website statistics
Jump to content
  • Register/Login on Totallympics!

    Sign up to Totallympics to get full access to our website.

     

    Registration is free and allows you to participate in our community. You will then be able to reply to threads and access all pages.

     

    If you encounter any issues in the registration process, please send us a message in the Contact Us page.

     

    We are excited to see you on Totallympics, the home of Olympic Sports!

     

Athletics EAA European Championships 2018


Recommended Posts

3 minutes ago, Monzanator said:

 

Probably Vetter's 94m in the javelin last year? ;)

Oh, I didn't know there was one :p Okay then, something less recent than this one :d I'd assume it's pretty tough breaking records in Germany.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158000
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Werloc said:

Oh, I didn't know there was one :p Okay then, something less recent than this one :d I'd assume it's pretty tough breaking records in Germany.

 

Or did you mean the oldest German NR? That probably dates back to the unholy deceased DDR :whistle:

 

It's safe to say Marlies Gohr, Marita Koch and Heike Drechsler will keep their records for a while yet :raspberry:

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158002
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Werloc said:

Oh, I didn't know there was one :p Okay then, something less recent than this one :d I'd assume it's pretty tough breaking records in Germany.

Konstanze Klosterhalfen broke the women's 3000m record last August in Birmingham.

Ok - it's not a championship event but it is an official German record

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158003
Share on other sites

26 minutes ago, OlympicsFan said:

No, Thompson for sure is an expert, but i think he just got emotional (like i did after Schwanitz lost the gold) because he saw an athlete from his country losing a medal and thought "All the other guys are much faster, why cant you run any faster" and he certainly had his own PB of 4:20 in mind. I would say you will have a hard time to find a normal person who is able to run sub 5:00 for the 1500 m.

 

BBC experts are the worst when it comes to cheering for UK athletes so Thompson's comments are actually not what you'd expect from them. Just wait until they hype KJT like she had a solid shot for gold vs Thiam :lol:   Besides, we're not talking normal people here. Steve Backley also said about Duckworth that you can't have 9 good events at this level hence they really understand how bad his 1500m time is. There's just no way to defend it.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158004
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, OlympicsFan said:

Of course i dont care whether she breaks a polish record ... lets be honest, you wouldnt care either if someone broke a german record?

I am sure it would be special for her to break such an old record that is probably from the time where there were no serious doping controls.

About Schwanitz performances today: We shouldnt forget that Schwanitz was involved in a car crash only 1 day after the german championships 3 weeks ago and injured her finger, so this might have played a role in her poor performance today.

You sounded as if you thought that polish athletics is in a better state than german athletics, so i had the feeling that all of those things werent obvious to you, but of course you are right, its only normal for Germany to be better than Poland in sports. Of course that doesnt stop Germany from being a complete disaster in fencing and swimming, so i guess as a german fan you have to be glad that german athletics is in a much better state.

 

I'd care if we're talking about Gohr, Koch or Drechsler records! :evil:  

 

Our women's shot put record is from June 1976, second oldest is Irena Szewinska's old 400m World Record from Montreal OG and that will probably stand for the next 40 years :p  Our SP record holder says she's got a special bottle of champagne ready when Guba finally beats the record (she's 20 cm short atm).

 

I don't care about fencing and swimming, these sports are rather boring though we've had success in both.

 

But we probably have a better shot at winning the overall medal table than Germany here :cool: 

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158005
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, Monzanator said:

 

Or did you mean the oldest German NR? That probably dates back to the unholy deceased DDR :whistle:

 

It's safe to say Marlies Gohr, Marita Koch and Heike Drechsler will keep their records for a while yet :raspberry:

Nah, you answered my question correctly. I was wondering what was the most recent record, it's just that

1) I did not expect it to be that recent

2) I wanted to facepalm myself, because I remembered watching the video of that throw, but my mind erased it as a broken record :d

Generally, I thought that perhaps the most recent broken record would be something a bit less obvious, but every single German record is probably a qualification mark to any championship :d Here in Lithuania we still have some records that are childs play and we have like 6-7 athletes that are actively breaking NR's as their PB's and a lot of athletes that are very close to breaking NR's.

Edited by Werloc
Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158007
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Werloc said:

Nah, you answered my question correctly. I was wondering what was the most recent record, it's just that

1) I did not expect it to be that recent

2) I wanted to facepalm myself, because I remembered watching the video of that throw, but my mind erased it as a broken record :d

Generally, I thought that perhaps the most recent broken record would be something a bit less obvious, but every single German record is probably a qualification mark to any championship :d Here in Lithuania we still have some records that are childs play and we have like 6-7 athletes that are actively breaking NR's as their PB's and a lot of athletes that are very close to breaking NR's.

 

Does Lithuania honor the USSR period records?

