Athletics competitions at the 2009 Pacific Mini Games were held at the Bank of the Cook Islands National Stadium in Rarotonga, Cook Islands, between September 22–26, 2009.
Athletics at the VIII Pacific Mini Games | |
---|---|
Dates | September 22–26 |
Host city | Rarotonga, Cook Islands |
Venue | Bank of the Cook Islands National Stadium |
Level | Senior |
Events | 41 (21 men, 20 women) |
Participation | 175 athletes from 16 nations |
A total of 41 events were contested, 21 by men and 20 by women.
Medal summary
editMedal winners and their results were published on the Oceania Athletics Association webpage by Bob Snow.[1]
Complete results can also be found on the Oceania Athletics Association,[2] and on the Cook Islands Sports and National Olympic Committee[3] webpages.
Men
editWomen
editEvent | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres (wind: +0.1 m/s) | Makelesi Bulikiobo (FIJ) | 11.97 | Latai Sikuvea (TGA) | 12.46 | Vasi Feke (TGA) | 12.62 |
200 metres (wind: +0.4 m/s) | Makelesi Bulikiobo (FIJ) | 24.52 | Paulini Korowaqa (FIJ) | 25.07 | Anameli Navukitu (FIJ) | 25.33 |
400 metres | Makelesi Bulikiobo (FIJ) | 55.71 | Paulini Korowaqa (FIJ) | 58.02 | Makitalena Lokolokobuka (FIJ) | 58.89 |
800 metres | Kavita Maharaj (FIJ) | 2:18.40 | Astrid Montuclard (PYF) | 2:19.82 | Salote Naiula (FIJ) | 2:20.13 |
1500 metres | Kavita Maharaj (FIJ) | 5:04.43 | Salote Naiula (FIJ) | 5:05.91 | Astrid Montuclard (PYF) | 5:05.92 |
5000 metres | Betty Babalu (SOL) | 20:10.29 | Sereima Liku (FIJ) | 20:10.67 | / Anne Beaufils (NCL) | 20:20.63 |
10000 metres | / Josiane Chipeaux (NCL) | 41:24.10 | Betty Babalu (SOL) | 42:08.95 | / Anne Beaufils (NCL) a | 42:37.81 |
Half Marathon | / Josiane Chipeaux (NCL) | 1:29:24.65 | / Anne Beaufils (NCL) | 1:36:37.93 | Valérie Bechennec (PYF) | 1:38:21.26 |
100 metres hurdles (wind: -0.1 m/s) | Terani Faremiro (PYF) | 15.14 | Vasi Feke (TGA) | 15.21 | Johanna Sui (PYF) | 15.53 |
400 metres hurdles | Anameli Navukitu (FIJ) | 65.32 | Océane LeFranc (PYF) | 65.90 | Vasi Feke (TGA) | 68.12 |
High Jump | Johanna Sui (PYF) | 1.62m | Terani Faremiro (PYF) | 1.62m | Océane LeFranc (PYF) | 1.53m |
Long Jump | Terani Faremiro (PYF) | 5.62m (wind: +1.0 m/s) | Soko Salaniqiqi (FIJ) | 5.54m (wind: +0.0 m/s) | Johanna Sui (PYF) | 5.51m (wind: +0.1 m/s) |
Triple Jump | Terani Faremiro (PYF) | 11.58m (wind: +1.3 m/s) | Soko Salaniqiqi (FIJ) | 11.31m (wind: +1.6 m/s) | Manoa Asenate (TUV) | 10.29m (wind: +1.0 m/s) NR |
Shot Put | Ana Po'uhila (TGA) | 16.53m | Margaret Satupai (SAM) | 14.52m | Tereapii Tapoki (COK) | 13.88m |
Discus Throw | Ana Po'uhila (TGA) | 53.10m | Margaret Satupai (SAM) | 50.94m | Tereapii Tapoki (COK) | 48.46m |
Hammer Throw | Ana Po'uhila (TGA) | 50.70m | / Elise Takosi (NCL) | 49.80m | / Bina Ramesh (NCL) | 42.57m |
Javelin Throw | / Bina Ramesh (NCL) | 47.66m | / Astrid Waheo (NCL) | 47.48m | Teuruerani Tanepau (PYF) | 45.24m |
Heptathlon | Soko Salaniqiqi (FIJ) | 4745pts | Terano Faremiro (PYF) | 4723pts | Johanna Sui (PYF) | 4258pts |
4 x 100 metres relay | Fiji | 47.63 | Tonga | 48.61 | N/A |
DSQ
|
4 x 400 metres relay | Fiji | 3:56.05 | Tonga a | 4:24.50 | N/A |
N/A
|
Medal table (unofficial)
edit* Host nation (Cook Islands)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fiji | 18 | 9 | 7 | 34 |
2 | / New Caledonia | 11 | 6 | 5 | 22 |
3 | French Polynesia | 5 | 13 | 10 | 28 |
4 | Tonga | 4 | 6 | 3 | 13 |
5 | Solomon Islands | 3 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
6 | Samoa | 0 | 3 | 1 | 4 |
7 | Vanuatu | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
8 | Cook Islands* | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3 |
9 | Niue | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
10 | Norfolk Island | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Tuvalu | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Wallis and Futuna | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Totals (12 entries) | 41 | 40 | 35 | 116 |
Participation
editThe official start list contains 175 athletes from 17 countries.[5] However, in the result lists, the announced 9 athletes from Guam did not appear, but only athletes from the following 16 countries:[2][3]
- Cook Islands (21)
- Fiji (31)
- French Polynesia (25)
- Kiribati (7)
- Micronesia (2)
- Nauru (5)
- / New Caledonia (18)
- Niue (7)
- Norfolk Island (1)
- Palau (4)
- Samoa (5)
- Solomon Islands (13)
- Tonga (15)
- Tuvalu (5)
- Vanuatu (3)
- / Wallis and Futuna (4)
Notes
edit^ a Medals were not awarded to place-getters in events where insufficient competitors took part. Five events (Men: 3,000 metre Steeplechase, 4 × 400 metre Relay and Octathlon; Women: 10,000 metre and 4 × 100 metre Relay) had only three competitors,[6] and one event (Women's 4 × 400 metre Relay) had only two competitors.[6] As recorded in the list of medal winners on the official website,[7] those events with three competitors had no bronze medal awarded, and the event with two competitors had no silver or bronze awarded (note also: While the athletes' names on the official website's list of medal winners appear correct, their recorded nationalities are mismatched in some cases. e.g. New Caledonians are listed as from Federated States of Micronesia, Fijians are listed as from Niue).
References
edit- ^ Snow, Bob (October 30, 2012), MINI SOUTH PACIFIC GAMES MEDALLISTS (PDF), OAA, archived from the original (PDF) on October 30, 2013, retrieved April 12, 2013
- ^ a b Results - Pacific Mini Games - 1/01/1990 - Rarotonga, Cook Islands, OAA, retrieved 18 August 2020
- ^ a b Pacific Mini Games 2009 - Athletics - Results, Cook Islands Sports and National Olympic Committee, retrieved April 12, 2013
- ^ Niue Athletics at Mini Games 09, Niue Athletics Association, retrieved April 29, 2013
- ^ Pacific Mini Games 2009 - Athletics teams, Cook Islands Sports and National Olympic Committee, retrieved April 12, 2013
- ^ a b "2009 Pacific_Mini Games final results" (PDF). Athletics Oceania. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2017.
- ^ "Athletics". Pacific Mini Games 2009. Archived from the original on 23 September 2017.