Mediterranean Athletics Championships
The Mediterranean Athletics Championships (Greek: Μεσογειακοί Αγώνες Στίβου) were an annual outdoor track and field competition between nations in the Mediterranean region that took place from 1947 to 1949. These events were a precursor to the Mediterranean Games, founded in 1951.
First event | 1947 |
---|---|
Last event | 1949 |
The Hellenic Amateur Athletic Association (SEGAS) sought to establish a regular athletics competition for the region, and scheduled the first event for 28–30 June 1935 at the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens. Seven countries were invited (Greece, France, Italy, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Egypt and Mandatory Palestine), but political and economic complications in the build up to World War II saw the cancellation of the event. When the war concluded, SEGAS looked to revive the idea, particularly given that the Balkan Athletics Championships was not taking place at this time.[1][2][3]
The first event was organised as the Eastern Mediterranean Athletics Championships (Greek: Αθλητικοί Αγώνες Ανατολικής Μεσογείου) and held at the Panathenaic Stadium on 28 September, 4 and 5 October 1947 with the participation of three countries: Greece (40 athletes), Turkey (28) and Palestine (15). The 22 events were between men only and featured two athletes from each country, and one team each for the relay. The marathon race was held over the classic route, from Marathon, Greece to the Panathenaic Stadium. A total of 19 athletes participated in the marathon: 2 Turks, 2 Greeks and 15 other Greek runners not part of the team competition. Stylianos Kyriakides (2:56:15) was runner-up, with Turkey's Mustafa Kaplan in third with 3:04:20. Hammer throw was also held at the Panellinios G.S. stadium on 2 October. The Balkan relay event was over 1500 metres, with four legs divided into distances of 800 m, 400 m, 200 m, and 100 m. A team system allocated points based on finishing position, running from six points for first place to one point for sixth place. Turkey won the points competition, with Turkish athletes winning 14 events.[4][5][6]
The event returned the following year, taking place at İnönü Stadium in Istanbul on 6, 12 and 13 June 1948, though there was reduced participation with only three countries: Greece, Turkey, Persia. Again 22 men's events were contested and Turkey topped the points table, though the marathon race was not included in the scoring. The marathon course had a difficult looped route, starting from İnönü Stadium, on to Tarabya, Büyükdere, Sarıyer and Beykoz Park, then back to İnönü Stadium. Five athletes finished the race. Hassan Yildirim finished in second with 3:08:46.0 and Christos Vartzakis was third in 3:13:24.2.[7]
A third edition followed, but a diplomatic fall out between the Greek and Turkish national sports administrators, caused by events earlier that year at a Mediterranean Cup football match, meant only Turkey and five Italians athletes took part. The competition returned to Istanbul's İnönü Stadium from 9–11 September 1949. A reduced programme of 12 men's events took place, with Italy winning nine of them.[8]
Editions
editEd. | Year | Stadium | City | Country | Events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
– | 1935 | Panathenaic Stadium | Athens | Greece | — |
1 | 1947 | Panathenaic Stadium | Athens | Greece | 22 |
2 | 1948 | İnönü Stadium | Istanbul | Turkey | 22 |
3 | 1949 | İnönü Stadium | Istanbul | Turkey | 12 |
Participation
editCountry | Editions |
---|---|
Turkey | 1947, 1948, 1949 |
Greece | 1947, 1948 |
Italy | 1949 |
Mandatory Palestine | 1947 |
Persia | 1948 |
1947
editWinners
editEvent | Winner | Country | Performance |
---|---|---|---|
100 m | Yehuda Gabay | Mandatory Palestine | 11.2 |
200 m | Kemal Aksur | Turkey | 22.9 |
400 m | Adnan | Turkey | 51.7 |
800 m | Adnan | Turkey | 1:57.9 |
