1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships – Junior men's race

The Junior men's race at the 1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held in Auckland, New Zealand, at the Ellerslie Racecourse on March 26, 1988. A report on the event was given in the Glasgow Herald.[1]

Junior men's race at the 1988 IAAF World Cross Country Championships
OrganisersIAAF
Edition16th
DateMarch 26
Host cityAuckland, New Zealand New Zealand
VenueEllerslie Racecourse
Events1
Distances8.031 km – Junior men
Participation96 athletes from
25 nations

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

Race results edit

Junior men's race (8.031 km) edit

Individual edit

Rank Athlete Country Time
  Wilfred Kirochi   Kenya 23:25
  Alfonce Muindi   Kenya 23:39
  Bedile Kibret   Ethiopia 23:41
4 Mathew Rono   Kenya 23:51
5 Thomas Makini   Kenya 23:54
6 William Koskei Chemitei   Kenya 24:03
7 Demeke Bekele   Ethiopia 24:17
8 Juan Abad   Spain 24:35
9 Noureddine Morceli   Algeria 24:45
10 Tadelle Abebe   Ethiopia 24:48
11 Zoltán Káldy   Hungary 24:52
12 Andrea Erni    Switzerland 24:56
13 Lemi Erpassa   Ethiopia 25:06
14 Todd Williams   United States 25:08
15 Fermín Cacho   Spain 25:09
16 Mariano Campal   Spain 25:10
17 Tesfayi Dadi   Ethiopia 25:12
18 Naoki Yamagata   Japan 25:18
19 Rod de Highden   Australia 25:22
20 Jun Hiratsuka   Japan 25:22
21 Hirokazu Tatsumi   Japan 25:26
22 Jesús Gálvez   Spain 25:28
23 Carlos Calado   Portugal 25:28
24 Hideyuki Matsumoto   Japan 25:31
25 Ross Wilson   New Zealand 25:32
26 Neil Panchen   United Kingdom 25:32
27 Julian Paynter   Australia 25:38
28 Richard Lindroos   New Zealand 25:38
29 Akio Ishizaki   Japan 25:40
30 Rorri Currie   Canada 25:41
31 John Myers   United States 25:43
32 Carsten Arndt   West Germany 25:45
33 Ernest Shephard   United States 25:46
34 Jason Bunston   Canada 25:47
35 Frank Hanley   Ireland 25:47
36 Sarinuto Zandonella   Italy 25:48
37 Jeffrey Pajak   United States 25:50
38 Alex Davey   Australia 25:55
39 Savino Tondo   Italy 25:55
40 Fabio Caldirolli   Italy 25:58
41 Ricardo Castaño   Spain 26:01
42 Ferhat Zaidi   Algeria 26:03
43 Shinya Kitahara   Japan 26:04
44 Dean Rose   Australia 26:10
45 Fabrizio de Vincenzi   Italy 26:10
46 Mohamed Arab Tadjer   Algeria 26:11
47 Nick Tsioros   Canada 26:13
48 Andrew Hudson   United States 26:16
49 Michael Johnston   New Zealand 26:19
50 Jeremy Forbes   New Zealand 26:21
51 Clarke Murphy   United Kingdom 26:22
52 Jon Dennis   United Kingdom 26:28
53 David Pujolar   Spain 26:30
54 Kameshwar Ravidas   India 26:31
55 Kamel Khellaf   Algeria 26:31
56 Steven Brooks   United Kingdom 26:33
57 Noel Cullen   Ireland 26:34
58 Daniel Maas   United States 26:35
59 Baltazar Sousa   Portugal 26:36
60 John Hansen   Norway 26:39
61 Chris Roberts   United Kingdom 26:40
62 Faycal Menasria   Algeria 26:42
63 Alan Lewis   Canada 26:48
64 Glen le Gros   New Zealand 26:48
65 Shyan Boodnah   Mauritius 26:48
66 Tsai Ching-Chou   Chinese Taipei 26:53
67 Greg Collier   Australia 27:01
68 Spencer Duval   United Kingdom 27:01
69 Hwang Chiu-Ping   Chinese Taipei 27:02
70 John Bowden   Canada 27:04
71 Paul Logan   Ireland 27:05
72 Fajinder Rathor   India 27:06
73 Kevin Gavin   Ireland 27:14
74 Seamus Power   Ireland 27:17
75 Eiliv Gjesdal   Norway 27:25
76 Dean Ogilvie   New Zealand 27:27
77 Julius Solheim   Norway 27:32
78 Luca Serena   Italy 28:22
79 Bishen Rouvat     Nepal 28:23
80 Rajan Khatri     Nepal 28:46
81 Ithai Luria   Israel 28:58
82 Henry Iata   Vanuatu 29:26
83 Ancel Nalau   Vanuatu 29:31
84 Uraia Koroi   Fiji 29:46
85 Brendan Matthias   Canada 29:52
86 Anand Kumar   India 29:55
87 Dhani Chowdhary     Nepal 30:22
88 Lok Rokaya     Nepal 30:35
89 Shalendra Sagar   Fiji 30:40
90 Nilesh Narayan   Fiji 30:52
91 Michael Cecil   Vanuatu 31:13
92 Usman Kutty   Fiji 31:32
93 Chandra Karki     Nepal 33:40
94 Paul Young   Western Samoa 39:10
95 Darren Young   Western Samoa 47:30
Cosmas Ndeti   Kenya DQ

