European Athletics Championships 1990/4 × 100 m men

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15th European Athletics Championships
Athletics pictogram.svg
discipline 4 × 100 m relay
gender Men
Attendees 9 relays with 36 athletes
venue Yugoslavia Socialist Federal RepublicYugoslavia Split
Competition location Poljud Stadium
Competition phase August 31 (preliminary / final)
Medalist
gold medal FranceFrance France
Silver medal United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain
Bronze medal ItalyItaly Italy
The Poljud stadium in Split in 2010

The men's 4 x 100 meter relay at the European Athletics Championships in 1990 was held on August 31, 1990 in the Poljud Stadium in Split .

France won the European championship with Max Morinière , Daniel Sangouma , Jean-Charles Trouabal and Bruno Marie-Rose . The team set a new world record in the final. Second place went to Great Britain with Darren Braithwaite , John Regis , Marcus Adam and Linford Christie . Bronze went to Italy ( Mario Longo , Ezio Madonia , Sandro Floris , Stefano Tilli ).

Records

Existing records

World record 37.83 s United StatesUnited States USA
( Sam Graddy , Ron Brown , Calvin Smith , Carl Lewis )
OS Los Angeles
USA
August 11, 1984
European record 38.02 s Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union
( Alexander Evgenev , Nikolai Yuschmanow , Vladimir Muravyov , Vladimir Krylov )
World Cup Rome
Italy
September 6, 1987
EM record 38.29 s Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union
( Alexander Evgenev , Nikolai Yuschmanow , Vladimir Muravyov , Wiktor Bryshin )
EM Stuttgart
BR Germany
August 31, 1986

Record improvement

The winning relay from France improved the existing EM record in the final on August 31 with the line-up of Max Morinière , Daniel Sangouma , Jean-Charles Trouabal and Bruno Marie-Rose by fifty hundredths of a second to 37.79 seconds. During this time, the team also set a new world record.

Preliminary round

August 31, 1990

With only nine participants, the preliminary round was held in two runs. That is, a single season would be eliminated. The first three teams per run - highlighted in light blue - as well as the two fastest teams - highlighted in light green - should qualify for the final. However, only three participants reached the finish in the first run, the other two teams were eliminated. From the second preliminary run, the teams involved only had to reach the goal to be in the final. The final on the following day was consequently held with only seven seasons.

Forward 1

space Season occupation Time (s)
1 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain Darren Braithwaite
John Regis
Marcus Adam
Linford Christie
38.90
2 ItalyItaly Italy Mario Longo
Ezio Madonia
Sandro Floris
Stefano Tilli
39.17
3 PortugalPortugal Portugal Fernando Damásio
Pedro Curvelo
Pedro Agostinho
Luis Barroso
40.01
DNF NorwayNorway Norway Kennet Kjensli
Geir Moen
Vidar Jakobsen
Aham Okeke
Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR GDR Sven Matthes
Steffen Görmer
Torsten Heimrath
Steffen Bringmann

Forward 2

space Season occupation Time (s)
1 FranceFrance France Max Morinière
Daniel Sangouma
Jean-Charles Trouabal
Bruno Marie-Rose
38.81
2 Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union Innokenti Sharov
Vladimir Krylov
Oleg Fatun
Alexander Sokolov
39.21
3 HungaryHungary Hungary György Bakos
László Karaffa
Pál Rezák
Attila Kovács
39.66
4th SpainSpain Spain Florencio Gascón
Enrique Talavera
José Javier Arques
Luís Rodríguez
39.89

final

August 31, 1990

space Season occupation Time (s)
1 FranceFrance France Max Morinière
Daniel Sangouma
Jean-Charles Trouabal
Bruno Marie-Rose
37.79 WR
2 United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain Darren Braithwaite
John Regis
Marcus Adam
Linford Christie
37.98
3 ItalyItaly Italy Mario Longo
Ezio Madonia
Sandro Floris
Stefano Tilli
38.39
4th Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union Innokenti Sharov
Vladimir Krylov
Oleg Fatun
Alexander Sokolov
38.46 NO
5 HungaryHungary Hungary György Bakos
László Karaffa
Pál Rezák
Attila Kovács
39.05
6th SpainSpain Spain Florencio Gascón
Enrique Talavera
José Javier Arques
Luís Rodríguez
39.10
7th PortugalPortugal Portugal Fernando Damásio
Pedro Curvelo
Pedro Agostinho
Luis Barroso
39.33

Web links

Video

References and comments

  1. IAAF world records. 4 × 100 m , accessed on September 11, 2019
  2. ^ Progression of the European Outdoor Records. 4 × 100 m on rfea.es, p. 36 (PDF, 271 kB), accessed on September 11, 2019