1500 m | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 4:04.0 |
5000 m | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 15:29.8 |
10,000 m | Osman Coşgül | Turkey | 33:46.5 |
Marathon | Şevki Koru | Turkey | 2:52:15.0 |
110 m hurdles | Erdal Barkay | Turkey | 15.9 |
400 m hurdles | Lazaros Petropoulakis | Greece | 59.9 |
3000 m s'chase | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 9:43.8 |
4 × 100 m relay | ? | Turkey | 43.9 |
4 × 400 m relay | ? | Turkey | 3:33.9 |
Balkan relay | ? | Turkey | 3:33.0 |
Long jump | Giorgos Marinakis | Greece | 6.86 m |
High jump | Ioannis Lambrou | Greece | 1.75 m |
Triple jump | Ruhi Sarıalp | Turkey | 14.37 m |
Pole vault | Theodosios Balafas | Greece | 3.70 m |
Shot put | Konstantinos Giataganas | Greece | 14.68 m |
Discus throw | Nikolaos Syllas | Greece | 45.03 m |
Javelin throw | Ioannis Pappas | Greece | 59.49 m |
Hammer throw | Thomas Baltzis | Turkey | 43.74 m |
Points table
editPosition | Country | First placings | Second placings | Third placings | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Turkey | 14 | 8 | 7 | 197 |
2 | Greece | 7 | 14 | 8 | 193 |
3 | Mandatory Palestine | 1 | 0 | 7 | 69 |
1948
editWinners
editEvent | Winner | Country | Performance |
---|---|---|---|
100 m | Kemal Aksur | Turkey | 10.9 |
200 m | Stefanos Petrakis | Greece | 22.5 |
400 m | Kemal Horulu | Turkey | 50.9 |
800 m | Seidis | Turkey | 1:56.9 |
1500 m | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 4:11.2 |
5000 m | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 15:33.3 |
10,000 m | Vasilios Mavrapostolos | Greece | 32:38.1 |
110 m hurdles | Periklis Tambakopoulos | Greece | 15.8 |
400 m hurdles | Kemal Horulu | Turkey | 55.4 |
3000 m s'chase | Cahit Önel | Turkey | 9:37.0 |
4 × 100 m relay | Periklis Tambakopoulos Ventikos Zafiris Stefanos Petrakis |
Greece | 43.3 |
4 × 400 m relay | ? | Turkey | 3:25.0 |
Balkan relay | ? | Turkey | 3:22.5 |
Long jump | Kyros Marinis | Greece | 7.05 m |
High jump | Alexandros Parodos | Greece | 1.85 m |
Triple jump | Ruhi Sarıalp | Turkey | 14.45 m |
Pole vault | Theodosios Balafas | Greece | 3.70 m |
Shot put | Konstantinos Giataganas | Greece | 14.17 m |
Discus throw | Nikolaos Syllas | Greece | 44.67 m |
Javelin throw | Halil Zıraman | Turkey | 57.60 m |
Hammer throw | Thomas Baltzis | Turkey | 43.34 m |
Marathon | Ali Karaduman | Turkey | 2:59:25.4 |
Points table
editPosition | Country | First placings | Second placings | Third placings | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Turkey | 13 | 12 | 6 | 198 |
2 | Greece | 9 | 10 | 12 | 186 |
3 | Persia | 0 | 0 | 3 | 64 |
1949
editWinners
editEvent | Winner | Country | Performance |
---|---|---|---|
100 m | Antonio Siddi | Italy | 11.4 |
200 m | Antonio Siddi | Italy | 22.0 |
400 m | Antonio Siddi | Italy | 50.5 |
800 m | Aldo Fracassi | Italy | 1:58.6 |
Marathon | Mustafa Kaplan | Turkey | 2:41:16.0 |
110 m hurdles | Mustafa Batman | Turkey | 15.3 |
Long jump | Antonio Siddi | Italy | 6.90 m |
High jump | Albano Albanese | Italy | 1.80 m |
Shot put | Angiolo Profeti | Italy | 14.29 m |
Discus throw | Angiolo Profeti | Italy | 42.14 m |
Javelin throw | Halil Zıraman | Turkey | 61.31 m |
Hammer throw | Teseo Taddia | Italy | 53.535 m |
Points table
editPosition | Country | Wins |
---|---|---|
1 | Italy | 9 |
2 | Turkey | 3 |
References
edit- ^ Εφημερίδα "Αθλητική Ηχώ", φύλλα των ετών 1947 ως 1949.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ημέρα", Μάιος 1935.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ηχώ", φ. 22/9, 25 και 29/9/1947.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ηχώ", φ. 2/10, 5/10 και 6/10/1947.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ηχώ", φ. 7/6/1947.
- ^ εφ. "Ελευθερία", 15/6/1948.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ηχώ", φ. 3 και 5/6/1948.
- ^ εφ. "Αθλητική Ηχώ", 8/9 και 12/9/1949.
- Results
- Αθλητική Ηχώ (Athletic Echo journal) (in Greek) 1947 to 1949.