1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Junior men's race

Junior men's race at the 1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships
Organisers IAAF
Edition 16th
Date March 26
Host city Auckland, New Zealand New Zealand
Location Ellerslie Racecourse
Nations participating 25
Athletes participating 96
Races 1
Distances 8.031 km – Junior men

The Junior men's race at the 1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held in Auckland, New Zealand, at the Ellerslie Racecourse on March 26, 1988. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald.[1]

Complete results,[2] medallists, [3] and the results of British athletes[4] were published.

Race results

Junior men's race (8.031 km)

Individual

RankAthleteCountryTime
1st, gold medalist(s)Wilfred Kirochi Kenya23:25
2nd, silver medalist(s)Alfonce Muindi Kenya23:39
3rd, bronze medalist(s)Bedile Kibret Ethiopia23:41
4Mathew Rono Kenya23:51
5Thomas Makini Kenya23:54
6William Koskei Kenya24:03
7Demeke Bekele Ethiopia24:17
8Juan Abad Spain24:35
9Noureddine Morceli Algeria24:45
10Tadelle Abebe Ethiopia24:48
11Zoltán Káldy Hungary24:52
12Andrea Erni  Switzerland24:56
13Lemi Erpassa Ethiopia25:06
14Todd Williams United States25:08
15Fermín Cacho Spain25:09
16Mariano Campal Spain25:10
17Tesfayi Dadi Ethiopia25:12
18Naoki Yamagata Japan25:18
19Rod de Highden Australia25:22
20Jun Hiratsuka Japan25:22
21Hirokazu Tatsumi Japan25:26
22Jesús Gálvez Spain25:28
23Carlos Calado Portugal25:28
24Hideyuki Matsumoto Japan25:31
25Ross Wilson New Zealand25:32
26Neil Panchen United Kingdom25:32
27Julian Paynter Australia25:38
28Richard Lindroos New Zealand25:38
29Akio Ishizaki Japan25:40
30Rorri Currie Canada25:41
31John Myers United States25:43
32Carsten Arndt West Germany25:45
33Ernest Shephard United States25:46
34Jason Bunston Canada25:47
35Frank Hanley Ireland25:47
36Sarinuto Zandonella Italy25:48
37Jeffrey Pajak United States25:50
38Alex Davey Australia25:55
39Savino Tondo Italy25:55
40Fabio Caldirolli Italy25:58
41Ricardo Castaño Spain26:01
42Ferhat Zaidi Algeria26:03
43Shinya Kitahara Japan26:04
44Dean Rose Australia26:10
45Fabrizio de Vincenzi Italy26:10
46Mohamed Arab Tadjer Algeria26:11
47Nick Tsioros Canada26:13
48Andrew Hudson United States26:16
49Michael Johnston New Zealand26:19
50Jeremy Forbes New Zealand26:21
51Clarke Murphy United Kingdom26:22
52Jon Dennis United Kingdom26:28
53David Pujolar Spain26:30
54Kameshwar Ravidas India26:31
55Kamel Khellaf Algeria26:31
56Steven Brooks United Kingdom26:33
57Noel Cullen Ireland26:34
58Daniel Maas United States26:35
59Baltazar Sousa Portugal26:36
60John Hansen Norway26:39
61Chris Roberts United Kingdom26:40
62Faycal Menasria Algeria26:42
63Alan Lewis Canada26:48
64Glen le Gros New Zealand26:48
65Shyan Boodnah Mauritius26:48
66Tsai Ching-Chou Chinese Taipei26:53
67Greg Collier Australia27:01
68Spencer Duval United Kingdom27:01
69Hwang Chiu-Ping Chinese Taipei27:02
70John Bowden Canada27:04
71Paul Logan Ireland27:05
72Fajinder Rathor India27:06
73Kevin Gavin Ireland27:14
74Seamus Power Ireland27:17
75Eiliv Gjesdal Norway27:25
76Dean Ogilvie New Zealand27:27
77Julius Solheim Norway27:32
78Luca Serena Italy28:22
79Bishen Rouvat   Nepal28:23
80Rajan Khatri   Nepal28:46
81Ithai Luria Israel28:58
82Henry Iata Vanuatu29:26
83Ancel Nalau Vanuatu29:31
84Uraia Koroi Fiji29:46
85Brendan Matthias Canada29:52
86Anand Kumar India29:55
87Dhani Chowdhary   Nepal30:22
88Lok Rokaya   Nepal30:35
89Shalendra Sagar Fiji30:40
90Nilesh Narayan Fiji30:52
91Michael Cecil Vanuatu31:13
92Usman Kutty Fiji31:32
93Chandra Karki   Nepal33:40
94Paul Young Western Samoa39:10
95Darren Young Western Samoa47:30
Cosmas Ndeti KenyaDQ

