2006 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships
XVII Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships | |
---|---|
Dates | 14–16 July |
Host city | Port of Spain, Trinidad |
Venue | Hasely Crawford Stadium |
Level | Junior and Youth |
Events | 81 (43 junior, 38 youth) |
Participation | about 449 (245 junior, 204 youth) athletes from 24 nations |
The 17th Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships were held in the Hasely Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain, Trinidad, between 14–16 July 2006, and organized by the National Amateur Athletic Association of Trinidad & Tobago (NAAATT). The event was open for athletes from the invited countries, that are members of the Central American and Caribbean Athletic Confederation (CACAC), in two categories: Junior A Category: 17 to 19 years as of 31 December 2004 (Born between 1987 and 1989), and Junior B Category: 14 to 16 years as of 31 December 2006 (Born between 1990 and 1992).[1] A preview[2] and detailed discussions of the results on a day-by-day basis are given.[3][4][5]
Records
[edit]A total of 18 new championship records were set.[6][7]
Event | Record | Athlete | Country | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Boys Under 20 (Junior) | ||||
5000 m | 14:21.58 | Diego Alberto Borrego | Mexico | CR |
110 m hurdles | 13.69 (1.6 m/s) | Ryan Brathwaite | Barbados | CR |
Shot put | 17.06m | Tyron Benjamin | Dominica | CR |
Discus throw | 52.79m | Sharif Small | Jamaica | CR |
Hammer throw (junior implement, 6 kg) |
60.25m1) | Cristian Vargas | Puerto Rico | CR |
Girls Under 20 (Junior) | ||||
200 m | 23.20 (2.0 m/s) | Schillonie Calvert | Jamaica | CR |
400 m | 51.57 | Sonita Sutherland | Jamaica | CR |
400 m hurdles | 57.09 | Sherene Pinnock | Jamaica | CR |
2000 m steeplechase | 8:09.76 | Adriana Rosado | Puerto Rico | CR |
Pole vault | 4.05m | Alexandra González | Puerto Rico | CR |
Long jump | 6.56m (0.0 m/s) | Rhonda Watkins | Trinidad and Tobago | CR |
Hammer throw | 54.51m | Aline Huerta | Mexico | CR |
Boys Under 17 (Youth) | ||||
400 m hurdles | 52.62 | Nathan Arnette | Bahamas | CR |
4×100 m relay | 40.83 | Jerome Myers Ramone McKenzie Nickel Ashmeade Dexter Lee |
Jamaica | CR |
Pole vault | 4.50m | David A. Díaz | Puerto Rico | CR |
Discus throw | 52.77m | Omar Bryan | Jamaica | CR |
Girls Under 17 (Youth) | ||||
100 m hurdles | 13.72 (1.3 m/s) | Kierre Beckles | Barbados | CR |
Javelin throw | 39.92m | Deandra Dottin | Barbados | CR |
4000 m race walk | 20:24.68 | Jamy Franco | Guatemala | CR |
- Key
AR — Area record • CR — Championship record • NR — National record |
---|
Notes:
1): This was a new championship record using the (junior implement) hammer of 6 kg. However, Yosmel Montes from Cuba threw the hammer 65.88m using the (senior implement) 7.257 kg hammer during the 1996 championships.[8]
Medal summary
[edit]The results are published.[6][7][9][10][11][12][13]
Male Junior A (under 20)
[edit]Female Junior A (under 20)
[edit]Male Junior B (under 17)
[edit]Female Junior B (under 17)
[edit]Medal table
[edit]The medal count was published.[14][15]
Total[edit]
|
Sub 20[edit]
|
Sub 17[edit]
|
Remarks
[edit]1): Jamaica: count of bronze medals for sub-17 is 6 (rather than 7 as published[14]), total is 28 (rather than 29 as published[14]).
2): Mexico: count of bronze medals for sub-17 is 5 (rather than 6 as published[14]), total is 16 (rather than 17 as published[14]). Total count of gold medals is 13 (rather than 14 as published[15]), total is 41 (rather than 42 as published[15]).
3): Bahamas: Total count of bronze medals is 11 (rather than 13 as published[15]).
4): Puerto Rico: Total count of gold medals is 8 considering U-17 hammer throw.[6][10]
Team trophies
[edit]Team trophies were distributed to the 1st place of the women category, to the 1st place of the men category, and to the 1st place overall (men and women categories).[1] However, points were only published for the overall (men and women combined) Sub-20 and Sub-17 categories.[16] Working through the results[9] yields the following unofficial ranking.
