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

Nordic Race Walking Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nordic Race Walking Championships
SportRacewalking
Founded1957
CountryFinland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland

The Nordic Race Walking Championships (Norwegian: Nordisk mesterskap i kappgang) is an annual racewalking competition between athletes from the Nordic countries organised by Nordic Athletics. Established in 1957, it was a biennial competition until 2004. The events vary between road competitions and track competitions each edition. The 1975 and 1979 editions were open to non-Nordic athletes.[1]

The championships features two senior races: a men's 20 kilometres race walk and a women's 10 kilometres race walk. There are also six further age category competitions: 20 km walk for under-23 men, 10 km walk for under-23 women and under-20 men, and 5 kilometres race walk for under-20 women and both sexes under-18. A men's 50 kilometres race walk event was held at the championships until 2010. The age category events were held as the Nordic Junior Race Walking Match from 1966 to 2003, before being folded into the main championships.[2]

Editions

  • The 1959 course was short.
Year Dates Place Country Edition
1957 25 August Gothenburg Sweden 1
1959 29–30 August Pori Finland 2
1961 26–27 August Copenhagen Denmark 3
1963 24–25 August Fredrikstad Norway 4
1965 21–22 August Örebro Sweden 5
1967 9–10 September Copenhagen Denmark 6
1969 2–3 August Taivassalo Finland 7
1971 24–25 July Gothenburg Sweden 8
1973 10–11 August Fredrikstad Norway 9
1975 19–20 July Odense Denmark 10
1977 6–7 August Helsinki Finland 11
1979 8 July Härnösand Sweden 12
1981 25–26 July Sistranda Norway 13
1983 16 July Copenhagen Denmark 14
1985 7–8 September Pori Finland 15
1987 11–12 July Gimo Sweden 16
1989 28–29 April Bergen Norway 17
1992 26–27 September Copenhagen Denmark 18
1994 9–10 September Stockholm Sweden 19
1996 14–15 September Espoo Finland 20
1998 9 May Bergen Norway 21
2000 21–22 October Vallensbæk Denmark 22
2004 11 September Stockholm Sweden 23
2005 24 September Odense Denmark 24
2006 16 September Turku Finland 25
2007 8 June Strandebarm Norway 26
2008 13 September Eskilstuna Sweden 27
2009 5 September Ballerup Denmark 28
2010 4 September Tuusula Finland 29
2011 17 September Halden Norway 30
2012 15 September Eskilstuna Sweden 31
2013 Cancelled
2014 13 September Glostrup Denmark 32
2015 29 August Espoo Finland 33
2016 17 September Norway 34
2017 17 September Stockholm Sweden 35[2]

