1989 IAAF World Race Walking Cup | |
---|---|
Organisers | IAAF |
Edition | 14th |
Date | May 27 |
Host city | L'Hospitalet, Catalunya, Spain |
Events | 3 |
Participation | 341 athletes from 33 nations |
The 1989 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 27 and 28 May 1989 in the streets of L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, suburb of Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain.
Complete results were published. [1]
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men | ||||||
Men's 20 km walk | Frants Kostyukevich Soviet Union | 1:20:21 | Mikhail Shchennikov Soviet Union | 1:20:34 | Yevgeniy Misyulya Soviet Union | 1:20:47 |
Men's 50 km walk | Simon Baker Australia | 3:43:13 | Andrey Perlov Soviet Union | 3:44:12 | Stanislav Vezhel Soviet Union | 3:44:50 |
Lugano Cup (Men) | ||||||
Team (Men) | Soviet Union | 585 pts | Italy | 534 pts | France | 516 pts |
Women | ||||||
Women's 10 km walk | Beate Anders East Germany | 43:08 | Kerry Saxby-Junna Australia | 43:12 | Ileana Salvador Italy | 43:24 |
Eschborn Cup (Women) | ||||||
Team (Women) | Soviet Union | 218 pts | China | 212 pts | Italy | 203 pts |
The team rankings, named Lugano Trophy, combined the 20 km and 50 km events team results. [2]
Place | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
Soviet Union | 585 pts | |
Italy | 534 pts | |
France | 516 pts | |
4 | Spain | 503 pts |
5 | Mexico | 490 pts |
6 | Czechoslovakia | 474 pts |
7 | Poland | 444 pts |
8 | United Kingdom | 425 pts |
9 | East Germany | 408 pts |
10 | West Germany | 396 pts |
11 | Finland | 340 pts |
12 | United States | 334 pts |
13 | Hungary | 333 pts |
14 | Cuba | 312 pts |
15 | Brazil | 295 pts |
16 | Sweden | 290 pts |
17 | Algeria | 287 pts |
18 | Australia | 269 pts |
19 | Portugal | 257 pts |
20 | Switzerland | 245 pts |
21 | China | 234 pts |
22 | Netherlands | 226 pts |
23 | Canada | 207 pts |
24 | Denmark | 198 pts |
25 | Belgium | 193 pts |
26 | Norway | 193 pts |
27 | Venezuela | 191 pts |
28 | Ireland | 162 pts |
29 | Japan | 123 pts |
30 | Kenya | 96 pts |
31 | Guatemala | 93 pts |
32 | Greece | 92 pts |
33 | India | 58 pts |
Place | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
Soviet Union | 218 pts | |
China | 212 pts | |
Italy | 203 pts | |
4 | East Germany | 185 pts |
5 | Hungary | 185 pts |
6 | Canada | 185 pts |
7 | Spain | 174 pts |
8 | Australia | 163 pts |
9 | United States | 162 pts |
10 | Japan | 141 pts |
11 | United Kingdom | 140 pts |
12 | Sweden | 137 pts |
13 | West Germany | 117 pts |
14 | Poland | 112 pts |
15 | France | 109 pts |
16 | Norway | 106 pts |
17 | Finland | 93 pts |
18 | Denmark | 73 pts |
19 | Greece | 64 pts |
20 | Mexico | 61 pts |
21 | Ireland | 55 pts |
22 | Brazil | 54 pts |
23 | Belgium | 44 pts |
24 | Switzerland | 41 pts |
25 | Venezuela | 27 pts |
26 | Kenya | 11 pts |
The participation of 341 athletes (235 men/106 women) from 33 countries is reported. [1]
The World Athletics Race Walking Team Championships is a racewalking event organised by World Athletics. It has been held since 1961, and generally on a biennial basis. The first women's edition of the event happened in 1979. It was formerly known as the Lugano Cup after the city that hosted the first event, then became the IAAF World Race Walking Cup until 2016 and then IAAF World Race Walking Team Championships until 2018. In 2004, a junior division was added for athletes between 16 and 20. Since 2008 it has been a constituent meeting of the World Athletics Challenge – Race Walking.
The 1999 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 1 and 2 May 1999 in the streets of Mézidon-Canon, France. From this year on, there was no combined men's team trophy, just the separate standings for the two races, and the women's team trophy was no longer called "Eschborn Cup" as before with their distance being increased from 10 km to 20 km.
The 1997 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 19 and 20 April 1997 in the streets of Poděbrady, Czech Republic. The course followed a loop around Lázeňský park.
The 1995 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 29 and 30 April 1995 in the streets of Beijing, China. The event was also known as IAAF/Reebok World Race Walking Cup.
The 1993 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 24 and 25 April 1993 in the streets of Monterrey, Mexico. The event was also known as IAAF/Reebok World Race Walking Cup. For the first time, event specific team standings were introduced for the men's 20 km and 50 km competitions.
The 1991 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 1 and 2 June 1991 in the streets of San Jose, California, USA. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup. The course followed a loop along Park Avenue and Almaden Boulevard, north and east of the intersection.
The 1987 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 2 and 3 May 1987 in the streets of New York City, USA. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup.
The 1985 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 28 and 29 September 1985 in the streets of St John's, Isle of Man. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup.
The 1983 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 24 and 25 September 1983 in the streets of Bergen, Norway. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup.
The 1981 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 3 and 4 October 1981 in the streets of Valencia, Spain. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup.
The 1961 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Lugano, Ticino, Switzerland, on October 15–16, 1961. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1963 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Varese, Italy, on October 12–13, 1963. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1965 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Pescara, Italy, on October 9–10, 1965. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1967 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Bad Saarow, German Democratic Republic, on October 15, 1967. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1970 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Eschborn, Federal Republic of Germany, on October 10, 1970. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1973 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Lugano, Switzerland, on October 12–13, 1973. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy.
The 1975 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Le Grand-Quevilly, France, on October 11–12, 1975. The event was also known as Lugano Trophy. For the first time, there was a women's 5 km race held as invitation event.
The 1977 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Milton Keynes, United Kingdom, on 24–25 September 1977. For the first time, a new competition name IAAF Race Walking World Cup was introduced replacing the former Lugano Trophy. As in 1975, there was a women's 5 km race held as invitation event. Mexico was dominant in the men's events, taking the team title and the top two spots in the 20 km and 50 km events through Daniel Bautista, Domingo Colín, Raúl González and Pedro Aroche. Sweden's Siv Gustavsson won the invitational women's event.
The 1979 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Eschborn, Federal Republic of Germany, on September 29–30, 1979. The event was also known as IAAF Race Walking World Cup. The women's 5 km race was now officially introduced into the competition with the women's teams competing for the Eschborn Cup.
Lugano Trophy, set up in 1961 at the occasion of the first edition of the IAAF World Race Walking Cup, so in the Lugano 1961 edition, represented the team rankings that combined the 20 km race walk and 50 km race walk events. It was held until 1997 and since 1993 two different team rankings were drawn for 20 km and for 50 km, so for three editions, three titles were assigned for team race.
Men's Lugano Trophy(Combining results of 20Km & 50Km)