2000 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
clean up, typo(s) fixed: Recently- → Recently using AWB
Rescuing 3 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0.9.5
 
(35 intermediate revisions by 24 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{Infobox Athletics Championships
|Name = IX Ibero-American Championships
|Logo = 2000 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics logo.png
|Logo = Maracana Stadium.jpg
|Size = 220
|Colour = #FFCA4D
|Optional caption =
|Optional caption = The host athletics stadium (centre top) seen as part of the [[Maracanã Complex|Maracanã]] Sports Complex
|Host city = [[Rio de Janeiro (city)|Rio de Janeiro]], [[Brazil]]
|Dates = 1120 & 1221 May
|Stadium = [[Estádio Célio de Barros]]
|Nations participating = 20
|Athletes participating = 308297
|Events = 44
|Records set = <small>8 championship records</small>
|Previous = [[1998 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics|1998 Lisbon]]
|Next = [[2002 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics|2002 CuidadGuatemala de GuatemalaCity]]
}}
The '''2000 [[Ibero-American Championships in Athletics]]''' (Spanish: '''''IX Campeonato Iberoamericano de Atletismo''''') was the ninth edition of the international [[athletics (sport)|athletics]] competition between [[Ibero-America]]n nations which was held at the [[Estádio Célio de Barros]] in [[Rio de Janeiro (city)|Rio de Janeiro]], [[Brazil]] on 1120 and 1221 May.<ref name=CONS>{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20110725195432/http://www.consudatle.org/estadisiberosud.pdf Campeonato Iberamericano]}}. [[CONSUDATLE]]. Retrieved on 2012-01-04.</ref> With a total of 308 athletes, the number of competitors was the lowest since 1990. The Spanish team (29 athletes) was much smaller than previous delegations as most of the Spaniards chose to focus on the [[Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics|2000 Sydney Olympics]] instead.<ref name=SF10>[http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf El Atletismo Ibero-Americano - San Fernando 2010] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111123081158/http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf |date=2011-11-23 }} (pgs. 161). RFEA. Retrieved on 2012-01-08.</ref> Other national teams used the competition as a chance to gain an Olympic qualifying mark.<ref>[https://archive.today/20120709231745/http://berlin.iaaf.org/aboutiaaf/news/newsid=15212.html Brazil heads Ibero American Games standings with 7 gold medals]. IAAF/AP (2000-05-21). Retrieved on 2012-01-09.</ref>
 
The host nation Brazil easily topped the medal table by winning 18 [[gold medal]]s and a total haul of 45 medals. The next best performing nation was [[Spain]], which took six golds and 21 medals during the two-day championships.<ref name=IAAF1>[https://archive.today/20130415013341/http://berlin.iaaf.org/aboutiaaf/news/newsid=15214.html Brazil clinches 18 golds in Ibero American Championships]. IAAF/AP (2000-05-22). Retrieved on 2012-01-09.</ref> [[Cuba]] and [[Colombia]] won five golds each, while [[Argentina]] and [[Mexico]] had the third and fourth largest totals, with eleven and ten medals respectively. Fourteen of the 20 nations that participated reached the medal podium.<ref name=SF10/>
 
Brazil dominated the men's track events and [[Hudson de Souza]] completed aan [[800 metres|800]]/[[1500 metres]] double. Cuban men provided the highlights of the men's field events, where [[Michael Calvo]] won the [[triple jump]] with a jump of 17.05&nbsp;m and [[Emeterio González]] had a [[javelin throw]] over eighty metres (both championship marks). In the women's track events, reigning Olympic champion [[Fernanda Ribeiro]] broke the 5000&nbsp;m championship record and [[Soraya Telles]] became the first female Ibero-American champion in the [[steeplechase (athletics)|steeplechase]] (a contest which meant that the 44-event programme was equal between the sexes for the first time). The 10,000 m track walk saw [[Rosario Sánchez]] knock almost a minute of the meet record, while runner-up [[Geovana Irusta]] set a South American record behind her.<ref name=SF10/>
 
