Arturo Maffei Explained

Nationality:Italian
Sport:Athletics
Event:Long jump
Club:Giglio Rosso Florence
Birth Date:1909 11, df=y
Birth Place:Viareggio
Death Place:Torre del Lago
Weight:64kg (141lb)
Pb:
  • Long jump: 7.73 m (1936)
Country: Italy

Arturo Maffei (9 November 1909, in Viareggio – 17 August 2006, in Torre del Lago) was an Italian long jumper and footballer, who played as a goalkeeper.

Biography

He was the Italian long jump champion in 1930, 1932, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1939 and 1940. His eight national championships tied with Attilio Bravi for the most of all time. He competed in 87 local and regional competitions between 1938 and 1951, collecting 66 wins, 16 second places, 3 third places and 2 non-podium finishes. He competed in 43 international competitions between 1930 and 1941, collecting 27 wins, 9 second places, 2 third places, and 5 non-podium finishes.

He won second in the 1931 AAA Championships and placed first in that competition in 1938. He placed fifth at the 1934 European Championships in Torino, with a mark of 7.12 meters. He won a silver medal in the 1938 Championships in Paris, with a mark of 7.61 meters, although an unofficial winning mark of 7.78 meters was supposedly not counted due to a judge's mistake.[1] He tied for fourth in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, with a mark of 7.73 meters.

He first set the Italian long jump record on 19 May 1936 during Olympic trials with a distance of 7.42 meters, beating Virgilio Tommasi's 1929 mark of 7.41 meters. He broke his own mark on 29 June 1936 during the Italian Championships, with a mark of 7.50 meters. He broke his own national record again on 4 August 1936, with his Olympic mark of 7.73 meters. This mark stood as the Italian record until 17 August 1968, when Giuseppe Gentile set a mark of 7.91 meters.[1]

He played for ACF Fiorentina from 1926 until 1931, and joined the team's coaching staff from 1941 until 1956 as an athletic and goalkeeping coach under manager Fulvio Bernardini.[2]

Achievements

Year Competition Venue Position EventMeasureNotes
1934European Championships5thLong jump7.12 m
1936Olympic Games4thLong jump7.73 m
1938AAA Championshipsbgcolor=gold1stLong jump7.52 m[3]
European Championshipsbgcolor=silver2ndLong jump7.61 m

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.pierogiacomelli.com/redazione/speciali/speciale_209.pdf Arturo Maffei
  2. Web site: Intervista a Sarti: "Yashin e Buffon sono i più grandi della storia". ilnumero1.it. Italian. 29 December 2013. 6 June 2017.
  3. Web site: BRITISH ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS 1919-1939. gbrathletics.com. 18 August 2017.