European Athletics Championships 1971/100 m women

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10th European Athletics Championships
Athletics pictogram.svg
discipline 100-meter run for women
city FinlandFinland Helsinki
Stadion Olympic Stadium
Participants 20 athletes from 11 countries
Competition phase August 10th (preliminary)
August 11th (semifinals / finals)
Medalists
gold gold Renate Stecher ( GDR ) Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR 
Silver medals silver Ingrid Mickler-Becker ( FRG ) Germany BRBR Germany 
Bronze medals bronze Elfgard Schittenhelm ( FRG ) Germany BRBR Germany 
The Olympic Stadium of Helsinki in 2005

The 100-meter race of women in the 1971 European Athletics Championships was on 10 and 11 August 1971 at the Olympic Stadium of Helsinki held.

The athletes of the Federal Republic of Germany won two medals with silver and bronze. The co-owner of the world record Renate Stecher , previously successfully under her name Renate Meißner , became European champion . She won before Pentathlon Olympic Champion of 1968 Ingrid Becker that in these European Championships also gold in the long jump and the by-100-meter relay 4- won. Bronze went to Elfgard Schittenhelm , former Elfgard Weismann, who was also European relay champion here.

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 11.0 s TaiwanRepublic of China (Taiwan) Chi Cheng Vienna , Austria 18th July 1970
Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Renate Meissner East Berlin , GDR (now Germany ) 2nd August 1970
Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Renate Stecher July 31, 1971
European record 11.0 s Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Renate Meissner East Berlin , GDR (now Germany ) 2nd August 1970
Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Renate Stecher July 31, 1971
EM record 11.4 s GermanyGermany Jutta Heine EM Belgrade , Yugoslavia - semi-finals September 13, 1962
Poland 1944Poland Ewa Kłobukowska EM Budapest , Hungary - preliminary August 30, 1966
EM Budapest , Hungary - semi-finals August 31, 1966

Record settings

European champion Renate Stecher set the existing EM record of 11.4 s twice at these European championships: Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR 

  • 4th advance on August 10th
  • Final on August 11th

Electronically measured records

Existing records

World record 11.08 s United StatesUnited States Wyomia Tyus Olympic Games Mexico City , Mexico 15th October 1968
European record 11.19 s Poland 1944Poland Irena Kirszenstein Olympic Games Mexico City , Mexico 15th October 1968
Championship record 11.66 s Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR Petra Vogt EM Athens , Greece 17th September 1969

Record improvements

The existing EM record was improved three times at these European championships:

Preliminary round

August 10, 1971

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

Of only twenty runners who competed, only four were eliminated in the preliminary runs. The preliminary division is rather incomprehensible afterwards. Five sprinters started each of two races, six in one. In the fourth run, there were only four participants who only had to cross the finish line to automatically qualify for the next round.

Forward 1

Wind: -1.6 m / s

space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Irena Szewińska Poland 1944Poland Poland 11.8 11.84
2 Anita Neil United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 11.9 11.85
3 Monika Meyer Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.9 11.86
4th Wilma van den Berg NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 11.9 11.88
5 Margit Markó Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 12.1 12.10

Forward 2

Wind: -1.0 m / s

space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Elfgard Schittenhelm Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.5 11.53 CRel
2 Györgyi Balogh Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 11.7 11.68
3 Petra Vogt Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.7 11.73
4th Meta antennas SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 11.8 11.79
5 Elizabeth Johns United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 11.8 11.86

Forward 3

Wind: -0.9 m / s

space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Ingrid Mickler-Becker Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.6 11.56
2 Lyudmila Sharkova Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 11.8 11.82
3 Cecilia Molinari ItalyItaly Italy 11.9 11.90
4th Danuta Jędrejek Poland 1944Poland Poland 11.9 11.92
5 Helga Kapfer AustriaAustria Austria 12.0 11.99
6th Valerie Peat United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 12.1 12.07

Forward 4

Wind: -0.8 m / s

space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Renate Stecher Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.4 CRe 11.42 CRel
2 Inge Helten Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.7 11.66
3 Sylviane Telliez FranceFrance France 11.9 11.91
4th Helena Fliśnik Poland 1944Poland Poland 12.0 11.97

Semifinals

August 11, 1971, 5:00 p.m.

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

Run 1

Wind: -1.1 m / s

Monika Meyer, later Monika Hamman, missed the final by one place
Wilma van den Berg, later also successful as Wilma van Gool, was eliminated in seventh place in her semi-final run
space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Ingrid Mickler-Becker Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.5 11.53
2 Elfgard Schittenhelm Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.6 11.56
3 Irena Szewińska Poland 1944Poland Poland 11.8 11.75
4th Petra Vogt Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.8 11.78
5 Cecilia Molinari ItalyItaly Italy 11.9 11.92
6th Lyudmila Sharkova Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 11.9 11.94
7th Danuta Jędrejek Poland 1944Poland Poland 12.0 12.00
DNS Sylviane Telliez FranceFrance France

Run 2

Wind: +0.1 m / s

space Surname nation Official time (s)
rounded to the nearest tenth
Unofficial time (s)
exact value
1 Renate Stecher Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.5 11.50
2 Inge Helten Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.6 11.61
3 Györgyi Balogh Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 11.7 11.68
4th Anita Neil United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 11.7 11.70
5 Monika Meyer Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.8 11.78
6th Helena Fliśnik Poland 1944Poland Poland 12.0 11.97
7th Wilma van den Berg NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 12.1 12.05
DNS Meta antennas SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland

final

August 11, 1971, 6:40 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 Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.4 CRe 11.35 CRel
2 Ingrid Mickler-Becker Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.5 11.46
3 Elfgard Schittenhelm Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.5 11.51
4th Inge Helten Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany 11.6 11.55
5 Györgyi Balogh Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 11.6 11.59
6th Irena Szewińska Poland 1944Poland Poland 11.6 11.63
7th Petra Vogt Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR 11.7 11.71
8th Anita Neil United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 11.8 11.75

Web links

References and comments

  1. a b c IAAF world records. 100m women , accessed July 1, 2019
  2. Progression of the European Outdoor Records, 100 m Women , Spanish / English, p. 48 (PDF, 271 kB), accessed on July 1, 2019