The men's 20 kilometres road run event at the 1988 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, on 31 July.[1][2]
Medalists
Gold | Metaferia Zeleke Ethiopia |
Silver | Thomas Osano Kenya |
Bronze | Abel Gisemba Kenya |
Results
Final
31 July
Rank | Name | Nationality | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Metaferia Zeleke | Ethiopia | 59:27 | ||
Thomas Osano | Kenya | 1:00:14 | ||
Abel Gisemba | Kenya | 1:00:36 | ||
4 | Zoltán Káldy | Hungary | 1:00:54 | |
5 | Tesfayi Dadi | Ethiopia | 1:00:54 | |
6 | Valery Chesak | Soviet Union | 1:02:03 | |
7 | Boay Akonay | Tanzania | 1:02:33 | |
8 | Vanderlei de Lima | Brazil | 1:02:55 | |
9 | Ferenc Sági | Hungary | 1:03:06 | |
10 | Milan Pešava | Czechoslovakia | 1:03:42 | |
11 | Nick Tsioros | Canada | 1:03:45 | |
12 | Valdenor dos Santos | Brazil | 1:03:57 | |
13 | David De Luchi | Italy | 1:04:00 | |
14 | Patrick Chikwatu | Malawi | 1:04:26 | |
15 | Norbert Kilimiali | Tanzania | 1:04:32 | |
16 | Masaki Yamamoto | Japan | 1:04:54 | |
17 | David Angell | United States | 1:05:03 | |
18 | Carsten Arndt | West Germany | 1:05:34 | |
19 | Rocco Cantatore | Italy | 1:05:52 | |
20 | Ricardo Castaño | Spain | 1:06:06 | |
21 | Ventislav Chavdarov | Bulgaria | 1:06:28 | |
22 | Robert Lopatka | Poland | 1:06:41 | |
23 | Jonah Sixpence | Zimbabwe | 1:07:03 | |
24 | Jim Kaiser | United States | 1:07:04 | |
25 | Ross Wilson | New Zealand | 1:07:27 | |
26 | Julian Pérez | Cuba | 1:07:49 | |
27 | Paddy McCluskey | Canada | 1:08:08 | |
28 | Douglas Rountree | New Zealand | 1:09:38 | |
29 | Hussein Haleem | Maldives | 1:11:34 | |
30 | Rajan Khatri | Nepal | 1:11:35 | |
31 | Richard Rodriguez | Aruba | 1:12:02 | |
32 | Byron Salome | Netherlands Antilles | 1:17:05 | |
Said Lai | Djibouti | DNF | ||
Franklin Tenorio | Ecuador | DNF |
Participation
According to an unofficial count, 34 athletes from 25 countries participated in the event.
- Aruba (1)
- Brazil (2)
- Bulgaria (1)
- Canada (2)
- Cuba (1)
- Czechoslovakia (1)
- Djibouti (1)
- Ecuador (1)
- Ethiopia (2)
- Hungary (2)
- Italy (2)
- Japan (1)
- Kenya (2)
- Malawi (1)
- Maldives (1)
- Nepal (1)
- Netherlands Antilles (1)
- New Zealand (2)
- Poland (1)
- Soviet Union (1)
- Spain (1)
- Tanzania (2)
- United States (2)
- West Germany (1)
- Zimbabwe (1)
References
- ↑ Peters, Lionel; Magnusson, Tomas, WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS WJC - 1988 Sudbury CAN Jul 27-31, WORLD JUNIOR ATHLETICS HISTORY ("WJAH"), archived from the original on 7 April 2014, retrieved 13 June 2015
- ↑ IAAF WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS - Eugene 2014 - FACTS & FIGURES (PDF), IAAF, retrieved 13 June 2015
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.