512320
4 Brazil (BRA)431017
5 Ecuador (ECU)2316
6 Puerto Rico (PUR)1214
7 Argentina (ARG)1023
8 Venezuela (VEN)0112
9 Portugal (POR)0022
10 Chile (CHI)0011
 Colombia (COL)0011
 Guatemala (GUA)0011
 Peru (PER)0011
Totals (13 entries)404040120

Participation

Of the twenty-two members of the Asociación Iberoamericana de Atletismo, twenty presented delegations for the championships. The absent nations were Bolivia and the Dominican Republic. A record high of 371 athletes participated in the championships – more than the previous two editions combined.[5] However, only 344 participating athletes (including some guest athletes) were counted by analysing the official result list.[6] The higher number probably contains coaches and/or officials registered for the event.

References

  1. CONSUDATLE
    . Retrieved on 2011-11-13.
  2. ^ a b c Ibero American Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2011-11-13.
  3. ^ a b c d El Atletismo Ibero-Americano – San Fernando 2010 Archived 2011-11-23 at the Wayback Machine. RFEA. Retrieved on 2011-11-13.
  4. ^ Relevo criollo disputa este viernes la final panamericana. Solo Deportes (2011-10-27). Retrieved on 2011-11-13.
  5. ^ El Atletismo Ibero-Americano – San Fernando 2010 Archived 2011-11-23 at the Wayback Machine (pg. 214). RFEA. Retrieved on 2012-01-08.
  6. ISBN 84-87704-77-8, archived from the original
    (PDF) on 23 November 2011, retrieved 18 March 2015
Results