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Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Annual indoor track and field competition

Balkan Athletics Indoor Championships
Βαλκανικοί Αγώνες Κλειστού Στίβου
First event1994
Occur everyYear
PurposeIndoor track and field event between Balkan nations
OrganiserAssociation of the Balkan Athletics Federations

TheBalkan Athletics Indoor Championships, also known as theBalkan Indoor Games (Greek:Βαλκανικοί Αγώνες Κλειστού Στίβου), is an annual international regionalindoor track and field competition between athletes from theBalkans. Following a test event in 1991,[1] it was officially launched in 1994.[2] Organised by theAssociation of the Balkan Athletics Federations (ABAF), it is typically held in February.[3][4][5] The competition complemented the long-running annual outdoor track and field tournament: theBalkan Games.[6]

It received strong support from theHellenic Amateur Athletic Association – until 2002, thePeace and Friendship Stadium inPiraeus,[7][8] Greece was the permanent host, as this was the only international standard indoor track and field arena in the region at that point. ThePeania Indoors Arena, in the Metropolitan area of the Greek capital, took on hosting duties from 2003 to 2006, then began alternating with the Faliro,Piraeus stadium.[2] The event was cancelled in both 2010 and 2011 due to the insolvency of the Greek athletics body, linked to theGreek government-debt crisis.[9] The event was continued in 2012 with Turkey as the new host nation, which had built theAtaköy Athletics Arena for the2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships. The Balkan competition served as a major test event for the global championships.[10][11]

The programme of events has been similar to that of theIAAF World Indoor Championships, except for the omission of thecombined track and field events and (usually) the4 × 400 metres relay. Women'spole vault was introduced in 1998, giving the sexes event parity, and the200 metres for both sexes was dropped after 2005 in line with international standards. The 1994 championships featuredracewalking competitions, but these were dropped for subsequent editions.[2] In addition to individual titles, a men's and a women's team title is awarded to the best performing nation in each section. Both medal tables and points tables are collated, with the points score contributing to the team title.[12][13] The points table was introduced in 2002.

A total of seventeen nations have entered the competition during its history, withYugoslavia andSerbia and Montenegro being former competitors; all successor states of Yugoslavia have since competed independently, bar Kosovo.[12] The initial competition was between six nations, which expanded to nine by the end of the 1990s. The number of competing nations was further expanded between 2011 and 2014, with five more countries being admitted by the ABAF.Azerbaijan has also competed as a guest nation; its performances were discounted for medal and points-scoring purposes.[14] Romania and Greece have historically been the most successful nations at the event, although Turkey has been the most dominant since 2012.

Editions

[edit]
EditionYearStadiumCityCountryDatesNo. of
events
No. of
athletes
Men's winner[nb1]Women's winner[nb1]
1991Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreeceJanuary22 Romania Romania
11994Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece20 February25 Romania Romania
21995Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece25 February23 Greece Romania
31996Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece24 February23 Greece Romania
41997Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece22 February23 Greece Romania
51998Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece22 February24 Romania Romania
61999Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece13 February24 Greece Romania
72000Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece12 February24 Bulgaria Romania
82001Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece18 February24 Greece Greece
92002Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece23 February24 Greece Greece
102003Peania Indoors ArenaPaianiaGreece4 March24 Romania Greece
112004Peania Indoors ArenaPaianiaGreece28 February24 Romania Romania
122005Peania Indoors ArenaPaianiaGreece16 February24 Greece Romania
132006Peania Indoors ArenaPaianiaGreece22 February22 Romania Romania
142007Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece21 February22 Romania Romania
152008Peania Indoors ArenaPaianiaGreece9 February22 Romania Romania
162009Peace and Friendship StadiumPiraeusGreece21 February22 Romania Romania
2010Cancelled
2011Cancelled
172012Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey18 February22 Greece Turkey
182013Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey23 February22 Turkey Romania
192014Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey22 February22 Turkey Romania
202015Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey21 February22 Turkey Turkey
212016Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey27 February22 Romania Romania
222017Kombank ArenaBelgradeSerbia25 February22 Turkey Greece
232018Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey17 February24 Romania Romania
242019Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey16 February24 Turkey Ukraine
252020Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey15 February24 Ukraine Romania
262021Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey20 February24 Turkey Ukraine
272022Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey5 March24 Turkey Turkey
282024Ataköy Athletics ArenaIstanbulTurkey10 February[15]
292025Atletska dvoranaBelgradeSerbia15 February
  • nb1 Team winners decided by medals up to 2001, with the points scoring format introduced in 2002.