Remarks
[edit]The published points and corresponding ranks[16] for the Sub-20 category contain 3rd place ties for Jamaica and Mexico, 4th place ties for Barbados and Bermuda, and 5th place ties for Trinidad & Tobago and St. Lucia. However, there is no evidence in the published results.[9] Rather, corresponding ties are evident in the Sub-17 category, where they are already taken into account. Correcting the published Sub-20 point scheme correspondingly, it can be verified that the calculated points from the above tables are completely in line with the published point tables.
Participation
[edit]Detailed result lists can be found on the CACAC,[9] on the CFPI[6][7] and on the World Junior Athletics History website.[10] An unofficial count yields the number of about 440 athletes from about 24 countries:
- Anguilla (7)
- Aruba (5)
- Bahamas (55)
- Barbados (34)
- Bermuda (10)
- British Virgin Islands (11)
- Cayman Islands (7)
- Costa Rica (4)
- Dominica (6)
- El Salvador (6)
- Grenada (3)
- Guatemala (4)
- Guyana (8)
- Honduras (6)
- Jamaica (68)
- México (61)
- Netherlands Antilles (6)
- Puerto Rico (50)
- Saint Kitts and Nevis (20)
- Saint Lucia (3)
- Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (13)
- Trinidad and Tobago (53)
- Turks and Caicos Islands (7)
- U.S. Virgin Islands (2)
References
[edit]- ^ a b CACAC, XVII Central American and Caribbean Junior A & B Championships. TECHNICAL MANUAL, retrieved July 30, 2011
- ^ Foster, Anthony (July 13, 2006), CAC Junior Champs - PREVIEW, IAAF, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ Foster, Anthony (July 14, 2006), Jamaica's day - CAC Juniors, Day 1, IAAF, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ Foster, Anthony (July 15, 2006), Jamaica continues to dominate – CAC Juniors, Day 2, IAAF, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ Foster, Anthony (July 16, 2006), Three titles for local hero Nero – CAC Junior Champs, Day 3, IAAF, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ a b c d C.A.C. Junior Championships - 7/14/2006 to 7/16/2006, Hasely Crawford Stadium, Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago, Results, C.F.P.I. Timing & Data, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ a b c Central American and Caribbean Athletic Confederation, C.A.C. Junior Championships - 7/14/2006 to 7/16/2006, Hasely Crawford Stadium, Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago, Results, Girls, C.F.P.I. Timing and Data Inc., retrieved May 12, 2012
- ^ World Junior Athletics History, WORLD JUNIOR ATHLETICS HISTORY ("WJAH"), archived from the original on January 25, 2012, retrieved May 12, 2012
- ^ a b c d CACAC, AthleCAC - Results Service - Servicio de Resultados, XVII CAC Junior Championships 2006, CACCj Port-of-Spain TRI, 14-16 Jul 2006, retrieved July 30, 2011
- ^ a b c World Junior Athletics History, WORLD JUNIOR ATHLETICS HISTORY ("WJAH"), archived from the original on August 31, 2013, retrieved November 21, 2011
- ^ Athletics Weekly, CENTRAL AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS (UNDER 20 MEN), archived from the original on December 26, 2010, retrieved August 2, 2011
- ^ Athletics Weekly, CENTRAL AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS (UNDER 20 WOMEN), retrieved August 2, 2011
- ^ Athletics Weekly, CENTRAL AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS (UNDER 17), retrieved August 2, 2011
- ^ a b c d e CACAC (July 5, 2010), AthleCAC - Results Service - Servicio de Resultados, XVII CAC Junior Championships 2006 (Port-of-Spain, TRI), Medals - Medallas, retrieved August 2, 2011
- ^ a b c d C.F.P.I. Timing & Data (July 16, 2006), C.A.C. Junior Championships - 7/14/2006 to 7/16/2006, Hasely Crawford Stadium, Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago, Medal Count, Combined: Men + Women, retrieved August 2, 2011
- ^ a b CACAC, AthleCAC - Results Service - Servicio de Resultados, XVII CAC Junior Championships 2006 (Port-of-Spain, TRI), Points - Puntuación, retrieved August 3, 2011