The men's 800 metres event at the 1999 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Göteborg, Sweden, at Ullevi on 30 July and 1 August 1999.[1][2]
Medalists
Gold | Nils Schumann![]() |
Silver | James Nolan![]() |
Bronze | Paweł Czapiewski![]() |
Results
Final
1 August
Rank | Name | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Nils Schumann | ![]() | 1:45.21 | CR |
![]() | James Nolan | ![]() | 1:46.94 | |
![]() | Paweł Czapiewski | ![]() | 1:46.98 | |
4 | Roman Oravec | ![]() | 1:47.02 | |
5 | João Pires | ![]() | 1:47.83 | |
6 | Viktors Lācis | ![]() | 1:48.33 | |
7 | Pavel Pelepyagin | ![]() | 1:51.15 | |
8 | Rickard Pell | ![]() | 1:55.69 |
Heats
30 July
Qualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final
Heat 1
Rank | Name | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pavel Pelepyagin | ![]() | 1:47.82 | Q |
2 | Roman Oravec | ![]() | 1:47.86 | Q |
3 | Paweł Czapiewski | ![]() | 1:47.96 | q |
4 | Neil Speaight | ![]() | 1:48.42 | |
5 | Tobias Dertmann | ![]() | 1:48.53 | |
6 | Ramon Wächter | ![]() | 1:49.39 | |
7 | Daniel Oniciuc | ![]() | 1:50.34 | |
8 | Roman Hanzel | ![]() | 1:53.56 |
Heat 2
Rank | Name | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | James Nolan | ![]() | 1:48.45 | Q |
2 | Viktors Lācis | ![]() | 1:48.82 | Q |
3 | Aleksandr Trutko | ![]() | 1:49.34 | |
4 | Vanco Stojanov | ![]() | 1:49.66 | |
5 | Steve Gurnham | ![]() | 1:49.74 | |
6 | Andriy Tverdostup | ![]() | 1:51.24 | |
7 | Grant Cuddy | ![]() | 1:52.12 | |
8 | René Breitenstein | ![]() | 1:57.63 |
Heat 3
Rank | Name | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nils Schumann | ![]() | 1:47.09 | Q |
2 | João Pires | ![]() | 1:48.06 | Q |
3 | Rickard Pell | ![]() | 1:48.19 | q |
4 | Israel Domínguez | ![]() | 1:48.98 | |
5 | Alasdair Donaldson | ![]() | 1:49.18 | |
6 | Jan Verner | ![]() | 1:49.60 | |
7 | Dalibor Balgač | ![]() | 1:49.72 | |
8 | Tim Rogge | ![]() | 1:50.64 |
Participation
According to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.
Belarus (2)
Belgium (1)
Croatia (1)
Czech Republic (2)
Germany (3)
Ireland (1)
Latvia (1)
North Macedonia (1)
Poland (1)
Portugal (1)
Romania (1)
Slovakia (1)
Spain (1)
Sweden (1)
Switzerland (2)
Ukraine (1)
United Kingdom (3)
References
- ↑ European Athletics U23 Championships Ostrava 2011 - STATISTICS HANDBOOK - 2nd European Athletics U23 Championships - Göteborg, Sweden 29.7.-1.8. 1999 (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 17–29, retrieved 24 October 2014
- ↑ European Championships U23 - Göteborg/SWE () - 29.07.-01.08.99 (PDF), sportfieber.pytalhost.com, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2013, retrieved 27 October 2014
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