Ranking

[edit]
YearRanking by Medals
123Source
1994 Romania Bulgaria Greece[16]
1995 Romania Greece Bulgaria[17]
1996-2021
2022 Turkey Romania Slovenia[18]
2024 Turkey Romania Slovenia[19]

Medals (1994-2024)

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Romania208144110462
2 Greece130148118396
3 Bulgaria8210391276
4 Turkey749498266
5 Serbia313545111
6 Croatia22182565
7 Yugoslavia16265395
8 Albania16101844
9 Ukraine1512835
10 Slovenia14111136
11 Bosnia and Herzegovina1391335
12 Moldova12161846
13 Cyprus98522
14 Armenia64414
15 Israel3069
16 Austria2237
17 Azerbaijan2114
18 Montenegro17311
19 North Macedonia15713
20 Georgia1438
21 Kosovo0202
Totals (21 entries)6586596401,957

Source:[20]

Participation

[edit]
NationFirst appearance
 Greece1991
 Albania1991
 Bulgaria1991
 Romania1991
 Turkey1991
 North Macedonia1996
 Moldova1996
 Bosnia and Herzegovina1998
 Serbia2007
 Montenegro2007
 Croatia2011
 Armenia2013
 Cyprus2014
 Slovenia2014
 Georgia2014
 Israel2016?[21]
 Ukraine2019
 Yugoslavia1991
 Serbia and Montenegro1994–2002[nb2]
2003–2006

Championships records

[edit]

Key:  Defunct event

Men

[edit]
EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateMeetPlaceRef.
60 m6.58Georgios Theodoridis Greece13 February 19991999 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
200 m21.25Ioan Vieru Romania28 February 20042004 ChampionshipsPaiania, Greece[22]
400 m46.35Iliya Dzhivondov Bulgaria12 February 20002000 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
800 m1:48.19Oleg Myronets Ukraine20 February 20212021 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey[23]
1500 m3:37.49İlham Tanui Özbilen Turkey23 February 20132013 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey
3000 m7:42.49Polat Kemboi Arıkan Turkey18 February 20122012 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey
60 m hurdles7.57Gheorghe Boroi Romania20 February 19941994 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
High jump2.32 mCristian Popescu Romania20 February 19941994 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
Pole vault5.76 mIvan Horvat Croatia25 February 20172017 ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia[24]
Long jump8.12 mBozhidar Sarâboyukov Bulgaria15 February 20252025 ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia[25]
Triple jump17.51 mMarian Oprea Romania22 February 20062006 ChampionshipsPaiania, Greece
Shot put20.89 mAndrei Toader Romania15 February 20252025 ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia[26]
4 × 400 m relay3:10.36Andrei Remus
Mihai Dringo
Simon Denis
Robert Parge
 Romania5 March 20222022 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey[27]