Medalists

Men's 20 km walk

Year Gold Silver Bronze
1957  Åke Söderlund (SWE) 1:36:09  Folke Zackrisson (SWE) 1:36:10  Erik Söderlund (SWE) 1:36:25
1959  Pentti Kallionpää (FIN) 1:32:42  Åke Söderlund (SWE) 1:32:46  Jan Nilsson (SWE) 1:33:39
1961  Lennart Back (SWE) 1:32:33  John Ljunggren (SWE) 1:34:07  Erik Söderlund (SWE) 1:34:44
1963  John Ljunggren (SWE) 1:34:20  Erik Söderlund (SWE) 1:35:33  Tommy Kristensen-Bjørnø (DEN) 1:36:46
1965  Göte Nygren (SWE) 1:39:11  Ole David Jensen (DEN) 1:39:59  Roine Karlsson (SWE) 1:40:38
1967  Åke Söderlund (SWE) 1:37:38  Göte Nygren (SWE) 1:39:44  Kjell Gunnarsson (SWE) 1:40:23
1969  Stefan Ingvarsson (SWE) 1:41:44  Daniel Björkgren (SWE) 1:47:12  Georg Davidsson (SWE) 1:47:30
1971  Hans Tenggren (SWE) 1:32:24t  Kåre Moen (SWE) 1:34:51t  Jan Rolstad (NOR) 1:37:24t
1973  Hans Tenggren (SWE) 1:33:06t  Ove Hemmingsson (SWE) 1:35:07t  Kjell Lund (NOR) 1:36:04t
1975  Gérard Lelièvre (FRA) 1:30:14  Jan Ornoch (POL) 1:31:17  Godfried Dejonckheere (BEL) 1:31:40
1977  Reima Salonen (FIN) 1:32:04  Bo Gustafsson (SWE) 1:32:22  Ove Hemmingsson (SWE) 1:33:55
1979  Matti Katila (FIN) 1:29:51  Leif Karlsson (SWE) 1:30:41  Alf Brandt (SWE) 1:32:40
1981  Erling Andersen (NOR) 1:29:00  Roland Nilsson (SWE) 1:29:50  Per Rasmussen (SWE) 1:31:50
1983  Bo Gustafsson (SWE) 1:21:38  Jan Staaf (SWE) 1:28:13  Per Rasmussen (SWE) 1:28:32
1985  Reima Salonen (FIN) 1:28:43  Bo Gustafsson (SWE) 1:28:48  Roland Nilsson (SWE) 1:32:24
1987  Jan Staaf (SWE) 1:28:22  Roland Nilsson (SWE) 1:28:52  Veijo Savikko (FIN) 1:29:17
1989  Erling Andersen (NOR) 1:29:25.6t  Jan Olsson (SWE) 1:29:33.3t  Pauli Pirjetä (FIN) 1:30:14.0t
1992  Valentin Kononen (FIN) 1:24:40.6t  Kari Ahonen (FIN) 1:25:42.4t  Magnus Morenius (SWE) 1:26:12.8t
1994  Valentin Kononen (FIN) 1:23:56.4t  Jani Lehtinen (FIN) 1:27:50.6t  Veijo Savikko (FIN) 1:33:39.4t
1996  Trond Nymark (NOR) 1:31:49.38t  Jacob Sørensen (DEN) 1:33:35.28t  Esa Kinnunen (FIN) 1:44:57.53t
1998  Birger Fält (SWE) 1:24:48.2t  Claus Jørgensen (DEN) 1:27:09.4t  Klaus David Jensen (DEN) 1:29:25.6t
2000  Bengt Bengtsson (SWE) 1:31:18  Erik Tysse (NOR) 1:32:17  Birger Fält (SWE) 1:33:33
2004  Bengt Bengtsson (SWE) 1:34:40.2t  Christer Svensson (SWE) 1:37:04.7t  Erling Andersen (NOR) 1:38:33.0t
2005  Trond Nymark (NOR) 1:27:59.7t  Bengt Bengtsson (SWE) 1:29:50.1t  Fredrik Svensson (SWE) 1:32:54.1t
2006[3]  Erik Tysse (NOR) 1:20:56.5  Trond Nymark (NOR) 1:27:30.9  Antti Kempas (FIN) 1:28:48.9
2007[4]  Erik Tysse (NOR) 1:22:03  Trond Nymark (NOR) 1:27:50  Jani Lehtinen (FIN) 1:37:46
2008[5]  Fredrik Svensson (SWE) 1:29:55  Christer Svensson (SWE) 1:35:17  Timo Viljanen (FIN) 1:36:28
2009[6]  Ato Ibáñez (SWE) 1:29:26.25  Fredrik Svensson (SWE) 1:35:48.74  Arne-Johan Martinsen (NOR) 1:36:10.21
2010[7]  Antti Kempas (FIN) 1:29:34.03  Timo Viljanen (FIN) 1:34:27.53  Christer Svensson (SWE) 1:35:39.99
2011[8]  Heikki Kukkonen (FIN) 1:24:07.52  Andreas Nielsen (DEN) 1:32:39.23  Timo Viljanen (FIN) 1:33:28.74
2012[9]  Erik Tysse (NOR) 1:20:39  Ato Ibáñez (SWE) 1:22:36  Andreas Gustafsson (SWE) 1:23:20
2013[10] Cancelled
2014[11]  Ato Ibáñez (SWE) 1:24:53.20  Perseus Karlström (SWE) 1:29:39.52  Matias Korpela (FIN) 1:32:54.86
2015[12]  Timo Viljanen (FIN) 1:38:39.3  Andreas Nielsen (DEN) 1:41:54.7  Christer Svensson (SWE) 1:43:05.0
2016[13]  Anders Hansson (SWE) 1:25:52  Remo Kalström (SWE) 1:34:25  Timo Viljanen (FIN) 1:38:56
2017[2]  Ato Ibáñez (SWE) 1:28:42.77  Anders Hansson (SWE) 1:29:01.68  Elmo Koivunen (FIN) 1:34:07.86

References

  1. ^ Nordic Race Walking Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-13.
  2. ^ a b c Nordic Competitions 2017. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-13.
  3. ^ Competitions 2006. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  4. ^ Competitions 2007. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  5. ^ Competitions 2008. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  6. ^ Competitions 2009. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  7. ^ Competitions 2010. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  8. ^ Competitions 2011. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  9. ^ Competitions 2012. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  10. ^ Competitions 2013. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  11. ^ Competitions 2014. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  12. ^ Competitions 2015. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  13. ^ Competitions 2016. Nordic Athletics. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
Editions
This page was last edited on 20 November 2021, at 12:02
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.