The women's long jump event at the 1999 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Göteborg, Sweden, at Ullevi on 29 and 30 July 1999.[1][2]
Medalists
Gold | Aurélie Félix![]() |
Silver | Inga Leiwesmeier![]() |
Bronze | Eva Miklos![]() |
Results
Final
30 July
Rank | Name | Nationality | Attempts | Result | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |||||
![]() | Aurélie Félix | ![]() | x | 6.34 (w: 0.3 m/s) | 6.85 (w: 1.2 m/s) | 6.50 (w: 0.7 m/s) | 6.63 (w: 1.8 m/s) | x | 6.85 (w: 1.2 m/s) | CR |
![]() | Inga Leiwesmeier | ![]() | x | 6.63 (w: 0.7 m/s) | 6.64 (w: 1.4 m/s) | x | – | – | 6.64 (w: 1.4 m/s) | |
![]() | Eva Miklos | ![]() | x | 6.51 (w: 0.6 m/s) | 6.20 (w: 1.2 m/s) | 6.26 (w: 0.7 m/s) | x | – | 6.51 (w: 0.6 m/s) | |
4 | Cristina Nicolau | ![]() | 6.35 (w: 1.6 m/s) | 6.50 (w: 0.8 m/s) | x | 6.40 (w: 0.7 m/s) | x | 4.91 (w: 0.8 m/s) | 6.50 (w: 0.8 m/s) | |
5 | Laura Gatto | ![]() | 6.40 (w: 1.6 m/s) | 6.18 (w: 0.5 m/s) | 6.33 (w: -0.9 m/s) | 6.37 (w: 0.8 m/s) | 6.21 (w: 1.8 m/s) | 6.15 (w: 0.8 m/s) | 6.40 (w: 0.7 m/s) | |
6 | Sarah Gautreau | ![]() | x | 6.28 (w: 1.7 m/s) | x | x | 6.04 (w: 0.1 m/s) | x | 6.28 (w: 1.7 m/s) | |
7 | Magdalena Khristova | ![]() | x | 6.07 (w: 0.4 m/s) | 6.25 (w: 1.2 m/s) | x | 6.16 (w: 1.0 m/s) | x | 6.25 (w: 1.2 m/s) | |
8 | Yuliya Akulenko | ![]() | 6.23 (w: 0.2 m/s) | x | 5.96 (w: -0.1 m/s) | 6.06 (w: 0.8 m/s) | 6.09 (w: 0.6 m/s) | – | 6.23 (w: 0.2 m/s) | |
9 | Lucie Komrsková | ![]() | x | x | 5.06 (w: 0.6 m/s) | 6.06 (w: 0.6 m/s) | ||||
10 | Sarah Claxton | ![]() | x | 6.02 (w: 0.9 m/s) | x | 6.02 (w: 0.9 m/s) | ||||
11 | Vanessa Peñalver | ![]() | 5.72 (w: 0.7 m/s) | 5.88 (w: 0.1 m/s) | x | 5.86 (w: 0.1 m/s) | ||||
12 | Edita Sibiga | ![]() | x | 5.61 (w: 0.5 m/s) | x | 5.61 (w: 0.5 m/s) |
Qualifications
29 July
First 12 to the Final
Rank | Name | Nationality | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Aurélie Félix | ![]() | 6.65 (w: 0.7 m/s) | Q |
2 | Cristina Nicolau | ![]() | 6.57 w (w: 2.4 m/s) | Q |
3 | Inga Leiwesmeier | ![]() | 6.56 (w: 0.6 m/s) | Q |
4 | Sarah Claxton | ![]() | 6.35 (w: 1.4 m/s) | Q |
5 | Eva Miklos | ![]() | 6.23 (w: 1.2 m/s) | Q |
6 | Yuliya Akulenko | ![]() | 6.16 (w: 1.0 m/s) | Q |
7 | Sarah Gautreau | ![]() | 6.15 (w: 0.3 m/s) | Q |
8 | Lucie Komrsková | ![]() | 6.15 (w: 1.2 m/s) | Q |
9 | Laura Gatto | ![]() | 6.10 (w: 1.1 m/s) | Q |
10 | Vanessa Peñalver | ![]() | 6.09 (w: 1.8 m/s) | Q |
11 | Edita Sibiga | ![]() | 6.06 (w: -0.9 m/s) | Q |
12 | Magdalena Khristova | ![]() | 6.06 (w: 1.8 m/s) | Q |
13 | Irene Charalambous | ![]() | 5.88 (w: 0.9 m/s) | |
14 | Natalya Budarina | ![]() | 5.61 (w: 0.9 m/s) | |
Bianca Kappler | ![]() | NM | ||
Johanna Halkoaho | ![]() | NM |
Participation
According to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.
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
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.