Although the level of performances was generally lower than at earlier editions, eight [[List of Ibero-American Championships in Athletics records|championships records]] were set. Two national records were also beaten; [[Elena Guerra (athlete)|Elena Guerra]] improved the 1500&nbsp;m [[Uruguayan records in athletics|Uruguayan record]] and [[Érika Olivera]] set a new [[Chilean records in athletics|Chilean record]] for the [[5000 metres]].<ref name=SF10/> The Brazilian men's [[4×100 m relay]] team gave the performance of the competition with their winning time of 38.24&nbsp;seconds, which was a [[List of South American records in athletics|South American record]] and an Ibero-American record.<ref name=IAAF1/>
 
|Optional caption =[[File:Maracana Stadium.jpg|thumb|right|The host athletics stadium (centre top) seen as part of the [[MaracanãEstádio Complexdo Maracanã|Maracanã]] Sports Complex]]
Several athletes present at the competition went on to win medals on the Olympic stage later that year: Mexican [[Noé Hernández]] won the 20&nbsp;km walk silver medal, Fernanda Ribeiro took an Olympic bronze over 10,000&nbsp;m, while both the Brazilian and Cuban 4×100&nbsp;m relay teams reached the Olympic podium.<ref>[http://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/2000/ATH/ Athletics at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games]. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2012-01-09.</ref> Future world champion [[Naide Gomes]] won [[São Tomé and Príncipe]]'s first ever medal with her runner-up performance in the [[heptathlon]].
 
Several athletes present at the competition went on to win medals on the Olympic stage later that year: Mexican [[Noé Hernández (racewalker)|Noé Hernández]] won the 20&nbsp;km walk silver medal, Fernanda Ribeiro took an Olympic bronze over 10,000&nbsp;m, while both the Brazilian and Cuban 4×100&nbsp;m relay teams reached the Olympic podium.<ref>[httphttps://web.archive.org/web/20200417042527/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/2000/ATH/ Athletics at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games]. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2012-01-09.</ref> Future world champion [[Naide Gomes]] won [[São Tomé and Príncipe]]'s first ever medal with her runner-up performance in the [[heptathlon]].
 
==Medal summary==
{{main|2000 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics – Results}}
 
