1946 European Athletics Championships

3rd European Athletics Championships
Host city Oslo, Norway
Date(s) 22 – 25 August 1946
Main stadium Bislett Stadion
Level Senior
Type Outdoor
Participation 354 athletes from
20 nations
Events 33


Bislett stadion in Oslo, Norway, 1948

The 3rd European Athletics Championships were held from 22 August to 25 August 1946 in the Bislett Stadion in Oslo, Norway. For the first time it was a combined event for men and women, and for the first time a city in Scandinavia hosted the championships. Contemporaneous reports on the event were given in the Glasgow Herald.[1][2]

Two of the women's medalists from France underwent sex change later. Claire Brésolles became Pierre Brésolles, and Léa Caurla became Léon Caurla.[3]

Men's results

Complete results were published.[4]

Track

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
 Jack Archer (GBR)10.6  Haakon Tranberg (NOR)10.7  Carlo Monti (ITA)10.8
200 metres
 Nikolay Karakulov (URS)21.6  Haakon Tranberg (NOR)21.7  Jiří David (TCH)21.8
400 metres
 Niels Holst-Sørensen (DEN)47.9  Jacques Lunis (FRA)48.3  Derek Pugh (GBR)48.9
800 metres
 Rune Gustafsson (SWE)1:51.0  Niels Holst-Sørensen (DEN)1:51.1  Marcel Hansenne (FRA)1:51.2
1500 metres
 Lennart Strand (SWE)3:48.0 CR  Henry Eriksson (SWE)3:48.8  Erik Jørgensen (DEN)3:52.8
5000 metres
 Sydney Wooderson (GBR)14:08.6 CR  Wim Slijkhuis (NED)14:14.0  Evert Nyberg (SWE)14:23.2
10,000 metres
 Viljo Heino (FIN)29:52.0 CR  Helge Perälä (FIN)30:31.4  András Csaplár (HUN)30:35.2
Marathon
[nb]
 Mikko Hietanen (FIN)2:24:55  Väinö Muinonen (FIN)2:26:08  Yakov Puñko (URS)2:26:21
110 metres hurdles
 Håkan Lidman (SWE)14.6  Hippolyte Braekman (BEL)14.9  Väinö Suvivuo (FIN)15.0
400 metres hurdles
 Bertel Storskrubb (FIN)52.2 CR  Sixten Larsson (SWE)52.4  Rune Larsson (SWE)52.5
3000 metres steeplechase
 Raphaël Pujazon (FRA)9:01.4 CR  Erik Elmsäter (SWE)9:11.0  Tore Sjöstrand (SWE)9:14.0
10,000 metres track walk
 John Mikaelsson (SWE)46:05.2  Fritz Schwab (SUI)47:03.6  Emile Maggi (FRA)48:10.4
50 kilometres walk
 John Ljunggren (SWE)4:38:20 CR  Harry Forbes (GBR)4:42:58  Charles Megnin (GBR)4:57:04
4 × 100 metres relay
 Sweden
Stig Danielsson
Inge Nilsson
Olle Laessker
Stig Håkansson
41.5  France
Agathon Lepève
Julien Lebas
Pierre Gonon
René Valmy
42.0  Czechoslovakia
Mirko Paráček
Leopold Láznička
Miroslav Řihošek
Jiří David
42.2
4 × 400 metres relay
 France
Bernard Santona
Yves Cros
Robert Chef d’Hotel
Jacques Lunis
3:14.4  Great Britain
Ronald Ede
Derek Pugh
Bernard Elliot
Bill Roberts
3:14.5  Sweden
Folke Alnevik
Stig Lindgård
Sven-Erik Nolinge
Tore Sten
3:15.0

Field

Event Gold Silver Bronze
High jump
 Anton Bolinder (SWE)1.99  Alan Paterson (GBR)1.96  Nils Nicklén (FIN)1.93
Long jump
 Olle Laessker (SWE)7.42  Lucien Graff (SUI)7.40  Miroslav Řihošek (TCH)7.29
Pole vault
 Allan Lindberg (SWE)4.17 CR  Nikolay Ozolin (URS)4.10  Jan Bém (TCH)4.10
Triple jump
 Valdemar Rautio (FIN)15.17  Bertil Johnsson (SWE)15.15  Arne Åhman (SWE)14.96
Shot put
 Gunnar Huseby (Iceland)15.56  Dmitriy Goryainov (URS)15.25  Yrjö Lehtilä (FIN)15.23
Discus throw
 Adolfo Consolini (ITA)53.23 CR  Giuseppe Tosi (ITA)50.39  Veikko Nyquist (FIN)48.14
Javelin throw
 Lennart Atterwall (SWE)68.74  Yrjö Nikkanen (FIN)67.50  Tapio Rautavaara (FIN)66.40
Hammer throw
 Bo Ericson (SWE)56.44  Eric Johansson-Umedalen (SWE)53.54  Duncan Clark (GBR)51.32
Decathlon
 Godtfred Holmvang (NOR)6987 CR  Sergei Kuznetsov (URS)6930  Göran Waxberg (SWE)6504

Women's results

Track

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
 Yevgeniya Sechenova (URS)11.9 =CR  Winifred Jordan (GBR)12.1  Claire Bresolles (FRA)12.2
200 metres
 Yevgeniya Sechenova (URS)25.4  Winifred Jordan (GBR)25.6  Léa Caurla (FRA)25.6
80 metres hurdles
 Fanny Blankers-Koen (NED)11.8  Elene Gokieli (URS)11.9  Valentina Fokina (URS)11.9
4 × 100 metres relay
 Netherlands
Gerda van der Kade-Koudijs
Netty Witziers-Timmer
Marta Adema
Fanny Blankers-Koen
47.8  France
Léa Caurla
Anne-Marie Colchen
Claire Bresolles
Monique Drichon
48.5  Soviet Union
Yevgeniya Sechenova
Valentina Fokina
Elene Gokieli
Valentina Vasilyeva
48.7

Field

Event Gold Silver Bronze
High jump
 Anne-Marie Colchen (FRA)1.60  Aleksandra Chudina (URS)1.57  Anne Iversen (DEN)1.57
Long jump
 Gerda van der Kade-Koudijs (NED)5.67  Lidija Gaile (URS)5.67  Valentina Vasilyeva (URS)5.63
Shot put
 Tatyana Sevryukova (URS)14.16 CR  Micheline Ostermeyer (FRA)12.84  Amelia Piccinini (ITA)12.22
Discus throw
 Nina Dumbadze (URS)44.21  Ann Niesink (NED)40.46  Jadwiga Wajs (POL)39.37
Javelin throw
 Klavdiya Mayuchaya (URS)46.25 CR  Lyudmila Anokhina (URS)45.84  Johanna Koning (NED)43.24

Medals table

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Sweden 11 5 6 22
2 Soviet Union 6 7 4 17
3 Finland 4 3 5 12
4 France 3 4 4 11
5 Netherlands 3 2 1 6
6United Kingdom Britain 2 5 3 10
7 Norway 1 2 0 3
8  Denmark 1 1 2 4
 Italy 1 1 2 4
10 Iceland 1 0 0 1
11   Switzerland 0 2 0 2
12 Belgium 0 1 0 1
13 Czechoslovakia 0 0 4 4
14  Hungary 0 0 1 1
 Poland 0 0 1 1

Participation

According to an unofficial count, 354 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event, one athlete more than the official number of 353 as published.[5]

References

Results

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.