European Cup (athletics) explained

European Athletics Cup
Status:defunct
Genre:sports event
Frequency:annual / biannual
Location:various
First:1965
Last:2008
Organised:European Athletic Association

The European Cup is a former athletics competition for European teams that was replaced by the European Team Championships starting in 2009 and was organized by European Athletics Association. The European Cup saw most of the major nations of Europe compete. Originally known as the Bruno Zauli Cup, it first took place in 1965 in Stuttgart (men) and Kassel (women), Germany. Initially, the competition was a bi-annual event (tri-annual once); however, from 1993, it took place once every year.

History

The main idea of the cup, developed by Bruno Zauli, president of the European Committee of the International Association of Athletics Federations, was to create a competition for all European athletics federations, in which they would face each other in track and field events. Although Zauli died a few months before the launch of the first event, the competition has gone from strength to strength.

The competition always had different leagues through which countries had to progress. For the first twenty years, there were different groups (leagues) that took place at different times. Smaller nations, like Luxembourg and Switzerland, would compete in preliminary rounds, before larger countries, such as the United Kingdom and France, would join in the semi-finals. The top two countries from three semi-finals would enter into the final.

This formula was fairly successful; however, by 1983 the number of competitions that athletes were expected to compete in made it extremely difficult for countries to send their best team to each event. The format of the cup had to be changed so that each country in the whole cup competed on the same day.

The top league was named the Super League and contained eight male and eight female teams. The male and female teams were separate teams, which meant that the female team of one country could get relegated while their male counterpart would stay in the Super League as long as they had enough points. Below the Super League were the First and Second Leagues, which contained other European countries that did not qualify for the finals.

European Team Championships

See main article: European Athletics Team Championships. In 2009, the competition took a new format, European Team Championships. There are now four leagues, which consist of 20 events for men and 20 for women. The Super League and the First League have 12 teams each, while the Second League and the Third League 8 and 14 respectively. Team scores are calculated by combination of men and women's points.

Scoring system and relegation

Countries scored points for their performance in each race/event:The winning athlete received 8 points for their country, and this then carried on so second would get 7 points, third 6 points, etc. In the case of an athlete that did not finish a race, was disqualified or did not record a mark (as the case may be), their country would receive zero points for that event.

The male and female team with the most points was declared the winner. The four winning teams from the 'Super League' (two male and two female) went on to compete as individual countries in the IAAF World Cup in Athletics.

Since 1983, the lowest scoring male, and the lowest scoring female teams in the 'Super League' were relegated down into the 'First League'. These were replaced by the highest scoring male and female teams from the 'First League'. This process was repeated for relegation/promotion from the second to the first league. This system allowed countries to progress, and for a wider range of athletes to compete against opposition they might not normally face.

League positions in 2009

The leagues for the 2009 competition were formed by combination of each country's men and women's performances in 2008. As the teams are 46, the winning team received 46 points, the second 45 and so on. The new leagues are:[1]

Super League!Country!Pts
1548
1518
Poland1512
Germany1472
Italy1455
Spain1426.5
France1423.5
Ukraine1412.5
Greece1359.5
Sweden1309
Czech Republic1236
Portugal1222
First League!Country!Pts
Belarus1217
Slovenia1211
Romania1182.5
Turkey1166
Belgium1139
Hungary1133
Netherlands1118
Finland1072.5
Estonia1035.5
Switzerland1032.5
Serbia1028.5
Norway974
Second League!Country!Pts
Ireland971.5
Bulgaria947
Croatia942
Latvia933
Slovakia901
Lithuania839.5
Austria783
Cyprus749
Third League!Country!Pts
722
Israel714
Denmark709.5
Bosnia and Herzegovina555.5
Iceland550.5
Luxembourg399.5
Georgia356
Azerbaijan332.5
Montenegro310.5
Armenia301.5
AASSE280
Albania191
Andorra187
164

Winners

Super League!Year!Men!Women!Host City!Host Country
1965
Sweden/ Hungary
France
Finland
Italy
Germany
Italy
France
Spain
Germany
France
Germany
France
Italy
Poland
Italy
Spain
Germany
France

Best performances

Below is a list of the events that took place at the championships, and what is the European Cup record, who set it, what country they represented and which year.

valign=top

Men


100 m: 10.04 - Linford Christie, Great Britain 1996, 1997
200 m: 20.11 - Linford Christie, Great Britain, 1995
400 m: 44.75 - David Grindley, Great Britain, 1993
800 m: 1:44.28 - Wilson Kipketer, Denmark, 2002
1,500 m: 3:33.63 - José Manuel Abascal, Spain, 1983
3,000 m: 7:41.08 - Dieter Baumann, Germany, 1997
5,000 m: 13:21.68 - Salvatore Antibo, Italy, 1991
10,000 m: 27:32.85 - Fernando Mamede, Portugal, 1983
3,000 m Steeplechase: 8:13.32 - Mariano Scartezzini, Italy, 1981
110 m Hurdles: 13.10 - Colin Jackson, Great Britain, 1993
400 m Hurdles: 47.85 - Harald Schmid, West Germany, 1979, 1985
4 × 100 m Relay: 38.16 - Great Britain (Jason Gardener, Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish, Julian Golding), 1999
4 × 400 m Relay: 2:59.46 - Great Britain (Roger Black, Jamie Baulch, Ewan Thomas, Mark Richardson), 1997


