2006 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
II South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics
DatesNovember 10–12
Host cityBuenos Aires, Argentina Argentina
VenueCentro Nacional de Alto Rendimiento Deportivo (CeNARD)
LevelU-23
Events44
Participation410 athletes from
11 nations

The 2nd South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics were held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, at the Centro Nacional de Alto Rendimiento Deportivo (CeNARD) on November 10–12, 2006. The championships were held as a part of the 2006 South American Games (ODESUR). A detailed report on the results was given.[1]

Participation[]

410 athletes from 11 countries participated in the event.[2][3] However, an unofficial count through the result lists[4] resulted only in 266 participating athletes:

Medal summary[]

Medal winners are published.[1][5] Detailed results can be found on the Fecodatle,[2] on the CAU,[3] on the CACAC website,[6] on the CONSUDATLE website,[4] and on the Tilastopaja website.[7]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
(0.9 m/s)
 Kael Becerra (CHI) 10.33  Franklin Nazareno (ECU) 10.45 NR-j  Daniel Grueso (COL) 10.47
200 metres
(2.3 m/s)
 Franklin Nazareno (ECU) 20.76w  Cristián Reyes (CHI) 20.88w  Daniel Grueso (COL) 20.92w
400 metres  Andrés Silva (URU) 46.69  Geiner Mosquera (COL) 46.70   (VEN) 46.94
800 metres  Kléberson Davide (BRA) 1:51.20  Eduard Villanueva (VEN) 1:51.24   (COL) 1:51.34
1500 metres  Eduard Villanueva (VEN) 3:51.54  Cleveland Forde (GUY) 3:52.46   (BRA) 3:52.63
5000 metres  Cleveland Forde (GUY) 14:07.08 NR   (BRA) 14:09.46   (BRA) 14:09.85
10000 metres   (BRA) 29:52.06   (COL) 30:17.19   (URU) 30:28.93
3000 m steeplechase  Mario Bazán (PER) 8:49.67 NJR NR  José Gregorio Peña (VEN) 8:50.88 NJR   (ARG) 8:54.50
110 m hurdles
(2.6 m/s)
  (BRA) 13.81w  Éder Souza (BRA) 13.82w  Jorge McFarlane (PER) 14.43w
400 m hurdles  Andrés Silva (URU) 50.46 NR  Raphael Fernandes (BRA) 50.55   (ARG) 51.60
High jump   (BRA) 2.14  Wanner Miller (COL) 2.11  Albert Bravo (VEN) 2.11
Pole vault  Germán Chiaraviglio (ARG) 5.65   (ARG) 5.20   (BRA) 5.10
Long jump   (BRA) 7.74
(0.3 m/s)
 Louis Tristán (PER) 7.59w
(2.7 m/s)
 Hugo Chila (ECU) 7.53
(0.7 m/s)
Triple jump  Hugo Chila (ECU) 16.12
(1.4 m/s)
  (BRA) 16.00
(2.0 m/s)
 Jhon Murillo (COL) 15.48
(1.7 m/s)
Shot Put  Germán Lauro (ARG) 19.78 NR   (COL) 17.57   (CHI) 17.02
Discus Throw  Germán Lauro (ARG) 57.51  Ronald Julião (BRA) 55.13   (BRA) 52.06
Hammer Throw   (CHI) 63.95   (BRA) 60.38   (BRA) 60.03
Javelin Throw  Víctor Fatecha (PAR) 75.45  Júlio César de Oliveira (BRA) 72.10  Ignacio Guerra (CHI) 70.10 NR-j
Decathlon  Carlos Eduardo Chinin (BRA) 7253  Luiz Alberto de Araújo (BRA) 7140   (ARG) 7013
20 km Walk  James Rendón (COL) 1:28:05   (ECU) 1:30:47  Yerko Araya (CHI) 1:31:31.0
4 x 100 metres relay  Venezuela



39.95  Brazil
Nilson de Oliveira André

Bruno de Barros
Mauro da Silva
40.15  Colombia



Daniel Grueso
40.20
4 x 400 metres relay  Brazil

Kléberson Davide
Raphael Fernandes
Fernando de Almeida
3:08.38  Chile
Kael Becerra


