IAAF WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS IN ATHLETICS


The 'World Championships in Athletics' is an event organized by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). It is one of the largest sporting events in the world, and depending on how it is measured, possibly smaller only than the Summer Olympic Games and the FIFA World Cup. Originally, it was organised every four years, but this changed in 1991, and it has since been organised biennially.

Contents
History
Championships
All-time medal table 1983-2007
Ceremonies
Other Athletics World Championship events
External links

History


The idea of having an Athletics World Championships was around well before the competitions first event in 1983. In 1913, the IAAF decided that the Olympic Games would serve as the World Championships for athletics. This was considered suitable for over 50 years until in the 1960's the desire of many IAAF members to have their own World Championships began to grow. In 1976 at the IAAF Council Meeting in Puerto Rico an Athletics World Championships separate from the Olympic Games was approved.
Following bids from both Stuttgart, West Germany and Helsinki, Finland, the IAAF Council awarded the inaugural competition to Helsinki, to take place in 1983 and be held in the Helsinki Olympic Stadium (where the 1952 Summer Olympics were held).
Over the years the competition has grown in size. In 1983 an estimated 1,300 athletes from 154 countries participated. By the 2003 competition, in Paris, it had grown to 1,907 athletes from 203 countries with coverage being transmitted to 179 different countries.
There has also been a change in the schedule over the years, with several new events, mostly for women, being added. By 2005 the schedule for men and women was all but equal. The only differences being the men had the extra event of the 50 km Walk, while women competed in the 100 m Hurdles and Heptathlon compared to the men in the 110m Hurdles and Decathlon respectively.
The following shows when new events were added for the first time.

★ '1987', women's 10,000 m and 10 km walk were added.

★ '1993', women's triple jump was added.

★ '1995', women's 5000 m was added, replacing the 3000 m race.

★ '1999', women's pole vault and hammer were added and the women's 20 km walk replaced the 10 km walk.

★ '2005', women's 3000 m Steeplechase was added.

Championships


Order Year City Country Date Venue No. of
Events
No. of
Athletes
Website
1 1983 Helsinki August 7 - August 14 1983 Olympiastadion 41 1,355
2 1987 Rome August 28 - September 6 1987 Stadio Olimpico 43 1,451
3 1991 Tokyo August 23 - September 1 1991 National Olympic Stadium 43 1,517
4 1993 Stuttgart August 13 - August 22 1993 Gottlieb Daimler Stadium 44 1,689
5 1995 Gothenburg August 5 - August 13 1995 Ullevi 44 1,804
61997 Athens August 1 - August 10 1997 Olympiako Stadio 44 1,882
7 1999 Seville August 20 - August 29 1999 Estadio Olímpico de la Cartuja 46 1,821
8 2001 Edmonton August 3 - August 12 2001 Commonwealth Stadium 46 1,677
9 2003 Saint-Denis August 23 - August 31 2003 Stade de France 46 1,679
10 2005 Helsinki August 6 - August 14 2005 Olympiastadion 47 1,688
11 2007 Osaka August 24 - September 2 2007 Nagai Stadium 47 1,981 www.osaka2007.jp
12 2009 Berlin August 15 - August 23 2009 Olympiastadion www.berlin2009.org
13 2011 Daegu 2011 World Cup Stadium www.2011daegu.org
14 2013 Moscow 2013 Luzhniki Stadium

