2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup
2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup | |
---|---|
Organisers | Pan American Race Walking Committee |
Edition | 11th |
Date | 9 and 15 March |
Host city | Chula Vista, California, United States Tijuana, Baja California, México |
Venue | Marina Parkway, Chula Vista Marina / Paseo de los Héroes, zona del Río Tijuana |
Events | 3 |
Participation | 65 (+ 13 guests) athletes from 10 nations |
The 2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup was held in two locations: both 20 kilometres events in Chula Vista, California, United States, on 15 March. The track of the Cup ran in the Marina Parkway at Chula Vista Marina. The men's 50 kilometres event was held one week earlier 15 km away in Tijuana, Baja California, México, on 9 March. Here, the track of the Cup ran in the Paseo de los Héroes, zona del Río Tijuana, and the results were extracted from the inaugural competition of the IAAF World Race Walking Challenge, which was organized as part of the traditional XXVI International Race Walking Week (Spanish: Semana Internacional de la Caminata) held annually since in 1978.[1]
A detailed report for the 50 kilometres event was given by Javier Clavelo Robinson.[2] Because of a compromise with the transmitting TV companies, the start was scheduled at 10:00 rather than the usual 7:00, causing a great number of drop outs due to the hard climatic conditions during midday.[1] The decision to move the start time for Mexican television arguably contributed to the first team loss at the 50 km distance in Pan Am Cup history for the host nation as only two of the five declared Mexican scoring team members finished the race, resulting in a team victory for the United States. The U.S. was the only nation to have three scoring finishers.[3] Despite failing to finish the required three scoring finishers, the Games Committee awarded Mexico the silver and Ecuador bronze in the team competition based on having two and one finisher respectively in the extreme weather conditions.[4]
Complete results were published.[1][5][6][7]
Medallists
[edit]Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men | ||||||
20 km walk | Jefferson Pérez (ECU) | 1:23:12 | Cristián Berdeja (MEX) | 1:24:17 | Cristián Muñoz (CHI) | 1:24:34 |
50 km walk | Germán Sánchez (MEX) | 4:04:11 | Philip Dunn (USA) | 4:15:01 | Miguel Solís (MEX) | 4:18:02 |
Men (Team) | ||||||
Team 20 km walk | United States | 13 pts | Ecuador | 13 pts | México | 23 pts |
Team 50 km walk | United States | 13 pts | México | -- pts | Ecuador | -- pts |
Women | ||||||
20 km walk | María del Rosario Sánchez (MEX) | 1:37:14 | Geovana Irusta (BOL) | 1:37:53 | Sandra Zapata (COL) | 1:38:45 |
Women (Team) | ||||||
Team 20 km walk | México | 6 pts | United States | 15 pts |
Results
[edit]Men's 20 km
[edit]Team
[edit]Place | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
United States | 13 pts | |
Ecuador | 13 pts | |
México | 23 pts |
Men's 50 km
[edit]Place | Athlete | Time |
---|---|---|
—* | Jesús Ángel García ESP | 3:46:46 |
—* | Craig Barrett NZL | 3:51:15 |
Germán Sánchez MEX | 4:04:11 | |
Philip Dunn USA | 4:15:01 | |
† | Miguel Solís MEX | 4:18:02 |
4 † | Juan Toscano MEX | 4:18:52 |
—* | Saúl Méndez MEX | 4:19:12 |
5† | Cristián Bascuñán CHI | 4:19:27 |
6† | Rogelio Sánchez MEX | 4:26:09 |
—* | Felipe Nava MEX | 4:29:58 |
—* | Humberto Celestino MEX | 4:35:04 |
7 | Rolando Saquipay ECU | 4:44:16 |
8 | Jesús Martínez MEX | 4:49:39 |
9 | Theron Kissinger USA | 4:58:10 |
10 | Bill Vayo USA | 5:16:44 |
11 | Rod Craig USA | 5:18:33 |
— | Michael Bartholomew USA | DQ |
— | John Soucheck USA | DQ |
— | Francisco Berdeja MEX | DQ |
— | Carlos Flores MEX | DQ |
— | David Silva MEX | DQ |
— | Alejandro Chávez MEX | DQ |
— | Javier Malacatus ECU | DNF |
— | Miguel Ángel Rodríguez MEX | DNF |
— | Edgar Hernández MEX | DNF |
— | Fernando Guerrero MEX | DNF |
— | Omar Zepeda MEX | DNF |
— | Jaime González MEX | DNF |
— | Curt Clausen USA | DNF |
— | Horacio Nava MEX | DNF |
— | Raúl Cruz MEX | DNF |
— | Roberto Demeza MEX | DNF |
—* | Andreas Gustafsson SWE | DNF |
*: Started as a guest out of competition.