3:10.08  Colombia
Daniel Grueso


Geiner Mosquera
3:11.28

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
(1.9 m/s)
 Darlenis Obregón (COL) 11.73  Yomara Hinestroza (COL) 11.97   (CHI) 12.09
200 metres
(1.7 m/s)
 Darlenis Obregón (COL) 23.23  Wilmary Álvarez (VEN) 23.56  Vanda Gomes (BRA) 23.80
400 metres  Alejandra Idrovo (COL) 53.90  Wilmary Álvarez (VEN) 54.03   (VEN) 54.89
800 metres  Muriel Coneo (COL) 2:07.78  Marcela Britos (URU) 2:08.97 NR   (CHI) 2:09.84
1500 metres  Muriel Coneo (COL) 4:25.56 NJR   (BRA) 4:28.25  Sabine Heitling (BRA) 4:28.57
5000 metres   (COL) 16:52.04   (ARG) 16:54.31   (ARG) 16:57.48
10000 metres   (COL) 35:16.74  Zuleima Amaya (VEN) 35:17.89   (ARG) 35:32.48
3000 m steeplechase  Ángela Figueroa (COL) 10:29.35  Sabine Heitling (BRA) 10:37.38   (CHI) 10:50.46
100 m hurdles
(1.9 m/s)
  (ARG) 13.78  Fabiana Morães (BRA) 14.30   (BRA) 14.43
400 m hurdles   (BRA) 60.88   (COL) 61.74   (BOL) 61.95 NR
High jump  Marielys Rojas (VEN) 1.87 NR  Caterine Ibargüen (COL) 1.85   (ARG) 1.79
Pole vault  Keisa Monterola (VEN) 4.10  Milena Agudelo (COL) 4.10   (BRA) 4.10
Long jump  Caterine Ibargüen (COL) 6.32
(1.1 m/s)
 Tânia da Silva (BRA) 6.05
(-1.2 m/s)
  (BRA) 6.01w
(2.9 m/s)
Triple jump  Tânia da Silva (BRA) 13.35
(1.8 m/s)
 Caterine Ibargüen (COL) 13.26w
(2.5 m/s)
  (ECU) 12.61
(0.7 m/s) NR
Shot Put  Natalia Ducó (CHI) 16.36 AYR NJR  Ahymará Espinoza (VEN) 15.06  Keely Medeiros (BRA) 14.57
Discus Throw  Karen Gallardo (CHI) 52.01 NR  Rocío Comba (ARG) 48.08   (BRA) 46.19
Hammer Throw  Jennifer Dahlgren (ARG) 66.48  Johana Moreno (COL) 61.64  Rosa Rodríguez (VEN) 59.77
Javelin Throw   (COL) 50.91  Yusbelys Parra (VEN) 48.88   (BRA) 46.55
Heptathlon  Jailma de Lima (BRA) 5304   (VEN) 5266 NR-j   (ECU) 4945
20 km Walk  Yadira Guamán (ECU) 1:39:53   (COL) 1:39:59   (ECU) 1:48:26
4 x 100 metres relay  Colombia

Alejandra Idrovo
Darlenis Obregón
Yomara Hinestroza
45.14  Chile

María Fernanda Mackenna

46.63  Venezuela

Wilmary Álvarez

46.80
4 x 400 metres relay  Venezuela



Wilmary Álvarez
3:41.30  Colombia
Darlenys Obregón


Alejandra Idrovo
3:41.92  Ecuador



Erika Chavez
3:45.77

Medal table (unofficial)[]

The medal count was published.[5]


  *   Host nation (Argentina)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Colombia1211730
2 Brazil10131336
3 Venezuela58518
4 Argentina*53614
5 Chile43613
6 Ecuador33410
7 Uruguay2114
8 Peru1113
9 Guyana1102
10 Paraguay1001
11 Bolivia0011
Totals (11 nations)444444132

* There is a mismatch between the unofficial medal count above and the published medal count.[5] This is explained by the fact that the source[5] reports that in the women's 20 km race walk competition, from Ecuador won the silver medal and from Colombia won bronze. However, all other sources[1][2][3][6][7] and a special report on the race walking competitions[8] list second and third.

Team trophies[]

The placing tables for team trophy (overall team, men and women categories) were published.[2][3]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Biscayart, Eduardo (13 November 2006), Brazil best at South American U-23, IAAF, retrieved January 12, 2012
  2. ^ a b c d Resultados Juegos Odesur Y Campeonato Sud. S23 (PDF), Federación Colombiana de Atletismo, retrieved January 12, 2012[dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d Resultados Juegos Odesur Y Campeonato Sud. S23 (PDF), Confederación Atlética del Uruguay, archived from the original (PDF) on May 5, 2014, retrieved May 4, 2014
  4. ^ a b Resultados Del Juegos Odesur Y Campeonato Sud. S23 (PDF) (in Spanish), CONSUDATLE, archived from the original (PDF) on 30 January 2007, retrieved 15 June 2012
  5. ^ a b c d ODESUR 2006-Atletismo: Colombia ganó a Brasil en el medallero del atletismo, con 12 oros. (in Spanish), Tera Deportes, November 14, 2006, retrieved January 12, 2012
  6. ^ a b AthleCAC, Results Service - Servicio de Resultados, Juegos Odesur y Campeonato Sudamericano Sub 23, SAm-23 Buenos Aires ARG, 10-12 Nov 2006, Central American and Caribbean Athletic Confederation, archived from the original on March 5, 2016, retrieved January 12, 2012
  7. ^ a b SAmC Buenos Aires ARG 10–12 November, Tilastopaja Oy, retrieved January 12, 2012
  8. ^ Marchistas suman tres medallas para Ecuador (in Spanish), Diario El Comercio, 12 November 2006, retrieved January 12, 2012
Retrieved from ""