2015 South American Championships in Athletics

The 2015 South American Championships in Athletics (Spanish: Campeonato Sudamericano Mayores 2015) was the 49th edition of the biennial athletics competition between South American nations. The event was held in the Peruvian capital of Lima from 12 to 14 June at the Videna Stadium.[1] It was the eighth time Lima hosted the event, having last done so for the 2009 edition.[2] A total of 44 events were held, evenly divided between the sexes, continuing with the event programme established in 2001.

49th South American Championships
Official logo
Dates12–14 June
Host cityLima, Peru
VenueVidena Stadium
LevelSenior
Events44 (22 men, 22 women)
Participation333 athletes from
13 nations
Records set8

Brazil topped both the medal and points tables, with 11 golds, 34 medals, and 285 points. This extended the nation's unbeaten run at the tournament to 22 editions, having last lost in 1974. Colombia and Venezuela were clear as the next most successful nations, each gathering 22 medals; Colombia ranked second on medals with nine gold and Venezuela ranked second on points with 228. Brazil won both the men's and women's team titles, with Venezuela coming second in the women's rankings and Colombia runner-up in the men's.[3][4]

Sandra Arenas of Colombia provided the highlight performance of the meeting with a South American record of 1:31:02.3 hours—a 42-second improvement—to defend her 20,000 m racewalk title. A total of nine championship records were improved. Colombians Gerald Giraldo (men's steeplechase), Muriel Coneo (women's 1500 m) and Evelis Jazmín Aguilar (heptathlon) made it four records for their nation. Brazil's field athletes set two championship records through men's javelin thrower Júlio César de Oliveira and women's discus thrower Andressa de Morais. Ecuador's Bayron Piedra (men's 10,000 m) and Déborah Rodríguez of Uruguay (women's 400 m hurdles) rounded out the eight record breakers. A total of sixteen national records in athletics were also improved at the competition.[5]

Two athletes completed individual doubles at the championships, both women. Muriel Coneo of Colombia won both the 1500 metres and 3000 metres steeplechase titles – a feat she had managed at the 2014 South American Games.[6][7] Uruguay's Déborah Rodríguez did a shorter flat and barriers combination by winning the 800 metres and 400 metres hurdles, both in a national record time.[5] Venezuelan women's sprint duo Nediam Vargas and Nercely Soto each won four medals, reaching both individual and relay podiums and including a gold medal from each.[8] All winners at the competition gained qualification in their event for the 2015 World Championships in Athletics, in line with new IAAF rules.[1]

Medal summary

For full event details see 2015 South American Championships in Athletics – Results

