Athletics at the 1925 Far Eastern Championship Games explained

VII Far Eastern Championship Games
Host City:Manila, Philippines
Dates:May
Nations Participating:3
Events:19
Previous:1923 Osaka
Next:1927 Shanghai
Games:1925 Far Eastern Championship Games

The athletics events at the May 1925 Far Eastern Championship Games were held in Manila, Philippines.[1] A total of 19 men's athletics events were contested at the competition. It was the first time that track events at this competition were conducted over the international standard metric distances, changing from the imperial distances that previously featured at the competition.[2]

The Philippines returned to the top of the medal table in the athletics programme. The hosts won all but six of the nineteen events, placed in the top two in 16 of them, and completed medal sweeps in seven events. Japan was the next most successful nation, with five gold medals and medal sweeps in the triple jump and 1500 metres. China again performed poorly, matching their previous haul of two athletics medals of one gold and one bronze medal.[2]

Fortunato Catalon aimed for a fifth straight sprint double, but teammate David Nepomuceno—who became the first Filipino Olympian a year earlier—defeated Catalon in the 200 metres title. Two other Filipinos defended their titles from 1923: Regino Birtulfo in the discus and Juan Taduran in the decathlon. Mikio Oda of Japan was the only other athlete to repeat as champion, retaining his triple jump crown. Chūhei Nambu followed in his compatriot's footsteps by taking medals in high, long and triple jump at one games.[2] Both Oda and Nambu would go on to win Olympic triple jump titles (in 1928 and 1932, respectively).[3] [4] Wu Topan was China's only winner in the pentathlon.

Generoso Rabaya of the Philippines was the only athlete to claim two titles in the athletics and did so with an unusual combination of 110 metres hurdles and shot put (taking advantage of the lighter Asian implements in use).[2]

Medal summary

100 metres11.1??????
200 metres straight22.5??????
400 metres51.2??????
800 metres2:01.7??????
1500 metres4:07.8??????
10,000 metres36:07.5??????
110 m hurdles15.9??????
200 m hurdles straight25.7??????
4 × 200 m relay1:30.3???Only two finishers
4 × 400 m relay3:25.8???Only two finishers
High jump1.835 m1.81 m1.785 m
Pole vault
3.415 mNot awarded
3.35 m
Long jump6.89 m6.83 m6.69 m
Triple jump14.08 m14.00 m13.97 m
Shot put14.23 m14.02 m13.68 m
Discus throw37.40 m36.93 m34.97 m
Javelin throw51.71 m51.60 m51.12 m
Pentathlon2430 pts2428 pts2325 pts
Decathlon5042 pts4959 pts4741 pts

References

Results

Notes and References

  1. Bell, Daniel (2003). Encyclopedia of International Games. McFarland and Company, Inc. Publishers, Jefferson, North Carolina. .
  2. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/fec.htm Far Eastern Championships
  3. Nakamura, Ken (2010-04-26). Interview with Mikio Oda, first Japanese Olympic gold medallist. IAAF. Retrieved on 2014-12-24.
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417073301/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/na/chuhei-nanbu-1.html Chuhei Nanbu