1962 Ibero-American Games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
II Ibero-American Games
Logo iag 1962.png
DatesOctober 7–12, 1962
Host cityMadrid, Spain Spain
VenueEstadio de Vallehermoso
LevelSenior
Events31 (22 men, 9 women)
Participation349 athletes from
17 nations
1983 Barcelona

The 1962 Ibero-American Games were held at the Estadio de Vallehermoso in Madrid, Spain, between October 7–12, 1962.

A total of 31 events were contested, 22 by men and 9 by women.

Medal summary[]

Medal winners were published.[1][2]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Rafael Romero (VEN) 10.6   (PUR) 10.9   (BRA) 11.1
200 metres  Rafael Romero (VEN) 21.1   (ARG) 21.4  Arquímedes Herrera (VEN) 21.6
400 metres   (PUR) 47.3  Juan Carlos Dyrzka (ARG) 48.1   (URU) 48.3
800 metres   (ESP) 1:50.2   (ESP) 1:50.5  José Neira (COL) 1:50.7
1500 metres  Manuel Oliveira (POR) 3:52.7  Tomás Barris (ESP) 3:53.4  Osvaldo Suárez (ARG) 3:53.4
5000 metres  Osvaldo Suárez (ARG) 14:31.6  Manuel Oliveira (POR) 14:32.4  Mariano Haro (ESP) 14:38.2
10,000 metres  Osvaldo Suárez (ARG) 30:14.2  Mariano Haro (ESP) 30:22.4   (ESP) 30:57.6
Marathon  Armando Aldegalega (POR) 2:30:09   (POR) 2:32:18   (ESP) 2:32:54
3000 metres steeplechase  Domingo Amaisón (ARG) 9:02.6  Manuel Oliveira (POR) 9:05.2   (BRA) 9:16.4
110 metres hurdles  José Telles da Conceição (BRA) 14.7   (BRA) 14.8  Teófilo Davis Bell (VEN) 14.9
400 metres hurdles  Juan Carlos Dyrzka (ARG) 50.9  Víctor Maldonado (VEN) 51.9  Anubes da Silva (BRA) 53.0
High jump  Teodoro Palacios (GUA) 2.00  Roberto Abugattás (PER) 1.97  Júlio Fernandes (POR) 1.94
Pole vault  Rolando Cruz (PUR) 4.50  Rubén Cruz (PUR) 4.20   (ARG) 4.15
Long jump  Luis Felipe Areta (ESP) 7.52   (POR) 7.48   (VEN) 7.33
Triple jump  Luis Felipe Areta (ESP) 15.07   (PUR) 14.63   (CUB) 14.61
Shot put   (ARG) 16.06   (ARG) 15.96   (ESP) 14.92
Discus throw   (ARG) 49.38   (CHI) 47.52  Ignacio Reinosa (PUR) 47.00
Hammer throw  Eduardo Albuquerque (POR) 55.37   (ESP) 55.24   (CUB) 54.11
Javelin throw  Alfonso de Andrés (ESP) 68.17  Ricardo Héber (ARG) 65.36   (VEN) 64.68
Decathlon  Héctor Thomas (VEN) 6630   (VEN) 6133   (BRA) 6000
4 × 100 metres relay  Brazil


Affonso Coelho da Silva
José Telles da Conceição
41.2  Venezuela
Arquímedes Herrera
Lloyd Murad

Rafael Romero
41.6  Argentina



41.6
4 × 400 metres relay  Venezuela

Lloyd Murad
Víctor Maldonado
Hortensio Fucil
3:15.4  Puerto Rico

José Luis Villalongo

3:16.4  Brazil

José Telles da Conceição

Anubes da Silva
3:16.5

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Miguelina Cobián (CUB) 12.3   (BRA) 12.3   (CHI) 12.4
200 metres  Miguelina Cobián (CUB) 25.3   (BRA) 25.5   (ARG) 26.3
80 metres hurdles  Wanda dos Santos (BRA) 11.5   (ARG) 11.5   (BRA) 11.9
High jump  Aída dos Santos (BRA) 1.56   (BRA) 1.54   (CHI) 1.48
Long jump   (ARG) 5.58   (ARG) 5.55   (VEN) 5.40
Shot put   (BRA) 12.84  Ingeborg Pfüller (ARG) 12.54   (CHI) 12.35
Discus throw  Ingeborg Pfüller (ARG) 44.69   (CUB) 44.27   (CHI) 42.38
Javelin throw  Marlene Ahrens (CHI) 45.63  Maria Ventura (BRA) 42.24   (ARG) 38.97
4 × 100 metres relay  Chile

Carlota Ulloa

48.7  Argentina



Margarita Formeiro
48.9  Brazil
Wanda dos Santos


49.4

Medal table (unofficial)[]

  *   Host nation (Spain)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Argentina (ARG)88521
2 Brazil (BRA)55717
3 Spain (ESP)*44412
4 Venezuela (VEN)43512
5 Portugal (POR)3418
6 Puerto Rico (PUR)2417
7 Chile (CHI)2147
8 Cuba (CUB)2125
9 Guatemala (GUA)1001
10 Peru (PER)0101
11 Colombia (COL)0011
 Uruguay (URU)0011
Totals (12 nations)31313193


Team trophies[]

The placing table for team trophy awarded to the 1st place overall team (men and women) was published.[1] Overall winner was  Argentina, winner at the men's competition was  Venezuela, and  Brazil won the title in the women's category.

Overall[]

  The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
Rank Nation Points
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Argentina 186
2  Brazil 157
3  Venezuela 126
4  Spain 120
5  Portugal 88
6  Puerto Rico 79
7  Chile 75
8  Cuba 38
9  Guatemala 12
10  Uruguay 11
11  Colombia 10
12 Peru Perú 9

Participation[]

A total number of 349 athletes (287 men and 62 women) from 17 countries was reported to participate in the event.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c García, José María (May 2010), "II Juegos Atléticos Iberoamericanos – Madrid", in Mansilla, Ignacio (ed.), San Fernando 2010: XIV Campeonato Iberamericano de Atletismo: Andalucía (PDF) (in Spanish) (4th ed.), Asociación Iberoamericana de Atletismo, pp. 69–78, ISBN 84-87704-77-8, retrieved February 27, 2013
  2. ^ "IBERO AMERICAN GAMES", Athletics Weekly, retrieved February 27, 2013
Retrieved from ""