Athletics at the Islamic Games explained

I Islamic Games
Size:220px
Colour:
  1. CEF6CE
Host City:İzmir, Turkey
Dates:28 September to 5 October 1980
Stadium:İzmir Atatürk Stadium
Events:30
Games:Islamic Games

The athletics competition at the 1980 Islamic Games was held at the İzmir Atatürk Stadium in İzmir, Turkey between 28 September and 5 October 1980. This was the second major athletics event to be staged at the stadium, following the athletics at the 1971 Mediterranean Games. A total of thirty athletics events were contested, twenty-one for men and nine for women. While the men's programme was well attended, the women's events attracted very few entries, with Turkish female track athletes composing the bulk of the competitors.[1] Women's athletics in the Arab world particularly was at an early stage of development – only a year earlier had women's events been introduced at the Arab Athletics Championships and the African Championships in Athletics been launched.[2] [3]

The results of the competition were not of a high international standard, but this was a key purpose of the gathering, as it allowed Muslim nations not traditionally strong in track and field to engage with peers of a similar standard.[4] The host nation Turkey was easily the most dominant in the sport, winning fourteen of the thirty events on offer. Morocco was the next most successful nation, with five golds. Algeria performed well in the distance running events, taking three golds, and Saudi Arabia gave a similar performance in the sprints, also taking three golds. Ten nations made it to the medal table.[1]

Going into the competition, the most prominent athletes were Algeria's Rachid Habchaoui and Turkey's Mehmet Terzi, both of whom had won long-distance running medals at the 1979 Mediterranean Games.[5] Habchaoui took a long-distance track double in the 5000 metres and 10,000 metres, while Terzi was the marathon winner and 10,000 m runner-up. Olympic steeplechase finalist Lahcene Babaci was the winner of his event and, another Algerian, middle-distance running specialist Amar Brahmia was well established, having won multiple medals at the 1978 All-Africa Games.[6] However, it was the efforts of two young athletes who rose to prominence by winning their first major titles here that had the greatest impact on Islamic athletics. Brahmia was beaten in both the 800 metres and 1500 metres by twenty-one-year-old Saïd Aouita, who would later go on to win one of Morocco's first Olympic gold medals, alongside Nawal El Moutawakel, at the 1984 Summer Olympics.[7] Nineteen-year-old Ahmed Hamada Jassim of Bahrain was the other athlete to emerge internationally at this competition: after winning the 400 metres hurdles he went on to be one of Asia's foremost athletes in the event and was the champion at the 1986 Asian Games.[8]

Medal summary

Men

100 metres10.7511.0211.03
200 metres21.9522.2422.31
400 metres48.7949.4550.03
800 metres1:52.061:52.721:53.33
1500 metres3:51.263:51.743:54.32
5000 metres14:17.2714:49.1414:49.42
10,000 metres29:32.429:53.830:14.0
110 metres hurdles14.6514.7415.00
400 metres hurdles52.4653.2653.95
3000 metres steeplechase8:56.09:30.29:40.4
4×100 metres relay41.3642.0642.17
4×400 metres relay3:17.823:20.043:24.46
Marathon[9] 2:26:022:28:352:47:45
High jump2.10 m2.05 m2.05 m
Pole vault4.50 m4.30 m4.20 m
Long jump7.11 m6.97 m6.69 m
Triple jump15.31 m14.97 m14.54 m
Shot put16.66 m15.68 m14.68 m
Discus throw44.88 m44.80 m44.08 m
Hammer throw56.28 m54.90 m54.00 m
Javelin throw71.36 m65.58 m64.26 m

Women

100 metres12.80Not awardedNot awarded
200 metres25.91Not awardedNot awarded
800 metres2:16.142:18.64Not awarded
1500 metres4:36.37Not awardedNot awarded
3000 metres10:04.18Not awardedNot awarded
100 metres hurdles14.7514.78Not awarded
400 metres hurdles65.9Not awardedNot awarded
Long jump5.355.32Not awarded
Discus throw35.44Not awardedNot awarded

References

Medallists

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/isg.htm Islamic Games
  2. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/arc.htm Pan Arab Championships
  3. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/afc.htm African Championships
  4. Lawton, John. The Islamic Games. Aramco World (January/February 1992, Volume 43, Number 1). Retrieved on 2015-01-30.
  5. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/mg.htm Mediterranean Games
  6. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/afg.htm All-Africa Games
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417052944/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/countries/MAR/summer/ Morocco Summer Sports
  8. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/asg.htm Asian Games
  9. Tercüman Newspaper, 06.10.1980, p. 16