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158008
Share on other sites

vor 39 Minuten schrieb Werloc:

Oh, I didn't know there was one :p Okay then, something less recent than this one :d I'd assume it's pretty tough breaking records in Germany.

 

Gesa Krause in 3000 Metres Steeplechase (though of course it's a comparatively new discipline). It was at the ISTAF in 2017 and is even more recent than Vetter's and Klosterhalfen's records.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158009
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Monzanator said:

 

Does Lithuania honor the USSR period records?

Yes, our oldest record on the women's field is back from 1983, Ana Ambrazienė with 54.02 in women's 400m. Hurdles and only 11 days later it's the record (3:27.54) in 4x400m relay.

On the men's field, it's back 1969, Vladimiras Dudinas ran the 3000m. Steeplechase in 8:22.2

 

Although, we have some insane records that I think will never be broken, like Galina Murašova with 72.14 in women's discus. 20.27 by Danguolė Bimbaitė in shot put seems pretty unreachable too.

As for the men's, Benjaminas Viluckis looks scary in hammer throw with 82.24 (I don't know when was the last time we threw a hammer at least 70m, it's pretty much a joke discipline in Lithuania nowadays). Also, everyone is speculating if Gudžius is talented enough to go after 73.88 set by Alekna back in 2000.

Link to comment
https://totallympics.com/forums/topic/1116-athletics-eaa-european-championships-2018/page/73/#findComment-158011
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Right now  Spulber and  Ipcioglu are even on points but Ipcioglu is ranked ahead by one position. If Spulber moves ahead they no longer need a D.2 quota, Turkey only gets a D.2 quota (drop to one) and then continental cup ranking would determine the final quota. Unless the FIS does something strange like they briefly did in September and give a country 2 quotas in D.2.
    • Just realized that there are no 50km or Relay races in the World Cup season leading up to the Olympics, and the 50k is only contested once in March in Norway.  (I'm new to following Cross-Country skiing, but I would have thought athletes would have had some 'warm-up' competitions before the Olympics during the season. Also, I could be wrong...but I didn't see these events in the WC schedule.)
    • For those looking to re-live the glory days of the 2025: https://www.olympics.com/en/news/2025-olympic-sport-review-highlights-year-duplantis-shiffrin-pogacar-mcintosh
    • 20 nations are qualified on the men's side right now (even without China). Canada is only in bc Boyd-Clowes has resumed his career.   There is no nation count limit indeed, I only counted the qualified athletes' nations (20 for men, 16 for women).
    • Well, half of this is not true.There is no minimum nation count - even less nations were expected by FIS ski jumping higher-ups than there are qualified now. The last 4 quotas for men are for NOCs with one or none athletes qualified. So we should complete 3 super teams and get China with one ski jumper in the men's individual competitions. 
    • https://www.oasport.it/2025/12/foto-federica-brignone-lallenamento-di-oggi-a-valgrisenche/
    • Spengler Cup 2025   Day 4 Results 29.12.2025   Quarterfinals   Sparta Prague  - Team Canada    5-1   HC Davos  - IFK Helsinki    3-0
    • I think it depends on the sport.    On one hand, I admire the meritocracy of trials for Dutch speed skating or US athletics... but I don't think it's necessarily a recipe for optimal results forcing athletes to run the gauntlet at incredibly competitive trials, then turn around and try to peak again in short order at the Olympics.  It's something Canada does for our curling teams, and I think it's been a big part of the reason we've underperformed internationally more than one would expect. The successes we've had I feel are largely in spite of the qualification system, not because of it. Granted curling is a much different sport, but in it's case and it were up to me, I'd do like Sweden or GB, select the team the prior season then let them properly plan their seasons around the Olympics and preparing properly... rather than needing to peak for trials, and pouring whomever survives onto a plane for the Olympics a few weeks later For speedskating, I like the Canadian system. It's a mix of international results and trials. The medal contenders largely have their spots sewn up, so trials are a none-issue... and the rest are mostly just making up the numbers, so a heavier weighting on trials results is fair enough as no one else in that situation has done enough to solidify their position prior, so might as well play the hot hand. The Dutch having such incredible depth would obviously need to set the pre-qualification bar higher, but I don't think it would hurt them. But then again, their entire system is build around performance on demand... and that's produced great results, even if a few Ted-Jan Bloeman's wash out along the way
    • Volleyball World are doing a countdown to the new year with a list of the best players for 2025.    Here is the men's top 10 with two places to go: (which are Michieletto and Aleks Nikolov)   1. ??? 2. ??? 3.  Simone Giannelli 4.  Jakub Kochanowski 5.  /  Wilfredo Leon   6.  Simeon Nikolov 7.  Fabio Balaso 8.  Aleks Grozdanov 9.  Jan Kozamernik 10.  Patrik Indra  
    • After 2006, Fabris was never as so good again... But Fabris also never had such successes outside the 2006 Olympics than the current Ghiotto...
×
×
  • Create New...