:Cosmas Ndeti of   Kenya finished 2nd in 23:31 min, but was disqualified.

Teams edit

Rank Team Points
    Kenya
Wilfred Kirochi 1
Alfonce Muindi 2
Mathew Rono 4
Thomas Makini 5
(William Koskei Chemitei) (6)
12
    Ethiopia
Bedile Kibret 3
Demeke Bekele 7
Tadelle Abebe 10
Lemi Erpassa 13
(Tesfayi Dadi) (17)
33
    Spain
Juan Abad 8
Fermín Cacho 15
Mariano Campal 16
Jesús Gálvez 22
(Ricardo Castaño) (41)
(David Pujolar) (53)
61
4   Japan
Naoki Yamagata 18
Jun Hiratsuka 20
Hirokazu Tatsumi 21
Hideyuki Matsumoto 24
(Akio Ishizaki) (29)
(Shinya Kitahara) (43)
83
5   United States
Todd Williams 14
John Myers 31
Ernest Shephard 33
Jeffrey Pajak 37
(Andrew Hudson) (48)
(Daniel Maas) (58)
115
6   Australia
Rod de Highden 19
Julian Paynter 27
Alex Davey 38
Dean Rose 44
(Greg Collier) (67)
128
7   New Zealand
Ross Wilson 25
Richard Lindroos 28
Michael Johnston 49
Jeremy Forbes 50
(Glen le Gros) (64)
(Dean Ogilvie) (76)
152
8   Algeria
Noureddine Morceli 9
Ferhat Zaidi 42
Mohamed Arab Tadjer 46
Kamel Khellaf 55
(Faycal Menasria) (62)
152
9   Italy
Sarinuto Zandonella 36
Savino Tondo 39
Fabio Caldirolli 40
Fabrizio de Vincenzi 45
(Luca Serena) (78)
160
10   Canada
Rorri Currie 30
Jason Bunston 34
Nick Tsioros 47
Alan Lewis 63
(John Bowden) (70)
(Brendan Matthias) (85)
174
11   United Kingdom
Neil Panchen 26
Clarke Murphy 51
Jon Dennis 52
Steven Brooks 56
(Chris Roberts) (61)
(Spencer Duval) (68)
185
12   Ireland
Frank Hanley 35
Noel Cullen 57
Paul Logan 71
Kevin Gavin 73
(Seamus Power) (74)
236
13     Nepal
Bishen Rouvat 79
Rajan Khatri 80
Dhani Chowdhary 87
Lok Rokaya 88
(Chandra Karki) (93)
334
14   Fiji
Uraia Koroi 84
Shalendra Sagar 89
Nilesh Narayan 90
Usman Kutty 92
355
  • Note: Athletes in parentheses did not score for the team result

Participation edit

An unofficial count yields the participation of 96 athletes from 25 countries in the Junior men's race, one athlete less than the official number published.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gillon, Doug (March 28, 1988), Cross-country in Britain could be running out of time - The World Championships in Auckland may have signalled the beginning of the death of cross-country running in Britain..., Glasgow Herald, p. 9, retrieved October 23, 2013
  2. ^ Magnusson, Tomas (September 8, 2007), IAAF World Cross Country Championships - 8.0km CC Men - Auckland Elleslie Date: Saturday, March 26, 1988, Athchamps (archived), archived from the original on October 16, 2007, retrieved October 23, 2013{{citation}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ IAAF WORLD CROSS COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS, Athletics Weekly, retrieved October 9, 2013
  4. ^ a b 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. 2ff, archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013, retrieved October 9, 2013