European Athletics Championships 1971/200 m women
10th European Athletics Championships | |
---|---|
discipline | Women's 200-meter run |
city | Helsinki |
Stadion | Olympic Stadium |
Participants | 19 athletes from 10 countries |
Competition phase | August 12th (preliminary / semi-finals) August 13th (final) |
Medalists | |
gold | Renate Stecher ( GDR ) |
silver | Györgyi Balogh ( HUN ) |
bronze | Irena Szewińska ( POL ) |
The 200-meter race of women in the 1971 European Athletics Championships was on 12 and 13 August 1971 at the Olympic Stadium of Helsinki held.
Like over 100 meters , GDR sprinter Renate Stecher won . The Hungarian Györgyi Balogh became vice European champion. Bronze went to the 1968 Olympic champion Irena Szewińska from Poland.
Records
Preliminary remark:
In these years there was a dichotomy in terms of best performances and records. Hand-stopped and electronically determined services were performed side by side. The official times were usually given in tenths of a second, which were rounded if electronic measurements were available. Due to the elimination of the reaction time of the timekeeper with electronic timekeeping, the discussion was about introducing a so-called pre-set value in order not to automatically improve the hand-stopped performance. But the correct specification of these times remained, which were later also officially listed with hundredths of a second after the decimal point.
Official records - given in tenths of a second
Existing records
World record | 22.5 s | Irena Kirszenstein | Olympic Games Mexico City , Mexico | October 18, 1968 |
European record | ||||
Championship record | 23.1 s | EM Budapest , Hungary | 2nd September 1966 |
Record improvement
European champion Renate Stecher improved the existing EM record in the final on August 13th by four tenths of a second to 22.7 seconds
Electronically measured records
Existing records
World record | 22.58 s | Irena Kirszenstein | Olympic Games Mexico City , Mexico | October 18, 1968 |
European record | ||||
Championship record | 23.30 s | Petra Vogt | EM Athens , Greece | 19th September 1969 |
Record improvements
European champion Renate Stecher improved the existing EM record at these European championships twice:
- 23.26s - 2nd semi-final on August 12th
- 22.70 s - final on August 13th
Preliminary round
August 12, 1971, 12:00 p.m.
The preliminary round was held in four runs. The first four athletes per run - highlighted in light blue - qualified for the semi-finals.
The pre-run schedule was very bad. Of the only nineteen participants, three athletes had to be eliminated before the semifinals. Five runners started in two of the four races, one of which did not make it into the next lap. Six sprinters were assigned to the fourth heat, two of them were eliminated. The second preliminary run was occupied by only three athletes who were all automatically qualified for the semifinals when they reached the goal. From this race only three athletes got the right to start the next round, so that instead of a possible sixteen sprinters only fifteen made it to the semifinals and four instead of three runners were eliminated.
This failed organization can perhaps be explained by the fact that some participants only withdrew their reports shortly before the start.
Forward 1
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Renate Stecher | GDR | 23.8 | 23.83 |
2 | Wilma van den Berg | Netherlands | 24.1 | 24.13 |
3 | Helga Kapfer | Austria | 24.2 | 24.15 |
4th | Margaret Critchley | Great Britain | 24.2 | 24.21 |
5 | Barbara Bakulin | Poland | 24.6 | 24.57 |
DNS | Raisa Nikorova | Soviet Union | ||
Ivanka Venkova | Bulgaria |
Forward 2
Wind: -0.2 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Annegret Kroniger | BR Germany | 23.8 | 23.83 |
2 | Ellen Stropahl | GDR | 23.9 | 23.85 |
3 | Irena Szewińska | Poland | 25.8 | 25.61 |
DNS | Marina Sidorova | Soviet Union | ||
Anita Neil | Great Britain |
Forward 3
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Christina Heinich | GDR | 23.8 | 23.82 |
2 | Trudy Ruth | Netherlands | 24.0 | 23.98 |
3 | Györgyi Balogh | Hungary | 24.3 | 24.32 |
4th | Annelie Wilden | BR Germany | 24.5 | 24.51 |
5 | Elisabeth Randerz | Sweden | 24.8 | 24.81 |
DNS | Karoline Beetle | Austria |
Forward 4
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Rita Wilden | BR Germany | 23.6 | 23.64 |
2 | Nadezhda Besfamilnaja | Soviet Union | 23.7 | 23.74 |
3 | Urszula Jóźwik | Poland | 24.1 | 24.14 |
4th | Gabrielle Meyer | France | 24.3 | 24.25 |
5 | Karin Lundgren | Sweden | 24.6 | 24.61 |
6th | Della Pascoe | Great Britain | 24.7 | 24.66 |
Semifinals
August 12, 1971
In each of the two semi-finals, the first four athletes - highlighted in light blue - qualified for the final.
