Finnish Athletics Championships Explained

The Finnish Athletics Championships, which are known as Kalevan kisat in Finnish, were first held in Tampere in 1907. Since then, they have been held in a different location every year. In the beginning, women were not allowed to compete in the Finnish Championships.

The Kaleva Cup

In 1909, the personnel at the life insurance company Kaleva donated a trophy called the Kalevan malja or the Kaleva Cup to be awarded to and kept for until the next Championships by the team accumulating the most points during the competition.

In 1909, the Finnish Championships started to be informally referred to as the Kaleva Games because of the name of the cup. At the Championships held in Pori in 1915, the magazine Suomen Urheilulehti started to call the competition the Kaleva Games in its headlines. In 1937, at the Championships held in Vyborg, the Finnish athletics federation called Finnish Athletics (Suomen Urheiluliitto in Finnish) formally declared the name of the Finnish Championships to be the Kaleva Games.

History

EditionVenueDates
1907Tampere3–4 August
1908Kuopio29–30 August
1909Helsinki3–5 July
1910Viipuri2–3 July
1911Tampere15–16 July
1912Turku31 August–1 September
1913Helsinki19–20 July
1914Helsinki19–20 September
1915Pori14–15 August
1916Helsinki19–20 August
1917Tampere18–19 August
1918Helsinki31 August–1 September
1919Turku16–17 August
1920Helsinki3–4 July
1921Kotka20–21 August
1922Helsinki19–20 August
1923Kuopio18–19 August
1924Lahti23–24 August
1925Viipuri15–16 August
1926Tampere14–15 August
1927Turku20–21 August
1928Helsinki25–26 August
1929Viipuri17–18 August
1930Tampere16–17 August
1931Helsinki15–16 August
1932Helsinki6–7 August
1933Turku5–6 August
1934Tampere28–29 July
1935Kotka10–11 August
1936Turku22–23 August
1937Viipuri6–8 August
1938Helsinki6–8 August
1939Helsinki26–28 August
1940Tampere24–26 August
1941
1942Helsinki29–30 August
1943Helsinki14–15 August
1944Helsinki23–24 September
1945Turku11–12 August
1946Helsinki10–12 August
1947Tampere16–18 August
1948Vaasa21–22 August
1949Kymi20–21 August
1950Jyväskylä12–13 August
1951Helsinki19–20 August
1952Seinäjoki23–24 August
1953Pori15–16 August
1954Turku12–13 August
1955Kuopio13–14 August
1956Lahti25–26 August
1957Tampere17–18 August
1958Kouvola2–3 August
1959Helsinki16–17 August
1960Hämeenlinna13–14 August
1961Mikkeli12–13 August
1962Lappeenranta18–19 August
1963Turku17–18 August
1964Oulu15–16 August
1965Jyväskylä7–8 August
1966Tampere13–14 August
1967Pori11–13 August
1968Varkaus16–18 August
1969Helsinki16–18 August
1970Kouvola14–16 August
1971Oulu23–25 July
1972Joensuu11–13 August
1973Hyvinkää10–12 August
1974Jyväskylä9–11 August
1975Seinäjoki18–20 July
1976Turku2–4 July
1977Tampere29–31 July
1978Kokkola4–6 August
1979Helsinki11–13 August
1980Lappeenranta4–6 July
1981Oulu7–9 August
1982Kouvola13–15 August
1983Pori1–3 July
1984Kajaani6–8 July
1985Lahti16–18 August
1986Vaasa25–27 July
1987Kuopio14–16 August
1988Hämeenlinna5–7 August
1989Turku28–30 July
1990Oulu3–5 August
1991Helsinki27–29 July
1992Jyväskylä3–5 July
1993Mikkeli30 July–1 August
1994Tuusula8–10 July
1995Lapua20–23 July
1996Tampere4–7 July
1997Lappeenranta17–20 July
1998Oulu6–9 August
1999Seinäjoki5–8 August
2000Lahti17–20 August
2001Turku6–8 July
2002Joensuu18–21 July
2004Vaasa30 July–1 August
2005Pori15–17 July
2006Jyväskylä21–23 July
2003Helsinki9–11 August
2007Lappeenranta3–5 August
2008Tampere24–27 July
2009Espoo31 July–2 August
2010Kajaani5–8 August
2011Turku4–7 August
2013Lahti23–26 August
2013Vaasa25–27 August
2014Kuopio31 July–3 August
2015Pori30 July–2 August
2016Oulu21–24 July
2017Seinäjoki20–23 July
2018Jyväskylä19–22 July
2019Lappeenranta1–4 August
2020Turku13–16 August
2021Tampere26–29 August
2022Joensuu4–7 August
2023Lahti29–30 July
2024Vaasa

Championships records

Women

EventRecordAthleteDatePlaceRef
100 m hurdles12.79 (+1.0 m/s)Annimari Korte14 August 2020Turku[1]
Pole vault4.72 m Wilma Murto29 August 2021Tampere[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Kendricks tops 5.81m in Leverkusen, Nedasekau leaps 2.33m. World Athletics. 16 August 2020. 25 August 2020.
  2. News: Keely Hodgkinson Runs 400m PB At National Athletics League – Weekly Round-Up. mydmcsports.com. 30 August 2021. 30 December 2021.