1996 European Athletics Indoor Championships

1996 European Athletics Indoor Championships

Host venue (shown during a hockey competition)
Host city Stockholm
Sweden Sweden
Date(s) 8–10 March
Main stadium Globe Arena
Participation 463 athletes from
44 nations
Events 26


The 24th European Athletics Indoor Championships were held at the Globe Arena, Stockholm, the capital city of Sweden from Friday, 8 March to Sunday, 10 March 1996.[1]

This was the first edition to feature women's pole vault.

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
 Marc Blume (GER) 6.62  Jason John (GBR) 6.64  Peter Karlsson (SWE) 6.64
200 metres
 Erik Wijmeersch (BEL) 21.04  Alexis Alexopoulos (GRE) 21.05  Torbjörn Eriksson (SWE) 21.07
400 metres
 Du'aine Ladejo (GBR) 46.12  Pierre-Marie Hilaire (FRA) 46.82  Ashraf Saber (ITA) 46.86
800 metres
 Roberto Parra (ESP) 1:47.74  Giuseppe D'Urso (ITA) 1:48.04  Wojciech Kałdowski (POL) 1:48.40
1500 metres
 Mateo Cañellas (ESP) 3:44.50  Anthony Whiteman (GBR) 3:44.78  Abdelkader Chékhémani (FRA) 3:45.96
3000 metres
 Anacleto Jiménez (ESP) 7:50.06  Christophe Impens (BEL) 7:50.19  Panayotis Papoulias (GRE) 7:50.80
60 metres hurdles
 Igors Kazanovs (LAT) 7.59  Guntis Peders (LAT) 7.65  Jonathan Nsenga (BEL) 7.66
High jump
 Dragutin Topić (YUG) 2.35  Leonid Pumalainen (RUS) 2.33  Steinar Hoen (NOR) 2.31
Pole vault
 Dmitriy Markov (BLR) 5.85  Viktor Chistyakov (RUS) 5.80  Pyotr Bochkaryov (RUS) 5.80
Long jump
 Mattias Sunneborn (SWE) 8.06  Bogdan Tarus (ROM) 8.03  Spyridon Vasdekis (GRE) 8.03
Triple jump
 Māris Bružiks (LAT) 16.97  Francis Agyepong (GBR) 16.93  Armen Martirosyan (ARM) 16.74
Shot put
 Paolo Dal Soglio (ITA) 20.50  Dirk Urban (GER) 20.04  Oliver-Sven Buder (GER) 19.91
Heptathlon
 Erki Nool (EST) 6188  Tomáš Dvořák (CZE) 6114  Jón Arnar Magnússon (ISL) 6069

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
 Ekaterini Thanou (GRE) 7.15  Odiah Sidibé (FRA) 7.15  Jerneja Perc (SLO) 7.28
200 metres
 Sandra Myers (ESP) 23.15  Erika Suchovská (CZE) 23.16  Zlatka Georgieva (BUL) 23.40
400 metres
 Grit Breuer (GER) 50.81  Olga Kotlyarova (RUS) 51.70  Tatyana Chebykina (RUS) 51.71
800 metres
 Patricia Djaté (FRA) 2:01.71  Stella Jongmans (NED) 2:01.88  Svetlana Masterkova (RUS) 2:02.61
1500 metres
 Carla Sacramento (POR) 4:08.95  Yekaterina Podkopayeva (RUS) 4:09.65  Małgorzata Rydz (POL) 4:10.50
3000 metres
 Fernanda Ribeiro (POR) 8:39.48  Sara Wedlund (SWE) 8:50.32  Marta Domínguez (ESP) 8:53.34
60 metres hurdles
 Patricia Girard-Léno (FRA) 7.89  Brigita Bukovec (SLO) 7.90  Monique Tourret (FRA) 8.09
High jump
 Alina Astafei (GER) 1.98  Níki Bakogiánni (GRE) 1.96  Olga Bolşova (MDA) 1.94 NR
Pole vault
 Vala Flosadóttir (ISL) 4.16  Christine Adams (GER) 4.05  Gabriela Mihalcea (ROM) 4.05
Long jump
 Renata Nielsen (DEN) 6.76  Yelena Sinchukova (RUS) 6.75  Claudia Gerhardt (GER) 6.74
Triple jump
 Iva Prandzheva (BUL) 14.54  Šárka Kašpárková (CZE) 14.50  Ólga Vasdéki (GRE) 14.30
Shot put
 Astrid Kumbernuss (GER) 19.79  Irina Khudoroshkina (RUS) 19.07  Valentina Fedyushina (UKR) 18.90
Pentathlon
 Yelena Lebedenko (RUS) 4685  Urszula Włodarczyk (POL) 4597  Irina Vostrikova (RUS) 4545

Medal table

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Germany 4 2 2 8
2  Spain 4 0 1 5
3  France 2 2 2 6
4  Latvia 2 1 0 3
5  Portugal 2 0 0 2
6  Russia 1 6 4 11
7  United Kingdom 1 3 0 4
8  Greece 1 2 3 6
9  Sweden 1 1 2 4
10  Belgium 1 1 1 3
 Italy 1 1 1 3
12  Bulgaria 1 0 1 2
 Iceland 1 0 1 2
14  Belarus 1 0 0 1
 Denmark 1 0 0 1
 Estonia 1 0 0 1
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FR Yugoslavia 1 0 0 1
18  Czech Republic 0 3 0 3
19  Poland 0 1 2 3
21  Romania 0 1 1 2
 Slovenia 0 1 1 2
22  Netherlands 0 1 0 1
23  Armenia 0 0 1 1
 Moldova 0 0 1 1
 Norway 0 0 1 1
 Ukraine 0 0 1 1

Participating nations

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.