:Cosmas Ndeti of  Kenya finished 2nd in 23:31 min, but was disqualified.

Teams

RankTeamPoints
1st, gold medalist(s) Kenya
Wilfred Kirochi1
Alfonce Muindi2
Mathew Rono4
Thomas Makini5
(William Koskei)(6)
12
2nd, silver medalist(s) Ethiopia
Bedile Kibret3
Demeke Bekele7
Tadelle Abebe10
Lemi Erpassa13
(Tesfayi Dadi)(17)
33
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Spain
Juan Abad8
Fermín Cacho15
Mariano Campal16
Jesús Gálvez22
(Ricardo Castaño)(41)
(David Pujolar)(53)
61
4 Japan
Naoki Yamagata18
Jun Hiratsuka20
Hirokazu Tatsumi21
Hideyuki Matsumoto24
(Akio Ishizaki)(29)
(Shinya Kitahara)(43)
83
5 United States
Todd Williams14
John Myers31
Ernest Shephard33
Jeffrey Pajak37
(Andrew Hudson)(48)
(Daniel Maas)(58)
115
6 Australia
Rod de Highden19
Julian Paynter27
Alex Davey38
Dean Rose44
(Greg Collier)(67)
128
7 New Zealand
Ross Wilson25
Richard Lindroos28
Michael Johnston49
Jeremy Forbes50
(Glen le Gros)(64)
(Dean Ogilvie)(76)
152
8 Algeria
Noureddine Morceli9
Ferhat Zaidi42
Mohamed Arab Tadjer46
Kamel Khellaf55
(Faycal Menasria)(62)
152
9 Italy
Sarinuto Zandonella36
Savino Tondo39
Fabio Caldirolli40
Fabrizio de Vincenzi45
(Luca Serena)(78)
160
10 Canada
Rorri Currie30
Jason Bunston34
Nick Tsioros47
Alan Lewis63
(John Bowden)(70)
(Brendan Matthias)(85)
174
11 United Kingdom
Neil Panchen26
Clarke Murphy51
Jon Dennis52
Steven Brooks56
(Chris Roberts)(61)
(Spencer Duval)(68)
185
12 Ireland
Frank Hanley35
Noel Cullen57
Paul Logan71
Kevin Gavin73
(Seamus Power)(74)
236
13   Nepal
Bishen Rouvat79
Rajan Khatri80
Dhani Chowdhary87
Lok Rokaya88
(Chandra Karki)(93)
334
14 Fiji
Uraia Koroi84
Shalendra Sagar89
Nilesh Narayan90
Usman Kutty92
355
  • Note: Athletes in parentheses did not score for the team result

Participation

An unofficial count yields the participation of 96 athletes from 25 countries in the Junior men's race, one athlete less than the official number published.[4]

See also

References

  1. Gillon, Doug (March 28, 1988), Cross-country in Britain could be running out of time - The World Championships in Auckland may have signalled the beginning of the death of cross-country running in Britain..., Glasgow Herald, p. 9, retrieved October 23, 2013
  2. Magnusson, Tomas (September 8, 2007), IAAF World Cross Country Championships - 8.0km CC Men - Auckland Elleslie Date: Saturday, March 26, 1988, Athchamps (archived), Archived from the original on October 16, 2007, retrieved October 23, 2013
  3. IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS, Athletics Weekly, retrieved October 9, 2013
  4. 1 2 36th IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS - EDINBURGH 2008 - FACTS & FIGURES - GREAT BRITAIN & NORTHERN IRELAND AT THE INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY & WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS (PDF), IAAF, p. 2ff, archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013, retrieved October 9, 2013
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.