Run 1
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Annegret Kroniger | BR Germany | 23.4 | 23.37 |
2 | Györgyi Balogh | Hungary | 23.4 | 23.42 |
3 | Rita Wilden | BR Germany | 23.5 | 23.50 |
4th | Christina Heinich | GDR | 23.6 | 23.62 |
5 | Urszula Jóźwik | Poland | 24.0 | 24.01 |
6th | Wilma van den Berg | Netherlands | 24.0 | 24.02 |
7th | Gabrielle Meyer | France | 24.3 | 24.31 |
Run 2
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Renate Stecher | GDR | 23.3 | 23.26 CRel |
2 | Irena Szewińska | Poland | 23.5 | 23.54 |
3 | Nadezhda Besfamilnaja | Soviet Union | 23.6 | 23.60 |
4th | Ellen Stropahl | GDR | 23.7 | 23.68 |
5 | Margaret Critchley | Great Britain | 23.9 | 23.91 |
6th | Trudy Ruth | Netherlands | 23.9 | 23.92 |
7th | Helga Kapfer | Austria | 24.1 | 24.11 |
8th | Annelie Wilden | BR Germany | 24.5 | 24.46 |
final
August 13, 1971, 5:30 p.m.
Wind: ± 0.0 m / s
space | Surname | nation |
Official time (s) rounded to the nearest tenth |
Unofficial time (s) exact value |
1 | Renate Stecher | GDR | 22.7 CR | 22.70 CRel |
2 | Györgyi Balogh | Hungary | 23.3 | 23.26 |
3 | Irena Szewińska | Poland | 23.3 | 23.32 |
4th | Nadezhda Besfamilnaja | Soviet Union | 23.4 | 23.42 |
5 | Annegret Kroniger | BR Germany | 23.6 | 23.62 |
6th | Rita Wilden | BR Germany | 23.6 | 23.62 |
7th | Ellen Stropahl | GDR | 23.6 | 23.63 |
8th | Christina Heinich | GDR | 23.7 | 23.73 |
Double European sprint champion Renate Stecher (here in 2017) - 1972 also double Olympic sprint champion
Also at these European Championships, the 1968 Olympic champion Irena Szewińska - in the photo in 2012 - won a bronze medal again, her last Olympic victory in 1976 over 400 meters
Web links
- European Championship 1971 Helsinki, Women 200m on todor66.com, accessed July 2, 2019
- Track and Field Statistics, EM 1971 on trackfield.brinkster.net, accessed July 2, 2019
- European Athletics Championships Zurich 2014 - Statistics Handbook , Women 200m European Championship 1971 Helsinki, p. 417, Spanish / English (PDF, 13,363 kB) at european-athletics.org, accessed on July 2, 2019
- Results of all European Athletics Championships - 1971, 200 m women on sportschau.de, accessed on July 2, 2019
- 10th European Athletics Championships 1971 in Helsinki, Finland from ifosta.de, accessed on July 2, 2019
References and comments
- ↑ a b IAAF world records. 200m women , accessed July 19, 2019