1979 World Masters Athletics Championships | |
Size: | 240 |
Stadium: | Niedersachsenstadion |
Host City: | Hannover, Germany |
Dates: | 27 July - 2 August, 1979 |
Level: | Masters |
Type: | Outdoor |
Athletes Participating: | 3126 |
Nations Participating: | 42[1] |
Previous: | 1977 |
Next: | 1981 |
52.3601°N 9.7312°W1979 World Masters Athletics Championships is the third in a series of World Masters Athletics Outdoor Championships (called World Veterans Championships at the time) that took place in Hannover, Germany, from 27 July to 2 August 1979.[1]
The main venue was Niedersachsenstadion (English: Lower Saxony Stadium), which featured a new Olympic-style electronic scoreboard.This stadium has since been rebuilt several times, most extensively in 2003/04. Cross Country was held at Sportpark Hannover (German: Mehrkampfanlage) in Galgenberg.
This edition of masters athletics Championships had a minimum age limit of 35 years for women and 40 years for men.
The governing body of this series is World Association of Veteran Athletes (WAVA). WAVA was formed during meeting at the inaugural edition of this series at Toronto in 1975, then officially founded during the second edition in 1977, then renamed as World Masters Athletics (WMA) at the Brisbane Championships in 2001.[2] [3]
This Championships was organized by WAVA in coordination with a Local Organising Committee (LOC) of German Athletics Association (German: Deutscher Leichtathletik-Verband, DLV) and K. Wilhelm Köster.[1]
In addition to a full range of track and field events,[4] [5] non-stadia events included 10K Cross Country, 10K Race Walk (women), 20K Race Walk (men), and Marathon.
In 1976, the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF) had expelled the Amateur Athletic Union of South Africa due to the apartheid policy of the South African government at that time,[6] though the WAVA constitution was written in 1977 to be independent of IAAF,[7] stating that
Citing the fact that South Africa had been excluded from the Summer Olympic Games since 1968, DLV meet organizers initially planned to ban South African athletes. After much discussion, a compromise was reached to allow athletes to compete under the flag of Rhodesia .
Past Championships results are archived at WMA.[8] Additional archives are available from Museum of Masters Track & Field[9] as a pdf book,[10] as a searchable pdf,[11] and in pdf newsletters from National Masters News.[12] [13] [14]
Selected winners are archived at Athletics Weekly for women[15] and for men.[2]
Rare photographs of the blind sprinter Fritz Assmy in competition were included in newspaper clippings from the Museum of Masters Track & Field pdf book, guided by his son-in-law Klaus Hinrichsen in lane 8.[10] [13] Assmy won the M60 100m, 200m, and 400m sprints, anchored the German M60 4 x 100 relay team to gold in a Championships Record time of 50.32, and anchored the German M60 4 x 400 relay team to 4th place.[12]
Several masters world records were set at this Championships. John Gilmour broke 4 world records by himself.[16] World records for 1979 are from the list of new records in the Museum of Masters Track & Field searchable pdf[11] unless otherwise noted.
Event | Athlete(s) | Nationality | Performance | |
---|---|---|---|---|
W50 200 Meters | Maeve Kyle | |||
W45 80 Meters Hurdles | Colleen Mills | |||
W35 High Jump | Christel Voss | |||
W55 High Jump | Vlasta Chlumská | |||
W35 Long Jump | Dorit Breul | |||
W50 Long Jump | Maeve Kyle | |||
W55 Long Jump | Ilse Pleuger | |||
W65 Long Jump | Helga Mitschke | |||
W35 Pentathlon | Christel Voss |
Event | Athlete(s) | Nationality | Performance | |
---|---|---|---|---|
M40 100 Meters | Karl Heinz Schröder | |||
M45 100 Meters | Lloyd Riddick | |||
M70 100 Meters | Frederick Reid | [17] | ||
M50 200 Meters | Clifford Mc Pherson | |||
M65 200 Meters | Yngve Brange | |||
M70 200 Meters | Frederick Reid | |||
M40 400 Meters | Bruno Bianchi | |||
M50 400 Meters | Francis Peter Higgins | |||
M65 400 Meters | Yngve Brange | |||
M60 800 Meters | John Gilmour | |||
M60 1500 Meters | John Gilmour | |||
M60 5000 Meters | John Gilmour | |||
M80 5000 Meters | Josef Galia | |||
M60 10000 Meters | John Gilmour[18] | |||
M45 110 Meters Hurdles | Valbjörn Þorláksson | |||
M60 110 Meters Hurdles | Alfred Guidet | |||
M65 110 Meters Hurdles | George Braceland | |||
M40 400 Meters Hurdles | Leon Hacker | |||
M65 400 Meters Hurdles | George Braceland | |||
M75 400 Meters Hurdles | Herbert F Anderson | |||
M50 3000 Meters Steeplechase | Arthur H G Taylor | |||
M55 3000 Meters Steeplechase | Galicia Eligio | |||
M60 3000 Meters Steeplechase | Olle Elvland | |||
M50 4 x 100 Meters Relay | H Goelz, Gerhard Baas, H Schlegel, P Mirkes | |||
M40 4 x 400 Meters Relay | Leon Hacker, Grujic, D Burger, George Mathe | |||
M70 4 x 400 Meters Relay | Harold Chapson, Herbert F Anderson, Sydney Madden, Paul Fairbanks | |||
M65 High Jump | Richard O'Rafferty | |||
M70 High Jump | Josef Sahlmann | |||
M80 High Jump | Sven A Falk | |||
M65 Long Jump | Willi Rumig | |||
M70 Long Jump | Josef Sahlmann | |||
M50 Triple Jump | Carlos Vera Guardia | |||
M65 Hammer Throw | Aarne Miettinen | |||
M75 Hammer Throw | Alex Renk | |||
M45 Javelin Throw | Jen Smiding | |||
M40 Javelin Throw | Urs von Wartburg | |||
Veikko Javanainen | ||||
M65 Shot Put | Konstanty Maksimczyk | |||
M75 Shot Put | Ernst Korte | |||
M65 Discus Throw | Konstanty Maksimczyk[19] | |||
M45 Pentathlon | Valbjörn Thorlaksson | |||
M75 Pentathlon | Herbert F Anderson |