1922 South American Championships in Athletics (unofficial)
Unofficial South American Championships in Athletics | |
---|---|
Host city | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Level | Senior |
Events | 22 |
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Unofficial South American Championships in Athletics were held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1922. They were part of the "Jogos Olímpicos Latino-Americanos" held in celebration of the 100th anniversary of Brazilian independence under the patronage of the IOC.[1]
Medal summary
Medal winners are published.[2]
Men
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres | Augusto de Negri (ARG) | 11.2 | Luis Miguel (CHI) | 11.4 | Carlos Bastos (URU) | |
200 metres* | ||||||
400 metres | Isabelino Gradín (URU) | 50.6 | Dionysio de Figueirêdo (BRA) | 50.8 | Félix Escobar (ARG) | |
800 metres | Luis Suárez (ARG) | 2:05.2 | Carlos Springer (ARG) | 2:06.8 | Rodolfo Etcheverry (ARG) | |
1500 metres | Luis Suárez (ARG) | 4:05.6 | Alfredo Gomes (BRA) | 4:06.2 | Raúl Amat (ARG) | |
3000 metres | Manuel Plaza (CHI) | 9:08.8 | Oscar Guajardo (CHI) | Pedro Arancibia (CHI) | ||
5000 metres | Manuel Plaza (CHI) | 16:06.6 | Alfredo Gomes (BRA) | 16:10.8 | José Ribas (BRA) | |
10,000 metres | Manuel Plaza (CHI) | 33:17.0 | Juan Bravo (CHI) | José Ribas (BRA) | ||
Marathon | Manuel Plaza (CHI) | Luis Celis (CHI) | Matheus Marcondes (BRA) | |||
110 metres hurdles | Guillermo Newbery (ARG) | 16.0 | Aldo Travaglia (BRA) | Otto Dietsch (ARG) | ||
400 metres hurdles | Enrique Thompson (ARG) | 56.8 | Andrés Mazzali (URU) | Agustín Garay (ARG) | ||
High jump | Valerio Vallanía (ARG) | 1.815 | Enrico Falcão (BRA) | 1.815 | Carlos Patiño (URU) | 1.75 |
Pole vault | José Amejeiras (URU) | 3.40 | Ernesto Kausel (CHI) | 3.40 | Ernesto Goycolea (CHI) | 3.30 |
Long jump | Ramiro García (CHI) | 6.695 | Carlos Patiño (URU) | 6.49 | Emmanuel Bianchi (BRA) | 6.455 |
Shot put | Benjamín Acevedo (CHI) | 12.275 | Jorge Llobet Cullen (ARG) | 12.175 | Fernando Capellini (URU) | 11.835 |
Discus throw | David Martín Estévez (URU) | 39.25 | Jorge Llobet Cullen (ARG) | 39.14 | Benjamín Acevedo (CHI) | 38.14 |
Hammer throw | Jorge Llobet Cullen (ARG) | 41.29 | Domingo Spirito (ARG) | 39.24 | Osvaldo Garay (ARG) | 36.35 |
Javelin throw | Willy Seewald (BRA) | 56.885 | Arturo Medina (CHI) | 50.30 | Hernán Orrego (CHI) | 44.76 |
Pentathlon | Emmanuel Bianchi (BRA) | Guillermo Newbery (ARG) Enrique Thompson (ARG) | ||||
4 × 100 metres relay | Argentina | 44.0 | Brazil | 45.2 | Chile | |
4 × 400 metres relay** | ||||||
Cross country 10,000 metres | Manuel Plaza (CHI) | 34:56.6 | Florides Castillo (CHI) | Luis Celis (CHI) |
* = race void as Chilean athletes refused to re-run after false start by winner whilst two other runners infringed lane; original result 1 Ramiro García (CHI) 22.8, 2 Eduardo Albe (ARG), 3 Carlos Bastos (URU)[2]
** = race void as crowd infringed on track; original result 1 Uruguay 3:31.2u, 2 Argentina, 3 Brazil[2]
Medal table (unofficial)
The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Argentina | 8 | 6 | 6 | 20 |
2 | Chile | 7 | 7 | 6 | 20 |
3 | Uruguay | 3 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
4 | Brazil | 2 | 6 | 4 | 12 |
References
- ↑ Torres, Cesar R., Jogos Olímpicos Latino-Americanos de 1922 – Rio de Janeiro (PDF) (in Portuguese), Atlas do Esporte no Brasil, retrieved October 29, 2011
- 1 2 3 "SOUTH AMERICAN CHAMPIONSHIPS (UNOFFICIAL)", Athletics Weekly, retrieved October 29, 2011
External links
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