IAAF Combined Events Challenge
The IAAF Combined Events Challenge is an athletics contest organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations (since 1998) for combined events, the heptathlon for women, and the decathlon for men. The winners are decided by totalling the number of points that the athletes have scored in each of three combined events competitions during the season. Points scored are determined by the IAAF combined events scoring tables.
The total prize money available is US$202,000, split evenly between male and female athletes. The male and female winners each receive $30,000, while second and third placed athletes are entitled to $20,000 and $15,000 respectively. Smaller prizes are given to the rest of the top eight finishers.[1]
Challenge competitions
Meetings
|
Games and championships |
Results
Men
Year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1998 |
Erki Nool Estonia | 25967 | Jón Arnar Magnússon Iceland | 25708 | Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25604 |
1999 |
Tomáš Dvořák Czech Republic | 26476 | Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25184 | Chris Huffins United States | 25067 |
2000 |
Erki Nool Estonia | 26089 | Tomáš Dvořák Czech Republic | 26018 | Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25591 |
2001 |
Tomáš Dvořák Czech Republic | 25943 | Erki Nool Estonia | 25839 | Lev Lobodin Russia | 25044 |
2002 |
Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 26301 | Tom Pappas United States | 25506 | Lev Lobodin Russia | 25179 |
2003 |
Tom Pappas United States | 26119 | Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 26047 | Laurent Hernu France | 2424 |
2004 |
Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25952 | Bryan Clay United States | 25602 | Dmitriy Karpov Kazakhstan | 25336 |
2005 |
Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25381 | Bryan Clay United States | 25199 | Attila Zsivoczky Hungary | 25185 |
2006 |
Dmitriy Karpov Kazakhstan | 25145 | Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25029 | Attila Zsivoczky Hungary | 24950 |
2007 |
Roman Šebrle Czech Republic | 25261 | Maurice Smith Jamaica | 25220 | Aleksey Drozdov Russia | 24972 |
2008 |
Andrei Krauchanka Belarus | 25448 | Leonel Suárez Cuba | 25344 | Aleksandr Pogorelov Russia | 24804 |
2009 |
Trey Hardee United States | 25567 | Yordanis García Cuba | 25231 | Oleksiy Kasyanov Ukraine | 25056 |
2010[2] | Romain Barras France | 25063 | Leonel Suárez Cuba | 24857 | Jake Arnold United States | 24627 |
2011 | Leonel Suárez Cuba | 25172 | Eelco Sintnicolaas Netherlands | 24772 | Mikk Pahapill Estonia | 24746 |
2012 | Hans Van Alphen Belgium | 25259 | Pascal Behrenbruch Germany | 25117 | Oleksiy Kasyanov Ukraine | 24822 |
2013 | Andrei Krauchanka Belarus | 25084 | Damian Warner Canada | 24980 | Pascal Behrenbruch Germany | 24768 |
2014 | Rico Freimuth Germany | 24981 | Eelco Sintnicolaas Netherlands | 24795 | Yordani García Cuba | 24423 |
2015 | Ilya Shkurenev Russia | 25259 | Michael Schrader Germany | 25252 | Damian Warner Canada | 25247 |
Women
See also
References
- ↑ 2009 IAAF Outdoor Handbook. IAAF (2009). Retrieved on 2009-11-26.
- ↑ van Kuijen, Hans (16 December 2010). Barras and Chernova are the overall winners of the 2010 IAAF Combined Events Challenge. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-12-16.
External links
- Competition history at IAAF
- Results at gbrathletics.com
- IAAF combined events scoring tables
- Historical overview from IAAF
- Years in review: 2010, 2011
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