1966 European Athletics Championships

8th European Athletics Championships
Dates30 August – 4 September
Host cityBudapest, Hungary
VenueNépstadion
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events36
Participation769 athletes from
30 nations

The 8th European Athletics Championships were held from 30 August to 4 September 1966 in the Nép Stadium in Budapest, Hungary. Contemporaneous reports on the event were given in the Glasgow Herald.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

A new IAAF ruling was applied for the first time making gender verification for female events mandatory. As a consequence, all women competitors were forced to have a sex check. Several of the greatest women athletes missed this year's championships, among them world record holders Iolanda Balaș (high jump) from Romania, as well as Tamara Press (shot put) and Tatyana Shchelkanova (long jump), both from the Soviet Union.[1]

Medal summary[edit]

Complete results were published.[7]

Men[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
 Wiesław Maniak (POL) 10.5  Roger Bambuck (FRA) 10.5  Claude Piquemal (FRA) 10.5
200 metres
details
 Roger Bambuck (FRA) 20.9  Marian Dudziak (POL) 21.0  Jean-Claude Nallet (FRA) 21.0
400 metres
details
 Stanisław Grędziński (POL) 46.0  Andrzej Badeński (POL) 46.2  Manfred Kinder (FRG) 46.3
800 metres
details
 Manfred Matuschewski (GDR) 1:45.9 CR  Franz-Josef Kemper (FRG) 1:46.0  Bodo Tümmler (FRG) 1:46.3
1500 metres
details
 Bodo Tümmler (FRG) 3:41.9  Michel Jazy (FRA) 3:42.2  Harald Norpoth (FRG) 3:42.4
5000 metres
details
 Michel Jazy (FRA) 13:42.8 CR  Harald Norpoth (FRG) 13:44.0  Bernd Diessner (GDR) 13:47.8
10,000 metres
details
 Jürgen Haase (GDR) 28:26.0 CR  Lajos Mecser (HUN) 28:27.0  Leonid Mikitenko (URS) 28:32.2
110 metres hurdles
details
 Eddy Ottoz (ITA) 13.7 =CR  Hinrich John (FRG) 14.0  Marcel Duriez (FRA) 14.0
400 metres hurdles
details
 Roberto Frinolli (ITA) 49.8  Gerd Lossdorfer (FRG) 50.3  Robert Poirier (FRA) 50.5
3000 metres steeplechase
details
 Viktor Kudinskiy (URS) 8:26.6 CR  Anatoliy Kuryan (URS) 8:28.0  Gaston Roelants (BEL) 8:28.0
4 × 100 metres relay
details
 France
Marc Berger
Jocelyn Delecour
Claude Piquemal
Roger Bambuck
39.4 CR  Soviet Union
Edvin Ozolin
Armin Tuyakov
Boris Savchuk
Nikolay Ivanov
39.8  West Germany
Hans-Jürgen Felsen
Gert Metz
Dieter Enderlein
Manfred Knickenberg
39.8
4 × 400 metres relay
details
 Poland
Jan Werner
Edmund Borowski
Stanisław Grędziński
Andrzej Badeński
3:04.5 CR  West Germany
Friedrich Roderfeld
Jens Ulbricht
Rolf Krusmann
Manfred Kinder
3:04.8  East Germany
Joachim Both
Günter Klann
Michael Zerbes
Wilfried Weiland
3:05.7
Marathon
details
 Jim Hogan (GBR) 2:20:04.6  Aurèle Vandendriessche (BEL) 2:21:43.6  Gyula Tóth (HUN) 2:22:02.0
20 kilometres walk
details
 Dieter Lindner (GDR) 1:29:25.0 CR  Vladimir Golubnichiy (URS) 1:30:06.0  Nikolay Smaga (URS) 1:30:18.0
50 kilometres walk
details
 Abdon Pamich (ITA) 4:18:42.0  Genhady Agapov (URS) 4:20:01.2  Oleksandr Shcherbyna (URS) 4:20:47.2
High jump
details
 Jacques Madubost (FRA) 2.12 m  Robert Sainte-Rose (FRA) 2.12 m  Valeriy Skvortsov (URS) 2.09 m
Pole vault
details
 Wolfgang Nordwig (GDR) 5.10 m CR  Christos Papanikolaou (GRE) 5.05 m  Hervé d'Encausse (FRA) 5.00 m
Long jump
details
 Lynn Davies (GBR) 7.98 m CR  Igor Ter-Ovanesyan (URS) 7.88 m  Jean Cochard (FRA) 7.88 m
Triple jump
details
 Georgi Stoykovski (BUL) 16.67 m CR  Hans-Jürgen Rückborn (GDR) 16.66 m  Henrik Kalocsai (HUN) 16.59 m
Shot put
details
 Vilmos Varjú (HUN) 19.43 m CR  Nikolay Karasev (URS) 18.82 m  Władysław Komar (POL) 18.68 m
Discus throw
details
 Detlef Thorith (GDR) 57.42 m CR  Hartmut Losch (GDR) 57.34 m  Lothar Milde (GDR) 56.80 m
Javelin throw
details
 Jānis Lūsis (URS) 84.48 m CR  Władysław Nikiciuk (POL) 81.76 m  Gergely Kulcsár (HUN) 80.54 m
Hammer throw
details
 Romuald Klim (URS) 70.02 m CR  Gyula Zsivótzky (HUN) 68.62 m  Uwe Beyer (FRG) 67.28 m
Decathlon
details
 Werner von Moltke (FRG) 7740 pts  Jörg Mattheis (FRG) 7614 pts  Horst Beyer (FRG) 7562 pts

