1952 International Cross Country Championships

The 1952 International Cross Country Championships was held in Hamilton, Scotland, at the Hamilton Park on 22 March 1952. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald.[1]

1952 International Cross Country Championships
OrganisersICCU
Edition39th
Date22 March
Host cityHamilton, Scotland Scotland
VenueHamilton Park
Events1
Distances9 mi (14.5 km)
Participation63 athletes from
7 nations

Complete results,[2] medallists, [3] and the results of British athletes[4] were published.

Medallists

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
Individual
Men
9 mi (14.5 km)
Alain Mimoun
  France
48:19 Marcel Vandewattyne
  Belgium
49:02 Abdelkader Driss
  France
49:06
Team
Men   France 35   England 64   Belgium 126

Individual Race Results

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Men's (9 mi / 14.5 km)

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Rank Athlete Nationality Time
  Alain Mimoun   France 48:19
  Marcel Vandewattyne   Belgium 49:02
  Abdelkader Driss   France 49:06
4 Walter Hesketh   England 49:19
5 Buenaventura Baldoma   Spain 49:27
6 Julien Soucours   France 49:35
7 Mohamed Hamza   France 49:44
8 Abdallah Ould Lamine   France 49:51
9 Frank Sando   England 49:53
10 Ali Ou Bassou   France 49:54
11 Frank Aaron   England 50:02
12 Fred Norris   England 50:08
13 Geoff Saunders   England 50:11
14 Eddie Bannon   Scotland 50:18
15 Jim Peters   England 50:25
16 Ray Hatton   England
17 Maurits van Laere   Belgium 50:35
18 Roger Petitjean   France 50:35
19 Antonio Amoros   Spain 50:38
20 André Deschacht   Belgium 50:39
21 André Valdovinos   France
22 Ahmed Abdelkrim   France
23 Tommy Tracey   Scotland
24 Roger Serroels   Belgium
25 Andy Forbes   Scotland
26 Bobby Reid   Scotland
27 Dick Adams   England
28 Patsy Fitzgerald   Ireland
29 David Nelson   Scotland
30 Jean Simonet   Belgium
31 Pedro Sierra   Spain
32 Francisco Irizar   Spain
33 Jules Limbourg   Belgium
34 Charlie Robertson   Scotland
35 Charlie Owens   Ireland
36 Johnny Marshall   Ireland
37 Paul Huylebroeck   Belgium
38 Jaime Guixa   Spain
39 Edward Hardy   England
40 Jose Coll   Spain
41 John Doms   Belgium
42 Tom Wood   Wales
43 Joseph Deriemaeker   Belgium
44 Antonio Karamany   Spain
45 Tom Stevenson   Scotland
46 Gregorio Rojo   Spain
47 Don Appleby   Ireland
48 J. McClelland   Ireland
49 W.A. Robertson   Ireland
50 Doug Rees   Wales
51 Dyfrigg Rees   Wales
52 Archie Gibson   Scotland
53 George Phipps   Wales
54 Maldwyn White   Wales
55 Eddie Wilson   Ireland
56 Alan Anderson   Ireland
57 John Edwards   Wales
58 William Butcher   Wales
59 Brendan Twamley   Ireland
60 José Quesada   Spain
61 Norman Wilson   Wales
62 Ian Binnie   Scotland
63 Anthony Noonan   Wales

Team Results

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Men's

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Rank Country Team Points
1   France Alain Mimoun
Abdelkader Driss
Julien Soucours
Mohamed Hamza
Abdallah Ould Lamine
Ali Ou Bassou
35
2   England Walter Hesketh
Frank Sando
Frank Aaron
Fred Norris
Geoff Saunders
Jim Peters
64
3   Belgium Marcel Vandewattyne
Maurits van Laere
André Deschacht
Roger Serroels
Jean Simonet
Jules Limbourg
126
4   Scotland Eddie Bannon
Tommy Tracey
Andy Forbes
Bobby Reid
David Nelson
Charlie Robertson
151
5   Spain Buenaventura Baldoma
Antonio Amoros
Pedro Sierra
Francisco Irizar
Jaime Guixa
Jose Coll
165
6   Ireland Patsy Fitzgerald
Charlie Owens
Johnny Marshall
Don Appleby
J. McClelland
W.A. Robertson
243
7   Wales Tom Wood
Doug Rees
Dyfrigg Rees
George Phipps
Maldwyn White
John Edwards
307

Participation

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An unofficial count yields the participation of 63 athletes from 7 countries.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Scot's Cross-Country Improvement - Scotland finished fourth to France in the team contest at the International Cross-country Championships on Saturday at Hanilton Park - a performance that was probably better than had been expected..., Glasgow Herald, 24 March 1952, p. 9, retrieved 1 October 2013
  2. ^ Magnusson, Tomas (24 March 2007), INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS - 14.5km CC Men - Glasgow Hamilton Park Date: Saturday, March 22, 1952, Athchamps (archived), archived from the original on 9 June 2007, retrieved 1 October 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS, Athletics Weekly, retrieved 24 September 2013
  4. ^ 36th IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS - EDINBURGH 2008 - FACTS & FIGURES - GREAT BRITAIN & NORTHERN IRELAND AT THE INTERNATIONAL CROSS COUNTRY & WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS (PDF), IAAF, p. 13ff, archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2013, retrieved 24 September 2013