1976 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Junior men's race
The Junior men's race at the 1976 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held in Chepstow, Wales, at the Chepstow Racecourse on February 28, 1996. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald.[1]
Junior men's race at the 1976 IAAF World Cross Country Championships | |
---|---|
Organisers | IAAF |
Edition | 4th |
Date | February 28 |
Host city | Chepstow, Wales, UK |
Venue | Chepstow Racecourse |
Events | 1 |
Distances | 7.8 km – Junior men |
Participation | 81 athletes from 15 nations |
Complete results,[2] medallists, [3] and the results of British athletes[4] were published.
Race results
Individual
Rank | Athlete | Country | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Eric Hulst | United States | 23:53.8 | |
Thom Hunt | United States | 24:06.8 | |
Nat Muir | Scotland | 24:17 | |
4 | Thierry Watrice | France | 24:23 |
5 | Alberto Salazar | United States | 24:36 |
6 | Yahia Hadka | Morocco | 24:38 |
7 | Nick Lees | England | 24:42 |
8 | Don Moses | United States | 24:43 |
9 | Santiago Llorente | Spain | 24:45 |
10 | Harry Servranckx | Belgium | 24:46 |
11 | Marty Froelick | United States | 24:47 |
12 | José Luis González | Spain | 24:49 |
13 | Volkmar Betz | West Germany | 24:50 |
14 | Vesa Laukkanen | Finland | 24:51 |
15 | Rafael Nunez | Spain | 24:56 |
16 | Enrico Bosca | Italy | 24:58 |
17 | Abderrahmane Morceli | Algeria | 25:00 |
18 | Abdeslem Jaddor | Morocco | 25:01 |
19 | Ralph Serna | United States | 25:02 |
20 | Adrian Leek | Wales | 25:03 |
21 | Luca Consigli | Italy | 25:03 |
22 | Mike Dixon | Canada | 25:03 |
23 | Paul Roberts | Canada | 25:03 |
24 | Antonio Prieto | Spain | 25:03 |
25 | Mathias Plank | West Germany | 25:07 |
26 | Jeremy Lothian | England | 25:08 |
27 | Nigel Field | England | 25:09 |
28 | Mauro Pappacena | Italy | 25:11 |
29 | Dirk Vanderherten | Belgium | 25:12 |
30 | Harald Hudak | West Germany | 25:13 |
31 | Nick Brawn | England | 25:17 |
32 | Arturo Iacona | Italy | 25:27 |
33 | Mohamed Rajmi | Morocco | 25:27 |
34 | Markku Kantola | Finland | 25:27 |
35 | Andrew Smith | Scotland | 25:29 |
36 | Lyle Kuchmack | Canada | 25:31 |
37 | Lasse Mikkelsson | Finland | 25:32 |
38 | Francois Willems | Belgium | 25:33 |
39 | Terry Goodenough | Canada | 25:34 |
40 | José Calderón | Spain | 25:35 |
41 | Remigio della Monta | Italy | 25:36 |
42 | Kenneth McCartney | Scotland | 25:37 |
43 | Abdelrazzak Bounour | Algeria | 25:38 |
44 | Anthony Conroy | Ireland | 25:39 |
45 | Cyril Donnellan | Ireland | 25:40 |
46 | Paul Bettridge | England | 25:40 |
47 | Konrad Dobler | West Germany | 25:49 |
48 | Alan de Boeck | Belgium | 25:56 |
49 | Olivier Arnoux | France | 25:58 |
50 | Omar Arab | Morocco | 26:02 |
51 | David Carr | Wales | |
52 | Salim Atache | Algeria | |
53 | Gilles Garcia | France | |
54 | Serge Libessart | France | |
55 | David James | Wales | |
56 | Lahcene Babaci | Algeria | |
57 | David Murphy | England | |
58 | Gerhard Krippner | West Germany | |
59 | Arto Virtanen | Finland | |
60 | Francois Santmann | France | |
61 | Howard Norman | Wales | |
62 | Tom Lobsinger | Canada | |
63 | Brian McSloy | Scotland | |
64 | Ahmed Boutemdjet | Algeria | |
65 | Abdelaziz Khamel | Morocco | |
66 | Elie Aubertin | Belgium | |
67 | Alan Cummings | Wales | |
68 | Brendan Hillard | Ireland | |
69 | Charles Haskett | Scotland | |
70 | Byron Davies | Wales | |
71 | Peter Butler | Canada | |
72 | Raine Lehto | Finland | |
73 | Abdellah Ghabbi | Morocco | |
74 | Didier Combes | France | |
75 | Michael Lawther | Northern Ireland | |
76 | Axel Dietrich | West Germany | |
77 | Willy Max | Belgium | |
78 | John Maher | Ireland | |
79 | James Ross | Northern Ireland | |
80 | Ray Butler | Northern Ireland | |
81 | Eddie Patterson | Northern Ireland |
Teams
Rank | Team | Points | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States
|
16 | |||||||||||||
Spain
|
60 | |||||||||||||
England
|
91 | |||||||||||||
4 | Italy
|
97 | ||||||||||||
5 | Morocco
|
107 | ||||||||||||
6 | West Germany
|
115 | ||||||||||||
7 | Canada
|
120 | ||||||||||||
8 | Belgium
|
125 | ||||||||||||
9 | Scotland
|
143 | ||||||||||||
10 | Finland
|
144 | ||||||||||||
11 | France
|
160 | ||||||||||||
12 | Algeria
|
168 | ||||||||||||
13 | Wales
|
187 | ||||||||||||
14 | Ireland
|
235 | ||||||||||||
15 | Northern Ireland
|
315 |
- Note: Athletes in parentheses did not score for the team result
Participation
An unofficial count yields the participation of 81 athletes from 15 countries in the Junior men's race. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published.[4]
|
|
|
See also
References
- Marshall, Ron (1 March 1976), Scots are left behind in big race - When England walked off with the team awards at the first International Cross-Country Championship, in 1903 at Hamilton, a Scottish official, in writing of the trophy up for annual competition, said: "It is very handsome and I am only sorry that so far as Scotland is concerned we have probably seen the last of it for a number of years"..., Glasgow Herald, p. 17, retrieved 17 October 2013
- Magnusson, Tomas (8 September 2007), IAAF World Cross Country Championships - 7.8km CC Men - Chepstow Date: Saturday, February 28, 1976, Athchamps (archived), archived from the original on 16 October 2007, retrieved 17 October 2013CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
- IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS, Athletics Weekly, retrieved 9 October 2013
- 36th IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS - EDINBURGH 2008 - FACTS & FIGURES - GREAT BRITAIN & NORTHERN IRELAND AT THE INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY & WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS (PDF), IAAF, p. 2ff, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2013, retrieved 9 October 2013
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.