High Jump: 2.40 m - Patrik Sjöberg, Sweden, 1989
Pole Vault: 6.00 m - Radion Gataullin, Russia, 1993
=Long Jump: 8.38 - Robert Emmiyan, Soviet Union, 1987
=Long Jump: 8.38 - Kirill Sosunov, Russia, 1998
Triple Jump: 17.77 - Khristo Markov, Bulgaria, 1985
Shot put: 22.05 - Sergey Smirnov, Soviet Union, 1985
Hammer: 82.90 - Jüri Tamm, Soviet Union, 1985
Discus: 68.76 - Lars Riedel, Germany, 1995
Javelin: 92.41 - Aki Parviainen, Finland, 2001

valign=top

Women


100 m: 10.77 - Ivet Lalova, Bulgaria 2004
200 m: 21.99 - Silke Gladisch, East Germany, 1987
=400 m: 48.60 - Marita Koch, East Germany, 1979
=400 m: 48.60 - Olga Vladykina, Soviet Union, 1985
800 m: 1:55.91 - Jarmila Kratachvilova, Czechoslovakia, 1985
1,500 m: 3:58.40 - Ravilya Agletdinova, Soviet Union, 1985
3,000 m: 8:35.32 - Zola Budd, Great Britain, 1985
5,000 m: 14:29.11 - Paula Radcliffe, Great Britain, 2004
10,000 m: 31:03.62 - Kathrin Ullrich, Germany, 1991
3,000 m Steeplechase: 9:35.95 - Cristina Casandra, Romania, 2005
110 m Hurdles: 12.47 - Cornelia Oschkenat, East Germany, 1987
400 m Hurdles: 53.38 - Yuliya Pechonkina, Russia, 2002
4 × 100 m Relay: 41.65 - East Germany (Silke Gladisch, Marita Koch, Ingrid Auerswald-Lange, Marlies Göhr), 1985
4 × 400 m Relay: 3:18.58 - Soviet Union (Olga Nazarova, Nadiya Olizarenko, Mariya Pinigina, Olga Vladykina), 1985


High Jump: 2.06m - Stefka Kostadinova, Bulgaria, 1985
Pole Vault: 4.75m - Monika Pyrek, Poland, 2006
Long Jump: 7.42 - Tatyana Kotova, Russia, 2002
Triple Jump: 14.98 - Tatyana Lebedeva, Russia, 2000
Shot put: 21.56 - Natalya Lisovskaya, Soviet Union, 1987
Hammer: 76.50 - Tatyana Lysenko, Russia, 2006
Discus: 73.90 - Diana Gansky, East Germany, 1987
Javelin: 70.20 - Christina Obergföll, Germany, 2007

Hosts

YearA FinalB Final
11965 Stuttgart (men), Kassel (women)
21967 Kiev
31970 Stockholm
41973 Edinburgh
51975 Nice
61977 Helsinki Gothenburg (men), Třinec (women)
71979 Turin Karlovac (men), Paris (women)
81981 Zagreb Athens (men), Pescara (women)
91983 London Prague (men), Sittard (women)
101985 Moscow Budapest (men), Budapest (women)
111987 Prague Gothenburg (men), Gothenburg (women)
121989 Gateshead Brussels (men), Strasbourg (women)
131991 Frankfurt Barcelona
141993 Rome Brussels
151994 Birmingham Valencia
161995 Villeneuve d'Ascq Basel, Turku
171996 Madrid Lisbon, Bergen
181997 Munich Prague, Dublin
191998 St. Petersburg Budapest, Malmö
201999 Paris Lahti, Athens
212000 Gateshead Oslo, Bydgoszcz
212001 Bremen Vaasa, Budapest
222002 Annecy Banská Bystrica, Seville
232003 Florence Lappeenranta, Velenje
242004 Bydgoszcz Plovdiv, Istanbul
252005 Florence Gävle, Leiria
262006 Málaga Prague, Thessaloniki
272007 Munich Vaasa, Milan
282008 Annecy Leiria, Istanbul

Medals (1965-2008)

European Cup Finals :[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Overall Qualification Ranking 2008 . European Athletics . 2008-06-26 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080626223158/http://www.european-athletics.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6434&Itemid=2 . June 26, 2008 .
  2. Web site: Athletics Podium .