All-time medal table 1983-2007


'1' United States 114 61 59 '234'
'2' Russia 33 51 37 '121'
'3' Kenya 27 22 23 '72'
'4' Germany (incl. West Germany) 26 26 34 '86'
'5' Soviet Union 21 27 28 '76'
'6' East Germany 21 19 15 '55'
'7' Cuba 17 16 6 '39'
'8' Ethiopia 16 14 11 '41'
'9' Great Britain 13 24 26 '63'
'10' Italy 11 14 12 '37'
'11' Belarus 10 11 11 '32'
'12' Morocco 10 11 6 '27'
'13' Czech Republic 10 3 3 '16'
'14' France 9 11 12 '32'
'15' Ukraine 8 9 11 '28'
'16' China 8 7 8 '23'
'17' Jamaica 7 29 30 '66'
'18' Finland 7 7 5 '19'
'19' Poland 7 5 9 '21'
'20' Australia 7 5 8 '20'
'21' Sweden 7 3 5 '15'
'22' Spain 6 15 12 '33'
'23' Algeria 6 0 3 '9'
'24' Romania 5 8 8 '21'
'25' Bahamas 5 6 4 '15'
'26' Portugal 5 5 5 '15'
'27' Bulgaria 5 3 7 '15'
'28' Norway 5 3 2 '10'
'29' South Africa 5 3 1 '9'
'30' Canada 4 7 5 '16'
'31' Greece 4 5 10 '19'
'32' Czechoslovakia 4 4 3 '11'
'33' Switzerland 4 0 3 '7'
'34' Japan 3 5 10 '18'
'35' Mexico 3 1 6 '10'
'36' Mozambique 3 1 1 '5'
'37' Ecuador 3 1 0 '4'
'38' Bahrain 3 1 0 '4'
'39' Denmark 3 0 1 '4'
'40' Estonia 2 3 0 '5'
'41' Lithuania 2 2 1 '5'
'42' Ireland 2 2 0 '4'
'43' Dominican_Republic 2 1 0 '3'
'44' Qatar 2 1 0 '3'
'45' New Zealand 2 0 1 '3'
'46' Tajikistan 2 0 0 '2'
'47' Namibia 1 4 0 '5'
'48' Netherlands 1 3 3 '7'
'49' Trinidad and Tobago 1 3 2 '6'
'50' Zambia 1 2 0 '3'
'51' Uganda 1 1 1 '3'
'52' Saint Kitts and Nevis 1 0 2 '3'
'53' Somalia 1 0 1 '2'
'54' Syria 1 0 1 '2'
'55' Senegal 1 0 1 '2'
'56' North Korea 1 0 0 '1'
'57' Croatia 1 0 0 '1'
'58' Panama 1 0 0 '1'
'59' Brazil 0 5 5 '10'
'60' Hungary 0 4 5 '9'
'61' Nigeria 0 3 3 '6'
'62' Kazakhstan 0 2 3 '5'
'63' Djibouti 0 2 0 '2'
'64' Cameroon 0 2 0 '2'
'65' Turkey 0 2 0 '2'
'66' Austria 0 1 1 '2'
'67' Burundi 0 1 1 '2'
'68' Suriname 0 1 1 '2'
'69' Sri Lanka 0 1 1 '2'
'70' Israel 0 1 1 '2'
'71' Slovenia 0 1 1 '2'
'72' Ghana 0 1 1 '2'
'73' Bermuda 0 1 0 '1'
'74' Tanzania 0 1 0 '1'
'75' Belgium 0 0 3 '3'
'76' Slovakia 0 0 2 '2'
'77' Dominica 0 0 1 '1'
'78' Saudi Arabia 0 0 1 '1'
'79' American Samoa 0 0 1 '1'
'80' Haiti 0 0 1 '1'
'81' India 0 0 1 '1'
'82' Cyprus 0 0 1 '1'
'83' Tunisia 0 0 1 '1'
Total 491 494 488 1473

Ceremonies


The opening and closing ceremonies of the 8th IAAF World Championships held in Edmonton, Alberta in 2001 were broadcast live to over 200 countries and featured a thousand voice choir and original music by Jan Randall.

Other Athletics World Championship events


Prior to the inaugural IAAF World Championships in Helsinki in 1983 there had been several single events and races in the years leading up to them which were considered World Championships in those events. These mostly consisted of non-Olympic events for which the Olympics didn't provide the opportunity for the holding of World Championships. Below are the medal winners from these events.
=== 1976 (Malmö, Sweden) ===
Event:Gold:Silver:Bronze:
50 km WalkMenVeniamin Soldatenko
USSR
3:54:40Enrique Vera
Mexico
3:58:14Reima Salonen
Finland
3:58:53

=== 1980 (Sittard, Netherlands) ===
Event:Gold:Silver:Bronze:
3000 mWomenBrigit Friedmann
West Germany
8:48.05Karoline Nemetz
Sweden
8:50.22Ingrid Kristiansen
Norway
8:58.80
400 m hurdlesWomenBärbel Broschat
East Germany
54.55Ellen Neumann
East Germany
54.56Petra Pfatt
East Germany
55.84

External links



Results of past World Championships

Official site of the 2007 World Championships in Osaka

Official site of the 2009 World Championships in Berlin

Track and Field Results Almanac

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