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Diego Palomeque (COL)10.40  Álex Quiñónez (ECU)10.43  Ifrish Alberg (SUR)10.57
200 metres  Álex Quiñónez (ECU)20.76  Diego Palomeque (COL)21.15  Arturo Deliser (PAN)21.25
400 metres  Alberth Bravo (VEN)45.26  Hederson Estefani (BRA)45.57  Freddy Mezones (VEN)45.67
800 metres[nb1]  Rafith Rodríguez (COL)1:46.48  Lucirio Antonio Garrido (VEN)1:47.83  Jhon Sinisterra (COL)1:48.50
1500 metres  Carlos Díaz (CHI)3:40.79  Federico Bruno (ARG)3:42.21  Gerard Giraldo (COL)3:42.38 NR
5000 metres  Víctor Aravena (CHI)14:06.14  Federico Bruno (ARG)14:06.25  Bayron Piedra (ECU)14:08.84
10,000 metres  Bayron Piedra (ECU)28:30.80 CR  Mauricio González (COL)28:33.53  José Luis Ostos (PER)28:43.10 NR
110 metres hurdles  João Vítor de Oliveira (BRA)13.96  Jorge McFarlane (PER)13.99  Javier McFarlane (PER)14.00
400 metres hurdles  Andrés Silva (URU)49.43  Hederson Estefani (BRA)49.54  Víctor Solarte (VEN)50.83
3000 m steeplechase  Gerard Giraldo (COL)8:29.53 CR  Mauricio Valdivia (CHI)8:40.28  Enzo Yáñez (CHI)8:43.28
4×100 metres relay  Ecuador (ECU)
Anderson Quintero
Jhon Valencia
Franklin Nazareno
Álex Quiñónez
39.94  Venezuela (VEN)
Diego Rivas
Arturo Ramírez
Álvaro Cassiani
Dubeiker Cedeño
40.19  Colombia (COL)
Yeferson Valencia
Diego Palomeque
Jeyson Rivas
Carlos Andrés Lemos
40.80
4×400 metres relay  Venezuela (VEN)
Alberth Bravo
José Meléndez
Alberto Aguilar
Freddy Mezones
3:04.96  Chile (CHI)
Martín Tagle
Sergio Aldea
Sergio Germain
Enzo Faulbaum
3:10.32  Peru (PER)
Bryan Erazo
Williams García
Luis Saavedra
Paulo Herrera
3:14.64
20,000 m track walk  Pavel Chihuán (PER)1:23:34 NR  Juan Manuel Cano (ARG)1:23:56  Mauricio Arteaga (ECU)1:24:18
High jump  Fernando Carvalho Ferreira (BRA)2.22 m  Talles Frederico Silva (BRA)2.22 m  Alexander Bowen (PAN)2.19 m
Pole vault  Germán Chiaraviglio (ARG)5.70 m  Daniel Zupeuc (CHI)5.00 m  José Gutiérrez Pozo (PER)4.70 m
Long jump  Emiliano Lasa (URU)8.09 m NR  Diego Hernández (VEN)7.91 m w  Mauro Vinícius da Silva (BRA)7.81 m
Triple jump  Jhon Murillo (COL)16.55 m  Jefferson Sabino (BRA)16.34 m  Divier Murillo (COL)16.34 m
Shot put  Germán Lauro (ARG)20.77 m  Darlan Romani (BRA)20.32 m  Nelson Henrique Fernandes (BRA)18.28 m
Discus throw  Mauricio Ortega (COL)61.36 m  Ronald Julião (BRA)59.80 m  Juan Caicedo (ECU)54.88 m
Hammer throw  Wagner Domingos (BRA)71.47 m  Allan Wolski (BRA)69.82 m  Juan Ignacio Cerra (ARG)67.70 m
Javelin throw  Júlio César de Oliveira (BRA)81.22 m CR NR  Braian Toledo (ARG)79.34 m  Arley Ibargüen (COL)75.47 m
Decathlon  Luiz Alberto de Araújo (BRA)7799 pts  Georni Jaramillo (VEN)7454 pts  Óscar Campos (VEN)6857 pts
  • nb1 Uruguay's Javier Marmo set a national record of 1:49.16 minutes while placing fourth in the men's 800 metres.[5]

