The men's triple jump at the 1971 European Athletics Championships was held in Helsinki, Finland, at Helsinki Olympic Stadium on 14 and 15 August 1971.[1]
Medalists
Gold | Jörg Drehmel![]() |
Silver | Viktor Sanejev![]() |
Bronze | Carol Corbu![]() |
Results
Final
15 August
Rank | Name | Nationality | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Jörg Drehmel | ![]() | 17.16 w (w: 3.7 m/s) | |
![]() | Viktor Sanejev | ![]() | 17.10 w (w: 3 m/s) | |
![]() | Carol Corbu | ![]() | 16.87 | |
4 | Michael Sauer | ![]() | 16.58 (w: 1 m/s) | |
5 | Václav Fišer | ![]() | 16.39 w (w: 2.9 m/s) | |
6 | Heinz-Günter Schenk | ![]() | 16.38 w (w: 2.2 m/s) | |
7 | Gennady Bessonov | ![]() | 16.26 (w: 1.8 m/s) | |
8 | Gennady Salevich | ![]() | 16.24 w (w: 3.2 m/s) | |
9 | Joachim Kugler | ![]() | 16.12 (w: 0.9 m/s) | |
10 | Luis Felipe Areta | ![]() | 15.81 w (w: 2.8 m/s) | |
11 | Józef Szmidt | ![]() | 15.62 (w: 1.1 m/s) | |
12 | Giuseppe Gentile | ![]() | 14.00 |
Qualification
14 August
Rank | Name | Nationality | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Viktor Sanejev | ![]() | 16.99 | Q |
2 | Jörg Drehmel | ![]() | 16.83 | Q |
3 | Michael Sauer | ![]() | 16.50 | Q |
4 | Joachim Kugler | ![]() | 16.47 | Q |
5 | Giuseppe Gentile | ![]() | 16.46 | Q |
6 | Luis Felipe Areta | ![]() | 16.41 | Q |
7 | Václav Fišer | ![]() | 16.32 | Q |
8 | Józef Szmidt | ![]() | 16.27 | Q |
9 | Heinz-Günter Schenk | ![]() | 16.23 | Q |
10 | Gennady Bessonov | ![]() | 16.19 | q |
11 | Carol Corbu | ![]() | 16.12 | q |
12 | Gennady Salevich | ![]() | 16.10 | q |
13 | Kristen Fløgstad | ![]() | 15.93 | |
14 | Pentti Kuukasjärvi | ![]() | 15.83 | |
15 | Serge Firca | ![]() | 15.79 | |
16 | Milan Spasojević | ![]() | 15.61 | |
17 | Henrik Kalocsai | ![]() | 15.56 | |
18 | Aşkın Tuna | ![]() | 15.39 |
Participation
According to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.
Czechoslovakia (1)
East Germany (2)
Finland (1)
France (1)
Hungary (1)
Italy (1)
Norway (1)
Poland (1)
Romania (1)
Soviet Union (3)
Spain (1)
Turkey (1)
West Germany (2)
Yugoslavia (1)
References
- ↑ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 412–420, retrieved 13 August 2014
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