1990 European Athletics Indoor Championships

1990 European Athletics Indoor Championships

Kelvin Hall, the host venue
Host city Glasgow, Scotland
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Date(s) 3–4 March
Main stadium Kelvin Hall
Participation 370 athletes from
28 nations
Events 25


The 21st European Athletics Indoor Championships were held in Glasgow, United Kingdom, on 3 and 4 March 1990. It was the last time that the event had been held annually and not biennially as it is now. It was also the first edition to feature women's triple jump event.

The medal table was topped by the Soviet Union, followed by West and East Germany.

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
 Linford Christie (GBR) 6.56  Pierfrancesco Pavoni (ITA) 6.59  Jiří Valík (TCH) 6.63
200 metres
 Sandro Floris (ITA) 21.01  Nikolay Antonov (BUL) 21.04  Bruno Marie-Rose (FRA) 21.28
400 metres
 Norbert Dobeleit (FRG) 46.08  Jens Carlowitz (FRG) 46.09  Cayetano Cornet (ESP) 46.01
800 metres
 Tom McKean (GBR) 1:46.22  Tomás de Teresa (ESP) 1:47.22  Zbigniew Janus (POL) 1:47.37
1500 metres
 Jens-Peter Herold (GDR) 3:44.39  Fermín Cacho (ESP) 3:44.61  Tony Morrell (GBR) 3:44.83
3000 metres
 Eric Dubus (FRA) 7:53.94  Jacky Carlier (FRA) 7:54.75  Branko Zorko (YUG) 7:54.77
60 metres hurdles
 Igors Kazanovs (URS) 7.52  Tony Jarrett (GBR) 7.58  Florian Schwarthoff (FRG) 7.61
5000 metres walk
 Mikhail Shchennikov (URS) 19:00.62  Giovanni De Benedictis (ITA) 19:02.90  Axel Noack (GDR) 19:08.36
High jump
 Artur Partyka (POL) 2.33  Arturo Ortiz (ESP) 2.30  Dietmar Mögenburg (FRG)
 Gerd Nagel (FRG)
2.30
Pole vault
 Rodion Gataullin (URS) 5.80  Grigoriy Yegorov (URS) 5.75  Hermann Fehringer (AUT)
 Thierry Vigneron (FRA)
5.70
Long jump
 Dietmar Haaf (FRG) 8.11  Emiel Mellaard (NED) 8.08  Robert Emmiyan (URS) 8.06
Triple jump
 Igor Lapshin (URS) 17.14  Oleg Sakirkin (URS) 16.70  Tord Henriksson (SWE) 16.69
Shot put
 Klaus Bodenmüller (AUT) 21.03 NR  Ulf Timmermann (GDR) 20.43  Oliver-Sven Buder (GDR) 20.20

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 metres
 Ulrike Sarvari (FRG) 7.10  Laurence Bily (FRA) 7.13  Nelli Fiere-Cooman (NED) 7.14
200 metres
 Ulrike Sarvari (FRG) 22.96  Natalya Kovtun (URS) 23.01  Galina Malchugina (URS) 23.04
400 metres
 Marina Shmonina (URS) 51.22  Iolanda Oanta (ROM) 52.22  Judit Forgács (HUN) 53.02
800 metres
 Lyubov Gurina (URS) 2:01.63  Sabine Zwiener (FRG) 2:02.23  Lorraine Baker (GBR) 2:02.42
1500 metres
 Doina Melinte (ROM) 4:09.73  Sandra Gasser (SUI) 4:10.13  Violeta Beclea (ROM) 4:10.44
3000 metres
 Elly van Hulst (NED) 8:57.28  Margareta Keszeg (ROM) 8:57.50  Andrea Hahmann (GDR) 9:00.31
60 metres hurdles
 Lyudmila Narozhilenko (URS) 7.74  Monique Ewanjé-Épée (FRA) 7.84  Mihaela Pogacian (ROM) 7.99
3000 metres walk
 Beate Anders (GDR) 11:59.36  Ileana Salvador (ITA) 12:18.84  Annarita Sidoti (ITA) 12:27.94
High jump
 Heike Redetzky (FRG) 2.00  Britta Vörös (GDR) 1.94  Galina Astafei (ROM) 1.94
Long jump
 Galina Chistyakova (URS) 6.85  Olena Khlopotnova (URS) 6.74  Helga Radtke (GDR) 6.66
Triple jump
 Galina Chistyakova (URS) 14.14  Helga Radtke (GDR) 13.63  Ana Isabel Oliveira (POR) 13.44
Shot put
 Claudia Losch (FRG) 20.64  Natalya Lisovskaya (URS) 20.35  Grit Hammer (GDR) 19.34

Medal table

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Soviet Union 9 5 2 16
2  West Germany 5 2 3 10
3  East Germany 2 3 5 10
4  France 2 3 2 7
5  United Kingdom 2 1 2 5
6  Italy 1 3 1 5
7  Romania 1 2 3 6
8  Netherlands 1 1 1 3
9  Austria 1 0 1 2
 Poland 1 0 1 2
11  Spain 0 2 1 3
12  Bulgaria 0 1 0 1
  Switzerland 0 1 0 1
14  Czechoslovakia 0 0 1 1
 Hungary 0 0 1 1
 Portugal 0 0 1 1
 Yugoslavia 0 0 1 1

Participating nations

See also

External links

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