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Nediam Vargas (VEN)11.45  Isidora Jiménez (CHI)11.51  Vanusa dos Santos (BRA)11.60
200 metres  Nercely Soto (VEN)23.15  Isidora Jiménez (CHI)23.38  Nediam Vargas (VEN)23.60
400 metres  Geisa Coutinho (BRA)53.07  Nercely Soto (VEN)54.38  Liliane Fernandes (BRA)54.53
800 metres  Déborah Rodríguez (URU)2:01.46 NR  Flavia de Lima (BRA)2:02.05  Ydanis Navas (VEN)2:07.92
1500 metres  Muriel Coneo (COL)4:10.14 CR  Flavia de Lima (BRA)4:13.58  Pia Fernandez (URU)4:19.37 NR
5000 metres  María Pastuña (ECU)15:49.33  Tatiele Roberta de Carvalho (BRA)15:50.62  Carolina Tabares (COL)15:59.28
10,000 metres  Inés Melchor (PER)32:28.87  María Pastuña (ECU)32:51.33  Wilma Arizapana (PER)33:1.15
100 metres hurdles  Yvette Lewis (PAN)13.31  Brigitte Merlano (COL)13.43  Adelly Santos (BRA)13.53
400 metres hurdles  Déborah Rodríguez (URU)56.33 CR NR  Magdalena Mendoza (VEN)56.65 NR  Liliane Fernandes (BRA)58.44
3000 m steeplechase  Muriel Coneo (COL)9:53.1  Tatiane Raquel da Silva (BRA)9:56.8  Belén Casetta (ARG)9:57.1 NR
4×100 metres relay  Venezuela (VEN)
Lexabeth Hidalgo
Magdalena Mendoza
Nediam Vargas Arteaga
Nercely Soto
44.28  Brazil (BRA)
Vanusa dos Santos
Bruna Farias
Vitoria Cristina Rosa
Adelly Oliveira
44.43  Chile (CHI)
Josefina Gutiérrez
Isidora Jiménez
Maria Fernanda Mackenna
Paula Goñi
44.83 NR
4×400 metres relay[nb2]  Brazil (BRA)
Vanusa dos Santos
Liliane Fernandes
Joelma Sousa
Jailma de Lima
3:34.51  Venezuela (VEN)
Nercely Soto
Magdalena Mendoza
Maryury Valdez
Ydanis Navas
3:37.05  Chile (CHI)
Paula Goñi
Carmen Mansilla
Javiera Errázuriz
Maria Fernanda Mackenna
3:40.56
20,000 m track walk  Sandra Arenas (COL)1:31:2.3 CR AR  Ingrid Hernández (COL)1:36:42.1  Angela Castro (BOL)1:41:38.3
High jump  Ana Paula Caetano de Oliveira (BRA)1.82 m  Candy Toche (PER)1.76  Betsabé Páez (ARG)1.76 m
Pole vault  Robeilys Peinado (VEN)4.35 m  Valeria Chiaraviglio (ARG)4.10 m  Karla Rosa da Silva (BRA)4.10 m
Long jump  Paola Mautino (PER)6.52 m w [nb3]  Tânia da Silva (BRA)6.37 m w  Yuliana Angulo (ECU)6.25 m
Triple jump  Yulimar Rojas (VEN)14.14 m w  Tânia da Silva (BRA)13.60 m  Giselly Andrea Landázury (COL)13.35 m
Shot put  Geisa Arcanjo (BRA)17.76 m  Natalia Duco (CHI)17.56 m  Ahymará Espinoza (VEN)17.25 m
Discus throw  Andressa de Morais (BRA)61.15 m CR  Fernanda Borges Martins (BRA)58.22 m  Rocío Comba (ARG)57.15 m
Hammer throw  Rosa Rodríguez (VEN)71.66 m  Johana Moreno (COL)66.05 m  Jennifer Dahlgren (ARG)64.76 m
Javelin throw  Jucilene de Lima (BRA)60.16 m [nb4]  Flor Ruiz (COL)59.86 m  Maria Paz Rios (COL)51.12 m
Heptathlon  Evelis Aguilar (COL)5902 pts CR NR  Guillercy González (VEN)5444 pts  Giovana Cavaleti (BRA)5426 pts
  • nb2 The Peruvian 4 × 400 m relay team (Deysi Lisbeth Parra, Claudia Angelica Meneses Lopez, Jimena Judith Copara Gorvea, Maitte De La Flor Torres Cordova) set a national record of 3:44.44 minutes in fifth place.[5]
  • nb3 Peru's women's long jump winner Paola Mautino set a wind-legal national record in the final with a jump of 6.48 m.[5]
  • nb4 The winning performance of 60.16 m by Jucilene de Lima in the women's javelin was declared a championship record by CONSUDATLE,[5] but was actually short of Flor Ruiz's mark of 60.23 m set at the 2013 edition.[9]

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Peru)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil1115834
2 Colombia96722
3 Venezuela88622
4 Ecuador42410
5 Uruguay4015
6 Peru32510
7 Chile26412
8 Argentina25512
9 Panama1023
10 Bolivia0011
 Suriname0011
12 Aruba0000
 Paraguay0000
Totals (13 nations)444444132

Points tables

RankNationTotalMenWomen
1 Brazil285121164
2 Venezuela22897131
3 Colombia212112100
4 Chile1246460
5 Peru1075750
6 Argentina945341
7 Ecuador936033
8 Uruguay522329
9 Panama281315
10 Paraguay1899
11 Suriname1174
12 Bolivia725
13 Aruba000

Participation

Twelve of the 13 member federations of CONSUDATLE participated at the championships, plus ODESUR member Aruba. Guyana did not compete at this edition, having done so at the 2013 South American Championships in Athletics.

See also

References

  1. Biscayart, Eduardo (2015-06-15). Brazilians dominate South American Championships in Lima. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  2. Todas Las Ediciones Archived 2015-06-20 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish). CONSUDATLE. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  3. Medallero Final Totales Archived 2015-06-20 at the Wayback Machine. CONSUDATLE. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  4. Puntaje Final Totales Archived 2015-06-20 at the Wayback Machine. CONSUDATLE. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  5. Todos los récords de Lima 2015 (in Spanish). CONSUDATLE (2015-06-15). Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  6. Biscayart, Eduardo (2014-03-17). Davide and Duco delight big crowd on final day of ODESUR Games . IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  7. Biscayart, Eduardo (2014-03-15). Henriques speeds to 45.03 400m among a plethora of ODESUR Games records. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  8. Campeonato Sudamericano Mayores Lima 2015 Archived 2015-06-20 at the Wayback Machine. CONSUDATLE. Retrieved on 2015-06-20.
  9. Eduardo Biscayart (7 July 2013). "Quinonez and Lemos Silva double up at South American Championships". IAAF. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
Individual results
Medal and points tables
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