Women

[edit]
EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateMeetPlaceRef.
60 m7.13Tezdzhan Naimova Bulgaria21 February 20072007 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
200 m23.70Angela Moroșanu Romania16 February 20052005 ChampionshipsPaiania, Greece[28]
400 m51.06Vania Stambolova Bulgaria22 February 20062006 ChampionshipsPaiania, Greece
800 m1:59.82Mihaela Neacșu Romania21 February 20072007 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
1500 m4:06.89Luiza Gega Albania27 February 20162006 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey
3000 m8:55.22Cristina Grosu Romania23 February 20022002 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
60 m hurdles8.02Andrea Ivančević Croatia27 February 20162016 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey
High jump1.97 mStefka Kostadinova Bulgaria20 February 19941994 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
Pole vault4.60 mIana Gladiichuk Ukraine20 February 20212021 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey[29]
Long jump6.96 mIvana Španović Serbia25 February 20172017 ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbia[30]
Triple jump14.84 mHrysopiyi Devetzi Greece4 March 20032003 ChampionshipsPaiania, Greece
Shot put19.30 mAnca Heltne Romania21 February 20092009 ChampionshipsAthens, Greece
4 × 400 m relay3:33.76Kateryna Klymiuk
Tetiana Melnyk
Anastasiia Bryzgina
Anna Ryzhykova
 Ukraine16 February 20192019 ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkey[31]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Ματιές στα Σπορ (Survey of Sports), vol. 29 (January 1992), p. 43.
  2. ^abcBalkan Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  3. ^Mulkeen, Jon (2013-02-24).World leads by Lavillenie in Metz and Lendore, Duncan and Dendy in Fayetteville. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  4. ^Oprea eager for Moscow gold and World record - Balkan Indoor Champs report. IAAF (2006-02-23). Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  5. ^Mulkeen, Jon (2014-02-22).Beitia clears two metres, Fassinotti sets Italian record – indoor champs round-up. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  6. ^The Balkan Games in transition. IAAF (2001-02-19). Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  7. ^"Results | Balkan Athletics Official Website". 29 May 2024.
  8. ^"Βαλκανικοί Αγώνες (Balkan Games) | StivoZ.gr". Archived fromthe original on 3 July 2019. Retrieved6 July 2019.
  9. ^No Athens Indoor meeting this year or Balkan Indoor GamesArchived 2015-04-02 at theWayback Machine.Track and Field News. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  10. ^Turkish medal hopes and venue tested - Istanbul 2012. IAAF (2012-02-20). Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  11. ^Results. Association of Balkan Athletic Federations. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  12. ^abBalkan Indoor Championships 2015 TEAM POINTS - MENArchived 2015-04-02 at theWayback Machine. Association of Balkan Athletic Federations. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  13. ^Balkan Indoor Championships 2015 TEAM POINTS - WOMENArchived 2015-04-02 at theWayback Machine. Association of Balkan Athletic Federations. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  14. ^20th Balkan Indoor Championships 2015 Istanbul, TUR/Men/Full Results Men.pdfArchived 2015-04-02 at theWayback Machine. ABAF. Retrieved on 2015-03-04.
  15. ^"Events Calendar | World Athletics".worldathletics.org. Retrieved1 February 2024.
  16. ^"Athletics Podium".Athletics Podium. Retrieved7 March 2024.
  17. ^"Athletics Podium".
  18. ^"Athletics Podium".
  19. ^"Athletics Podium".
  20. ^"Athletics Podium".
  21. ^21st Balkan Indoor Championships 2016 Istanbul, TUR --- Results (Women's) --- Balkan-Athletics.EU
  22. ^"200m Results"(PDF).balkan-athletics.eu. 28 February 2004. Retrieved4 March 2017.
  23. ^"2021 Balkan Indoor Championships – Men's Results"(PDF). ABAF. 20 February 2021. Retrieved26 February 2021.
  24. ^"Pole Vault Results"(PDF).balkan-athletics.eu. 25 February 2017. Retrieved4 March 2017.
  25. ^"Long Jump Results".serbia.opentrack.run. Retrieved4 March 2025.
  26. ^"Shot Put Results".serbia.opentrack.run. Retrieved11 March 2025.
  27. ^"2022 Balkan Indoor Championships – Men's Results"(PDF). TAF. 5 March 2022. Retrieved13 April 2022.
  28. ^"200m Results"(PDF).balkan-athletics.eu. 16 February 2005. Retrieved4 March 2017.
  29. ^"2021 Balkan Indoor Championships – Women's Results"(PDF). ABAF. 20 February 2021. Retrieved26 February 2021.
  30. ^"Long Jump Results"(PDF).balkan-athletics.eu. 25 February 2017. Retrieved4 March 2017.
  31. ^"Balkan Indoor Championships 2019 Men's Results"(PDF). ABAF. 16 February 2019. Retrieved17 February 2019.

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