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1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1st IAAF World Indoor Championships
DatesMarch 6–8
Host cityIndianapolis, United States
VenueHoosier Dome
Events24
Participation401 athletes from
85 nations

The 1st IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics were held in Indianapolis, United States from March 6 to March 8, 1987. The championship had previously been known as the World Indoor Games, which were held once before changing the name.

Being the second championship of its kind, there were several championship records. New championship records were set for every single women's event. There were a total number of 401 participating athletes from 85 countries.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • 1987 IAAF World Indoor Track and Field Championships - Day 1 of 2
  • 1987 IAAF World Indoor Track and Field Championships - Day 2 of 2
  • When indoor athletics goes wrong 1 - 1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships 60m hurdles final
  • 1987 IAAF World Track and Field Championships - Day 1
  • World Indoor Championships 1987 - 3000m Men

Transcription

Results

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
details
 Lee McRae (USA) 6.501
(CR)
 Mark Witherspoon (USA) 6.54  Pierfrancesco Pavoni (ITA) 6.59
200 metres
details
 Kirk Baptiste (USA) 20.73
(CR)
 Bruno Marie-Rose (FRA) 20.89  Robson da Silva (BRA) 20.92
400 metres
details
 Antonio McKay (USA) 45.98  Roberto Hernández (CUB) 46.09  Michael Franks (USA) 46.19
800 metres
details
 José Luíz Barbosa (BRA) 1:47.49  Vladimir Graudyn (URS) 1:47.68  Faouzi Lahbi (MAR) 1:47.79
1500 metres
details
 Marcus O'Sullivan (IRL) 3:39.04
(CR)
 José Manuel Abascal (ESP) 3:39.13  Han Kulker (NED) 3:39.51
3000 metres
details
 Frank O'Mara (IRL) 8.03.32  Paul Donovan (IRL) 8.03.39  Terry Brahm (USA) 8:03.92
60 metres hurdles
details
 Tonie Campbell (USA) 7.51
(CR)
 Stéphane Caristan (FRA) 7.62  Nigel Walker (GBR) 7.66
5000 metres walk
details
 Mikhail Shchennikov (URS) 18:27.79
(CR)
 Jozef Pribilinec (TCH) 18:27.80  Ernesto Canto (MEX) 18:38.71
High jump
details
 Igor Paklin (URS) 2.38
(CR)
 Hennadiy Avdyeyenko (URS) 2.38  Ján Zvara (TCH) 2.34
Pole vault
details
 Sergey Bubka (URS) 5.85
(CR)
 Earl Bell (USA) 5.80  Thierry Vigneron (FRA) 5.80
Long jump
details
 Larry Myricks (USA) 8.23
(CR)
 Paul Emordi (NGR) 8.01  Giovanni Evangelisti (ITA) 8.01
Triple jump
details
 Mike Conley (USA) 17.54
(CR)
 Oleg Protsenko (URS) 17.26  Frank Rutherford (BAH) 17.02
Shot put
details
 Ulf Timmermann (GDR) 22.24
(CR)
 Werner Günthör (SUI) 21.61  Sergey Smirnov (URS) 20.67

1 Ben Johnson of Canada originally won the 60 metres in 6.41, but was disqualified in September 1989 after admitting to using steroids between 1981 and 1988.[1]

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
details
 Nelli Fiere-Cooman (NED) 7.08
(CR)
 Aneliya Nuneva (BUL) 7.101  Angela Bailey (CAN) 7.12
200 metres
details
 Heike Drechsler (GDR) 22.27
(CR)
 Merlene Ottey-Page (JAM) 22.66  Grace Jackson (JAM) 23.21
400 metres
details
 Sabine Busch (GDR) 51.66
(CR)
 Lillie Leatherwood (USA) 52.54  Judit Forgács (HUN) 52.68
800 metres
details
 Christine Wachtel (GDR) 2:01.32
(CR)
 Gabriela Sedláková (TCH) 2:01.85  Lyubov Kiryukhina (URS) 2:01.98
1500 metres
details
 Doina Melinte (ROU) 4:05.68
(CR)
 Tatyana Samolenko (URS) 4:07.08  Svetlana Kitova (URS) 4:07.59
3000 metres
details
 Tatyana Samolenko (URS) 8:46.52
(CR)
 Olga Bondarenko (URS) 8:47.08  Maricica Puică (ROU) 8:47.92
60 metres hurdles
details
 Cornelia Oschkenat (GDR) 7.82
(CR)
 Yordanka Donkova (BUL) 7.85  Ginka Zagorcheva (BUL) 7.99
3000 metres walk
details
 Olga Krishtop (URS) 12:05.49
(CR)
 Giuliana Salce (ITA) 12:36.76  Ann Peel (CAN) 12:38.97
High jump
details
 Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.05
(CR)
 Susanne Beyer (GDR) 2.02  Emiliya Dragieva (BUL) 2.00
Long jump
details
 Heike Drechsler (GDR) 7.10
(CR)
 Helga Radtke (GDR) 6.94  Yelena Belevskaya (URS) 6.76
Shot put
details
 Natalya Lisovskaya (URS) 20.52
(CR)
 Ilona Briesenick (GDR) 20.28  Claudia Losch (FRG) 20.14

1 Angella Issajenko of Canada originally finished second in the 60 metres in 7.08, but was disqualified in September 1989 after admitting to steroid use between 1985 and 1988.[1]

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)65415
2 United States (USA)63211
3 East Germany (GDR)6309
4 Ireland (IRL)2103
5 Bulgaria (BUL)1225
6 Brazil (BRA)1012
 Netherlands (NED)1012
 Romania (ROU)1012
9 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0213
 France (FRA)0213
11 Italy (ITA)0123
12 Jamaica (JAM)0112
13 Cuba (CUB)0101
 Nigeria (NGR)0101
 Spain (ESP)0101
  Switzerland (SUI)0101
17 Canada (CAN)0022
18 Bahamas (BAH)0011
 Great Britain (GBR)0011
 Hungary (HUN)0011
 Mexico (MEX)0011
 Morocco (MAR)0011
 West Germany (FRG)0011
Totals (23 entries)24242472

Participating nations

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mark Butler (ed.), "DOPING VIOLATIONS AT IAAF WORLD INDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS", IAAF Statistics Book – World Indoor Championships SOPOT 2014 (PDF), IAAF, pp. 47–48, retrieved September 27, 2015[permanent dead link]

External links


This page was last edited on 18 February 2024, at 18:12
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