===Men===
Line 73 ⟶ 76:
|{{flagathlete|[[Eronilde de Araújo]]|BRA}} ||49.35
|{{flagathlete|[[Carlos Zbinden]]|CHI}} ||50.32
|{{flagathlete|[[Anderson JorgeCosta dos Santos]]|BRA}} ||50.59
|-
|3000 m steeplechase
|{{flagathlete|[[José Luis Blanco]]|ESP}} ||8:28.44
|{{flagathlete|[[Salvador Miranda (runner)|Salvador Miranda]]|MEX}} ||8:28.80
|{{flagathlete|[[José María González (athlete)|José María González]]|ESP}} ||8:30.96
|-
|4×100 m relay
| {{flagteam|BRA}}<br />[[Vicente de Lima]]<br />[[Édson Ribeiro]]<br />[[André da Silva]]<br />[[Claudinei da Silva]]||38.24 '''CR'''
| {{flagteam|CUB}}<br />[[José Ángel César]]<br />[[Luis Alberto Pérez-Rionda]]<br />[[Iván García (athlete)|Iván García]]<br />[[Freddy Mayola]]||38.97
| {{flagteam|CHI}}<br />[[Juan Pablo Faúndez]]<br />[[Ricardo Roach]]<br />[[Sebastián Keitel]]<br />[[Rodrigo Roach]]||39.90
|-
|4×400 m relay
| {{flagteam|BRA}}<br />[[Anderson Jorge dos Santos]]<br />[[Sanderlei Parrela]]<br />[[Luis Antônio Eloi]]<br />[[Valdinei da Silva]]||3:03.33
| {{flagteam|CHI}}<br />[[Ricardo Roach]]<br />[[Guillermo Meyer]]<br />[[Carlos Zbinden]]<br />[[Rodrigo Roach]]||3:10.86
| {{flagteam|ARG}}<br />[[Carlos Gats]]<br />[[Gustavo Aguirre]]<br />[[Iván Altamirano]]<br />[[Gabriel López (athlete)|Gabriel López]]||3:12.45
|-
|20,000 m track walk
|{{flagathlete|[[Noé Hernández (racewalker)|Noé Hernández]]|MEX}} ||1:24:50.46
|{{flagathlete|[[João Vieira (athleteracewalker)|João Vieira]]|POR}} ||1:26:37.78
|{{flagathlete|[[Ricardo Alexandre Reinert]]|BRA}} ||1:32:43.63
|-
Line 107 ⟶ 110:
| Long jump
|{{flagathlete|[[Nelson Ferreira (athlete)|Nelson Ferreira]]|BRA}} ||7.90 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Esteban Copland]]|VEN|1930}} ||7.81 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Joan Lino Martínez]]|CUB}} ||7.71 m
|-
Line 117 ⟶ 120:
| Shot put
|{{flagathlete|[[Manuel Martínez Gutiérrez]]|ESP}} ||19.70 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Yojer Medina]]|VEN|1930}} ||18.89 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Iker Sukia]]|ESP}} ||18.17 m
|-
Line 127 ⟶ 130:
| Hammer throw
|{{flagathlete|[[Juan Ignacio Cerra]]|ARG}} ||74.32 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Vítor Costa (hammer thrower)|Vítor Costa]]|POR}} ||72.36 m
|{{flagathlete|[[José Manuel Pérez (athlete)|José Manuel Pérez]]|ESP}} ||70.67 m
|-
| Javelin throw
Line 166 ⟶ 169:
|1500 metres
|{{flagathlete|[[Nuria Fernández]]|ESP}} ||4:18.03
|{{flagathlete|[[Rocío Rodríguez (athlete)|Rocío Rodríguez]]|ESP}} ||4:19.78
|{{flagathlete|[[Niusha Mancilla]]|BOL}} ||4:20.02
|-
Line 236 ⟶ 239:
| Discus throw
|{{flagathlete|[[Katiuscia de Jesus]]|BRA}} ||51.41 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Neolanis Suárez]]|VEN|1930}} ||49.49 m
|{{flagathlete|[[Fanny García]]|VEN|1930}} ||49.45 m
|-
| Hammer throw
Line 258 ⟶ 261:
[[File:Hudson de Souza.jpg|thumb|160px|Brazil's [[Hudson de Souza]] won the 800 and 1500&nbsp;m titles.]]
[[File:Naide Gomes.JPG|thumb|220px|Heptathlon runner-up [[Naide Gomes]] was São Tomé and Príncipe's first ever medallist.]]
{{Medals table
;Key:
| caption =
{{legend|#ccccff|The host country (Brazil) is highlighted in lavender blue|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}
| host = BRA
{| {{RankedMedalTable|class=wikitable sortable}}
| flag_template =
|-style="background-color:#ccccff"
| event =
| 1 ||align=left| '''{{flagcountry|BRA}}''' || 18 || 16 || 11 || 45
| team =
|-
| gold_BRA = 18 | silver_BRA = 16 | bronze_BRA = 11 | host_BRA = yes
| 2 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|ESP}} || 6 || 5 || 10 || 21
| gold_ESP = 6 | silver_ESP = 5 | bronze_ESP = 10
|-
| gold_CUB = 5 | silver_CUB = 2 | bronze_CUB = 1
| 3 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|CUB}} || 5 || 2 || 1 || 8
| gold_COL = 5 | silver_COL = 0 | bronze_COL = 1
|-
| gold_ARG = 3 | silver_ARG = 3 | bronze_ARG = 5
| 4 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|COL}} || 5 || 0 || 1 || 6
| gold_POR = 3 | silver_POR = 3 | bronze_POR = 3
|-
| gold_MEX = 3 | silver_MEX = 5 | bronze_MEX = 2
| 5 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|ARG}} || 3 || 3 || 5 || 11
| gold_CHI = 1 | silver_CHI = 3 | bronze_CHI = 5
|-
| gold_VEN = 0 | silver_VEN = 3 | bronze_VEN = 1 | name_VEN = {{flagteam|VEN|1930}}
| 6 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|POR}} || 3 || 3 || 3 || 9
| gold_PUR = 0 | silver_PUR = 1 | bronze_PUR = 3
|-
| gold_BOL = 0 | silver_BOL = 1 | bronze_BOL = 1
| 7 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|MEX}} || 3 || 5 || 2 || 10
| gold_PAR = 0 | silver_PAR = 1 | bronze_PAR = 0
|-
| gold_STP = 0 | silver_STP = 1 | bronze_STP = 0
| 8 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|CHI}} || 1 || 3 || 5 || 9
| gold_URU = 0 | silver_URU = 0 | bronze_URU = 1
|-
|}}
| 9 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|VEN}} || 0 || 3 || 1 || 4
 