†: Both Miguel Solís and Juan Toscano from México were not listed as members of the official Mexican A Team.[6][8] Therefore, it remains unclear, whether they were entitled to win medals in the Pan American Race Walk Cup. One source lists Rogelio Sánchez from the Mexican A Team as 4th.[8] In this case, Cristián Bascuñán from Chile would have been the bronze medal winner. On the other hand, two other sources list Miguel Solís as bronze medallist.[1][9]
Team
[edit]Place | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
México | 8 pts | |
United States | 13 pts |
Women's 20 km
[edit]Place | Athlete | Time |
---|---|---|
María del Rosario Sánchez MEX | 1:37:14 | |
Geovana Irusta BOL | 1:37:53 | |
Sandra Zapata COL | 1:38:45 | |
4 | Graciela Mendoza MEX | 1:39:21 |
5 | Abigail Sainz MEX | 1:43:05 |
6 | Luisa Paltín ECU | 1:44:54 |
7 | Samantha Cohen USA | 1:44:57 |
8 | Bobbi Jo Chapman USA | 1:45:47 |
9 | Jolene Moore USA | 1:46:52 |
10 | Cheryl Rellinger USA | 1:47:27 |
11 | Susan Armenta USA | 1:49:03 |
12 | Gianetti de Sena Bonfim BRA | 1:49:38 |
13 | Lisa Sontag USA | 1:52:27 |
14 | Heidi Hauck USA | 1:53:11 |
15 | Lee Chase USA | 1:59:52 |
16 | Erin Taylor USA | 2:02:45 |
— | Francisca Martínez MEX | DQ |
— | Marianne Martino USA | DQ |
— | Sara Sheets USA | DQ |
— | Mara Ibáñez MEX | DNS |
— | Aura Morales MEX | DNS |
— | Ariana Quino BOL | DNS |
— | Zoila Reyes GUA | DNS |
— | Evelyn Núñez GUA | DNS |
Team
[edit]Place | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
México | 6 pts | |
United States | 15 pts |
Participation
[edit]The participation of 65 athletes from 10 countries (plus 10 guest athletes for the 50 kilometres event) is reported.[1] In addition, three athletes from overseas were competing for the IAAF World Race Walking Challenge.[2] The assignment for the official participants of the teams from México and the United States remains unclear.
- Bolivia (1)
- Brazil (2)
- Canada (1)
- Chile (2)
- Colombia (3)
- Ecuador (7)
- Guatemala (1)
- México (18) ?
- Puerto Rico (1)
- United States (25) ?
Guest countries:
- New Zealand (1)
- Spain (1)
- Sweden (1)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Aguilera, Rubén, Historia de las Copas Panamericanas de Marcha Atlética 1984-2007 (PDF) (in Spanish), Association of Panamerican Athletics, pp. 80–86, archived from the original (PDF) on March 6, 2016, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ a b Clavelo Robinson, Javier (March 10, 2003), García wins 50km in IAAF Race Walking Challenge in Tijuana, IAAF, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-09-19.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "USATF - Events - 2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup".
- ^ 2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup - Results - Men's 20 km Race Walk, USA Track & Field, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ a b 2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup - Results - Women's 20 km Race Walk, USA Track & Field, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ 2003 Pan American Race Walking Cup - Results - Men's 50 km Race Walk, USA Track & Field, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ a b Pineda Rodríguez, Luis (February 1, 2012), Historial de Copas Panamericanas de Caminata - Resultados de Atletas Mexicanos Participantes (PDF) (in Spanish), Federación Mexicana de Asociaciones de Atletismo, archived from the original (PDF) on May 10, 2013, retrieved July 22, 2013
- ^ DIRECCION TECNICA (April 24, 2013), MEDALLISTAS DE LA COPA PANAMERICANA DE MARCHA (PDF) (in Spanish), Federación Mexicana de Asociaciones de Atletismo, retrieved July 22, 2013[permanent dead link]
- Pan American Race Walking Cup
- 2003 in athletics (track and field)
- 2003 in American sports
- 2003 in Mexican sports
- International track and field competitions hosted by the United States
- International athletics competitions hosted by Mexico
- Track and field competitions in California
- 2003 in sports in California
- Sports in Chula Vista, California
- Walking in the United States