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1990 European Athletics Championships – Men's 5000 metres

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

These are the official results of the Men's 5,000 metres event at the 1990 European Championships in Split, Yugoslavia, held at Stadion Poljud on 30 August and 1 September 1990.[1]

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  • 1990 European Athletics Championships Men's 5000m final
  • 1990 European Athletics Championships Men's 4x400m final
  • 1990 European Athletics Championships Men's 3000m steeplechase final
  • 1990 European Athletics Championships Men's 4x100m final
  • 1990 European Athletics Championships Men's 1500m final

Transcription

Medalists

Gold Salvatore Antibo
 Italy
Silver Gary Staines
 United Kingdom
Bronze Sławomir Majusiak
 Poland

Results

Final

1 September Italy's Salvatore Antibo, who was the strongest pre-race favourite to win also this final, having taken the 10,000-metre European title with a solo run, fell at the start, and therefore had to run faster than the other runners for the first 700 metres, in order to catch them. Portugal's Domingos Castro first led the race, but soon thereafter France's Cyrille Laventure took the lead. Laventure was still leading the race at 3,000 metres in 8:09.15, and at 4,000 metres in 10:53.34. Despite the moderate pace, almost all runners were still in the lead group at this point. On the second last back straight, Castro accelerated past Laventure into the lead, and the main group's runners started to string out. Castro was still leading the race at 4,600 metres, in an informal time of 12:26.2 or 12:26.3. Antibo, Britain's Gary Staines, Poland's Slawomir Majusiak, Laventure, and Finland's Risto Ulmala were chasing Castro. On the final back straight, Staines tried to sprint past Antibo, who accelerated into the lead, leaving Castro behind. At the start of the final bend, Staines sprinted past Antibo. In the second half of the bend, however, Antibo furiously kicked past Staines. Some metres behind the leading duo, Majusiak accelerated past the fading Castro. Several metres behind the second pair of runners, Sweden's Jonny Danielsson passed Ulmala. Despite celebrating his victory in the final metres, Antibo defeated Staines by almost half a second, while Majusiak secured the bronze medal. Danielsson ran the home straight several metres faster than the exhausted Castro, but he still lost to the tiny Portuguese runner by under 0.2 seconds. (The Big European Championships Book / Suuri EM-kirja (Finland, c. 1990); https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8P_fSAPbYgM Salvatore Antibo vince i 5.000 a Spalato 90.)

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Salvatore Antibo  Italy 13:22.00
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Gary Staines  United Kingdom 13:22.45
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Sławomir Majusiak  Poland 13:22.92
4 Dionísio Castro  Portugal 13:23.99
5 Jonny Danielson  Sweden 13:24.16
6 Risto Ulmala  Finland 13:25.08
7 Stefano Mei  Italy 13:27.13
8 Harri Hänninen  Finland 13:28.22
9 Cyrille Laventure  France 13:28.25
10 Carlos Monteiro  Portugal 13:30.19
11 Abel Antón  Spain 13:31.27
12 Ian Hamer  United Kingdom 13:32.61
13 Eamonn Martin  United Kingdom 13:34.62
14 Arnold Mächler   Switzerland 13:45.01
Marcus O'Sullivan  Ireland DNF

Heats

30 August

Heat 1

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1 Sławomir Majusiak  Poland 13:40.12 Q
2 Salvatore Antibo  Italy 13:40.14 Q
3 Risto Ulmala  Finland 13:41.81 Q
4 Ian Hamer  United Kingdom 13:42.46 Q
5 Marcus O'Sullivan  Ireland 13:45.74 Q
6 Mikhail Dasko  Soviet Union 13:47.04
7 Thierry Pantel  France 13:48.80
8 Vincent Rousseau  Belgium 13:53.90
9 António Leitão  Portugal 13:54.38
10 Renato Gotti  Italy 14:05.30
11 Pascal Thiébaut  France 14:07.13
12 Steffen Brand  West Germany 14:12.84
13 Marcel Versteeg  Netherlands 14:22.42
14 Gerald De Gaetano  Malta 14:39.00
15 Are Nakkim  Norway 14:42.16
Martín Fiz  Spain DNF
Romeo Živko  Yugoslavia DNF

Heat 2

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1 Gary Staines  United Kingdom 13:29.00 Q
2 Dionísio Castro  Portugal 13:29.03 Q
3 Arnold Mächler   Switzerland 13:29.09 Q
4 Carlos Monteiro  Portugal 13:29.16 Q
5 Stefano Mei  Italy 13:29.49 Q
6 Cyrille Laventure  France 13:29.58 q
7 Eamonn Martin  United Kingdom 13:29.62 q
8 Jonny Danielson  Sweden 13:29.65 q
9 Abel Antón  Spain 13:29.81 q
10 Harri Hänninen  Finland 13:30.05 q
11 John Halvorsen  Norway 13:35.58
12 Evgeni Ignatov  Bulgaria 13:37.51
13 Antonio Serrano  Spain 13:42.03
14 Zeki Öztürk  Turkey 13:44.55
15 Frank O'Mara  Ireland 13:59.44

Participation

According to an unofficial count, 32 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.

See also

References

  1. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 451–460, retrieved 13 August 2014
This page was last edited on 3 April 2024, at 15:15
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