|-
| 10 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|PUR}} || 0 || 1 || 3 || 4
|-
| 11 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|BOL}} || 0 || 1 || 1 || 2
|-
| 12= ||align=left| {{flagcountry|PAR}} || 0 || 1 || 0 || 1
|-
| 12= ||align=left| {{flagcountry|STP}} || 0 || 1 || 0 || 1
|-
| 14 ||align=left| {{flagcountry|URU}} || 0 || 0 || 1 || 1
|-class="sortbottom"
!colspan=2|Total || 44 || 44 || 44 || 132
|}
 
==Participation==
A total of 20 delegations were sent from the 28 member nations of the [[Asociación Iberoamericana de Atletismo]], with 308297 athletes being present at the competition. Recently joined members Angola, Cape Verde and Equatorial Guinea were all absent in 2000. Costa Rica, El Salvador and the Dominican Republic were other regular participants who did not take part in the championships.<ref name=PP>[http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf El Atletismo Ibero-Americano - San Fernando 2010] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111123081158/http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf |date=2011-11-23 }} (pg. 214). RFEA. Retrieved on 2012-01-08.</ref>
 
{{div col-begin|colwidth=22em}}
*{{col-4ARG}} (26)
*{{ARGBRA}} (82)
*{{BOL}} (3)
*{{BRACHI}} (27)
*{{COL}} (13)
*{{CUB}} (12)
*{{col-4ECU}} (5)
*{{CHIGUA}} (5)
*{{ECUGBS}} (1)
*{{GUAMEX}} (20)
*{{GNBMOZ}} (4)
*{{MEXPAN}} (2)
*{{col-4PAR}} (5)
*{{MOZPER}} (6)
*{{PANPOR}} (11)
*{{PARPUR}} (19)
*{{PERSTP}} (1)
*{{PORESP}} (30)
*{{col-4URU}} (8)
*{{flag|Venezuela|1930}} (17)
*{{PUR}}
*{{STPdiv col end}}
*{{ESP}}
*{{URU}}
*{{VEN}}
{{col-end}}
 
==References==
Line 327 ⟶ 314:
;Results
*[http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/iac.htm Ibero American Championships]. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2012-01-08.
*[http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf El Atletismo Ibero-Americano - San Fernando 2010] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111123081158/http://www.rfea.es/aeea/archivos/libroiberoamericano2010.pdf |date=2011-11-23 }} (pgs. 161-170). RFEA. Retrieved on 2012-01-08.
 
{{2000 in athletics}}
{{Ibero-American Championships}}
 
[[Category:Ibero-American Championships in Athletics]]
[[Category:2000 in athletics (track and field)|Ibero-American Championships]]
[[Category:2000 in Brazilian sport]]
[[Category:AthleticsInternational inathletics competitions hosted by Brazil]]
[[Category:SportInternational sports competitions in Rio de Janeiro (city)]]
[[Category:Athletics in Rio de Janeiro (city)]]
[[Category:May 2000 sports events in South America]]