Women[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details[nb1]
 Ewa Kłobukowska (POL) 11.5  Irena Kirszenstein (POL) 11.5  Karin Frisch (FRG) 11.8
200 metres
details
 Irena Kirszenstein (POL) 23.1 CR  Ewa Kłobukowska (POL) 23.4  Vera Popkova (URS) 23.7
400 metres
details
 Anna Chmelková (TCH) 52.9 CR  Antónia Munkácsi (HUN) 52.9  Monique Noirot (FRA) 54.0
800 metres
details
 Vera Nikolić (YUG) 2:02.8 =CR  Zsuzsa Szabóné Nagy (HUN) 2:03.1  Antje Gleichfeld (FRG) 2:03.7
80 metres hurdles
details
 Karin Balzer (GDR) 10.7  Karin Frisch (FRG) 10.7  Elzbieta Bednarek (POL) 10.7
4 × 100 metres relay
details
 Poland
Elzbieta Bednarek
Danuta Straszynska
Irena Kirszenstein
Ewa Kłobukowska
44.4 CR  West Germany
Renate Meyer
Hannelore Trabert
Karin Frisch
Jutta Stöck
44.5  Soviet Union
Vera Popkova
Valentyna Bolshova
Lyudmila Samotyosova
Renāte Lāce
44.6
High jump
details
 Taisia Chenchik (URS) 1.75 m  Ludmila Komleva (URS) 1.73 m  Jarosława Bieda (POL) 1.71 m
Long jump
details
 Irena Kirszenstein (POL) 6.55 m CR  Diana Yorgova (BUL) 6.45 m  Helga Hoffmann (FRG) 6.38 m
Shot put
details
 Nadezhda Chizhova (URS) 17.22 m  Margitta Gummel (GDR) 17.05 m  Marita Lange (GDR) 16.96 m
Discus throw
details
 Christine Spielberg (GDR) 57.76 m CR  Liesel Westermann (FRG) 57.38 m  Anita Hentschel (GDR) 56.80 m
Javelin throw
details
 Marion Lüttge (GDR) 58.74 m CR  Mihaela Peneş (ROM) 56.94 m  Valentina Popova (URS) 56.70 m
Pentathlon
details
 Valentina Tikhomirova (URS) 4787 pts  Heide Rosendahl (FRG) 4765 pts  Inge Exner (GDR) 4713 pts
  • nb1 The women's 100 metres gold medallist Ewa Kłobukowska equalled the championship record twice in qualifying, running 11.4 seconds.

Medal table[edit]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany (GDR)83617
2 Poland (POL)75315
3 Soviet Union (URS)67720
4 France (FRA)43714
5 Italy (ITA)3003
6 West Germany (FRG)210921
7 Great Britain (GBR)2002
8 Hungary (HUN)1438
9 Bulgaria (BUL)1102
10 Czechoslovakia (TCH)1001
 Yugoslavia (YUG)1001
12 Belgium (BEL)0112
13 Greece (GRE)0101
 Romania (ROU)0101
Totals (14 entries)363636108

Participation[edit]

According to an unofficial count, 770 athletes from 29 countries participated in the event, one athletes more than the official number of 769 and one country less than the official number of 30 as published.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Athletics - Top Athletes Miss European Games - Objections to Medical Test?, Glasgow Herald, August 30, 1966, p. 6, retrieved September 3, 2014
  2. ^ Athletics - Start of European Championships - East Germans Gain First Two Gold Medals, Glasgow Herald, August 31, 1966, p. 6, retrieved September 3, 2014
  3. ^ Athletics - European Gold Medal for Davies - Britain's First Success, Glasgow Herald, September 1, 1966, p. 4, retrieved September 3, 2014
  4. ^ Athletics - Tummler Beats Jazy in 1500 Metres - W. German's Tactical Race, Glasgow Herald, September 2, 1966, p. 6, retrieved September 3, 2014
  5. ^ Athletics - Another Gold Medal for East Germans - Nordwig's Pole Vault Record, Glasgow Herald, September 3, 1966, p. 4, retrieved September 3, 2014
  6. ^ Athletics - Hogan Triumphs in Marathon - Irishman Gains Britain's Second Gold Medal, Glasgow Herald, September 1966, p. 5, retrieved September 3, 2014
  7. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 397–405, retrieved 13 August 2014
  8. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, p. 4, retrieved 13 August 2014
Results

External links[edit]