To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

2006 European Athletics Indoor Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2006 European Athletics Indoor Cup
Host cityLiévin, France
Events19
Dates5 March
Main venueStade Couvert Régional

The 2006 European Athletics Indoor Cup was held on 5 March 2006 at the Stade Couvert Régional in Liévin, France. It was the third edition of the indoor track and field meeting for international teams, which featured the six top performing nations from the 2005 European Cup and the top two from the European Cup First League. Great Britain's women's team withdrew due to the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne, while the Italian women also withdrew as the dates coincided with their indoor national championships.[1][2] The event was held a week prior to the 2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Moscow.

The competition featured nineteen athletics events ten for men and nine for women. The 400 metres race were held in a dual final format due to size constraints, with athletes' being assigned final positions through their finishing times.[1] The international team points totals were decided by their athletes' finishing positions, with each representative's performance contributing towards their national overall score. The Russian women won the competition for a third consecutive time, holding a sixteen-point margin over runners-up Poland.[3] The French men's team also repeated as champions, having won in 2004. Germany were the men's second placed team, while Spain just edged Poland into the third place spot.[4]

The competition venue is also the annual host of the Meeting Pas de Calais.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    3 251
    1 611
    360
    9 892
    1 422
  • Shot Put European Athletics Cup 1990
  • 2006 European Championships Men's 4x100m Relay
  • Erica Jarder Won the bronze medal
  • 2006 European Championships Women's Triple Jump - 3rd Anna Pyatykh
  • 1985 IAAF World Indoor Games

Transcription

Results summary

Men

Reigning world champion Ladji Doucouré won the hurdles.
Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres  Ronald Pognon (FRA) 6.65  Anatoliy Dovhal (UKR) 6.70  Dariusz Kuć (POL) 6.73
400 metres  Daniel Dąbrowski (POL) 46.62  Ruwen Faller (GER) 46.89  Aleksey Rachkovskiy (UKR) 47.01
800 metres  Juan de Dios Jurado (ESP) 1:49.50  Maurizio Bobbato (ITA) 1:50.05  René Herms (GER) 1:50.06
1500 metres  Sergio Gallardo (ESP) 3:49.77  Guillaume Éraud (FRA) 3:50.66  Vasiliy Tsikalo (UKR) 3:50.74
3000 metres  Jan Fitschen (GER) 7:58.08  Badre Din Zioini (FRA) 8:03.63  Francisco Javier Alves (ESP) 8:04.78
60 metres hurdles  Ladji Doucouré (FRA) 7.62  Mike Fenner (GER) 7.69  Olli Talsi (FIN) 7.74
Swedish relay
(800/600/400/200 m)
 Russia (RUS)
Yuriy Koldin
Dmitriy Bogdanov
Aleksandr Usov
Ivan Teplykh
4:15.93  France (FRA)
Romain Maquin
Kévin Hautcœur
Brice Panel
Idrissa M'Barke
4:16.20  Germany (GER)
Moritz Waldmann
Steffen Co
Florian Seitz
Sebastian Ernst
4:17.39
High jump  Ivan Ukhov (RUS) 2.26 m  Andrea Bettinelli (ITA) 2.26 m  Javier Bermejo (ESP) 2.26 m
Long jump  Olexiy Lukashevych (UKR) 7.88 m  Salim Sdiri (FRA) 7.85 m  Peter Rapp (GER) 7.82 m
Shot put  Tomasz Majewski (POL) 20.60 m  Ralf Bartels (GER) 20.59 m  Manuel Martínez (ESP) 20.09 m

Women

Russia's Yekaterina Volkova won the 3000 m.
Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres  Christine Arron (FRA) 7.16  Olga Khalandyreva (RUS) 7.29  Angela Moroșanu (ROM) 7.32
400 metres  Tatyana Veshkurova (RUS) 51.67  Monika Bejnar (POL) 52.45  Claudia Hoffmann (GER) 52.69
800 metres  Maria Cioncan (ROM) 2:02.21  Ewelina Sętowska (POL) 2:02.58  Svetlana Cherkasova (RUS) 2:02.78
1500 metres  Olga Komyagina (RUS) 4:10.23  Anna Jakubczak (POL) 4:13.23  Nataliya Tobias (UKR) 4:15.39
3000 metres  Yekaterina Volkova (RUS) 8:59.70  Antje Möldner (GER) 9:01.07  Tetyana Holovchenko (UKR) 9:04.88
60 metres hurdles  Susanna Kallur (SWE) 7.95  Glory Alozie (ESP) 7.99  Aurelia Trywiańska (POL) 8.00
Swedish relay
(800/600/400/200 m)
 Russia (RUS)
Irina Vashentseva
Mariya Dryakhlova
Tatyana Firova
Natalya Ivanova
4:47.48  Romania (ROM)
Mihaela Neacsu
Iuliana Popescu
Angela Moroșanu
Ionela Tîrlea-Manolache
4:49.96  Poland (POL)
Lidia Chojecka
Małgorzata Pskit
Marta Chrust-Rożej
Grażyna Prokopek
4:50.96
Pole vault  Anna Rogowska (POL) 4.80 m  Tatyana Polnova (RUS) 4.50 m  Martina Strutz (GER) 4.40 m
Triple jump  Oksana Rogova (RUS) 14.08 m  Mariana Solomon (ROM) 14.04 m  Theresa N'Zola (FRA) 13.97 m

Medal table

Key
  The host country is highlighted in lavender blue

References

Results

External links

This page was last edited on 25 March 2023, at 20:53
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.