European Athletics Championships 1946/100 m women

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
3. European Athletics Championships
1946 European Athletics Championships logo.png
discipline 100-meter run for women
city NorwayNorway Oslo
Stadion Bislett Stadium
Participants 20 athletes from 9 countries
Competition phase August 22nd
(preliminary / semi-finals / finals)
Medalists
gold gold Yevgenia Setschenowa ( URS ) Soviet Union 1923Soviet Union 
Silver medals silver Winifred Jordan ( GBR ) United KingdomUnited Kingdom 
Bronze medals bronze Claire Brésolles ( FRA ) France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic 
The Bislett Stadium in Oslo shortly after the European Championships

The 100-meter run for women at the 1946 European Athletics Championships was held on August 22, 1946 in the Bislett Stadium in the Norwegian capital, Oslo .

European champion was Yevgenia Setschenowa from the Soviet Union. She won ahead of the British Winifred Jordan . Bronze went to Claire Brésolles from France .

Records

Existing records

World record 11.6 s United States 48United States Helen Stephens Kansas City , USA June 8, 1935
Poland 1944Poland Stanisława Walasiewicz Berlin , Germany August 1, 1937
European record 11.6 s Poland 1944Poland Stanisława Walasiewicz Berlin , Germany August 1, 1937
EM record 11.9 s EM in Vienna , then Germany (now Austria ) September 17, 1938

Record improvement

In the final, European champion Yevgenia Setschenowa equalized the existing EM record of 11.9 seconds. Soviet Union 1923Soviet Union

execution

The entire competition took place in one day. The prelims (from 5:35 p.m.), semi-finals and the final took place on August 22, 1946.

Preliminary round

August 22, 1946, 5:35 p.m.

The preliminary round was held in four runs. The first three athletes per run - highlighted in light blue - qualified for the semi-finals.

Forward 1

Greta Magnusson ( center ) - in the long jump in seventh place - was eliminated as fourth in her preliminary run in the qualification
space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Fanny Blankers-Koen NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.4
2 Sylvia Cheeseman United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.8
3 Monique Drilhon France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic France 12.9
4th Mieczyslawa Moder Poland 1944Poland Poland 13.0
5 Kerstin Josefsson SwedenSweden Sweden 13.0
6th Liv Paulsen NorwayNorway Norway 13.2

Forward 2

space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Yevgenia Sechenova Soviet Union 1923Soviet Union Soviet Union 12.0
2 Nettie Timmer NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.4
3 Maureen Dyson United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.4
4th Greta Magnusson SwedenSweden Sweden 12.5
5 Dana Hiklová CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 12.7

Forward 3

space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Winifred Jordan United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.2
2 Stanisława Walasiewicz Poland 1944Poland Poland 12.5
3 Vera Bemová CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 12.5
4th Solveig Toms NorwayNorway Norway 12.6

Forward 4

space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Claire Brésolles France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic France 12.2
2 Gerda Koudijs NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.3
3 Ann-Britt Leyman SwedenSweden Sweden 12.4
4th Hilde Nissen DenmarkDenmark Denmark 12.5 NO
5 Irena Hejducka Poland 1944Poland Poland 13.2

Semifinals

August 22, 1946

In each of the two semi-finals, the first three athletes - highlighted in light blue - qualified for the final.

Run 1

Nettie Timmer was eliminated in fourth of her semi-final run
space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Yevgenia Sechenova Soviet Union 1923Soviet Union URS 12.0
2 Winifred Jordan United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.4
3 Gerda Koudijs NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.5
4th Nettie Timmer NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.6
5 Sylvia Cheeseman United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.7
6th Vera Bemová CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 12.7

Run 2

space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Maureen Dyson United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.2
2 Claire Brésolles France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic France 12.3
3 Ann-Britt Leyman SwedenSweden Sweden 12.3
4th Stanisława Walasiewicz Poland 1944Poland Poland 12.6
5 Monique Drilhon France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic France 12.7
DNF Fanny Blankers-Koen NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands

final

European champion Yevgenia Setschenowa

August 22, 1946

space Surname nation Time (s)
1 Yevgenia Sechenova Soviet Union 1923Soviet Union Soviet Union 11.9 CRe
2 Winifred Jordan United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.2
3 Claire Brésolles France 1944Provisional Government of the French Republic France 12.2
4th Ann-Britt Leyman SwedenSweden Sweden 12.2
5 Maureen Dyson United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.2
6th Gerda Koudijs NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.4

Web links

References and comments

  1. a b IAAF world records. 100m women , accessed March 13, 2019