1981 Pacific Conference Games

The 1981 Pacific Conference Games was the fourth edition of the international athletics competition between five Pacific coast nations: Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand and the United States. This was the first occasion that athletes from beyond the Pacific grouping were allowed to compete at the tournament. A total of 21 men's and 16 women's athletics events were contested. Combined track and field events were included for the first time, in the form of the men's decathlon and the women's pentathlon. The women's 3000 metres was also a new addition to the programme.[1]

IV Pacific Conference Games
The host stadium
Dates31 January and 1 February
Host cityChristchurch, New Zealand
VenueQueen Elizabeth II Park
Events37

It was held at Queen Elizabeth II Park on 31 January and 1 February in Christchurch, New Zealand.[2] The host stadium was built for and hosted 1974 British Commonwealth Games.[3]

The competition had mandatory drug testing and two gold medallists were banned from the sport by the International Amateur Athletic Federation (IAAF) after anabolic steroids were detected in their urine. Ben Plucknett, an American who broke the men's discus world record twice that year, was stripped of his win in that event and later tried to sue the IAAF.[4] Four-time Olympic champion Al Oerter stated that Plucknett had been made an example of due to his record breaking. Another American Olympian John Powell—who was consequently elevated to the Pacific Conference discus gold—criticised the fact that bans came top-down from the federation, rather than being seen before a judge or jury.[5]

Australia's Gael Mulhall similarly had her shot put and discus titles removed for the same doping violation. Mulhall considered a legal appeal and team mate Bev Francis (who was promoted to the shot put gold) criticised the testing procedure, which had no team officials or doctors present. Ultimately Mulhall accepted a reduced 18-month ban, but did not publicly confirm whether she had taken steroids or not.[6][7] Mulhall was criticised by Australian officials and members of the public as a drug cheat. She argued that testing was not of a reliable standard given the gravity of the sanctions and damage to her reputation, as well as saying that athletes needed more information on drugs and their effects.[8]

Medal summary edit

Men edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Peter Gandy (AUS) 10.42   Desai Williams (CAN) 10.50   Steve Williams (USA) 10.59
200 metres   Peter Gandy (AUS) 20.89   Bruce Frayne (AUS) 21.03   Desai Williams (CAN) 21.07
400 metres   Ed Yearwood (USA) 46.53   Palmer Simmons (USA) 46.78   Mike Willis (AUS) 46.95
800 metres   András Paróczai (HUN) 1:48.17   Peter Bourke (AUS) 1:49.06   John Walker (NZL) 1:49.41
1500 metres   Mike Hillardt (AUS) 3:41.74   Richie Harris (USA) 3:41.77   Mirosław Żerkowski (POL) 3:42.15
5000 metres   Dave Moorcroft (GBR) 13:36.79   Dick Buerkle (USA) 13:46.19   Masami Otsuka (JPN) 13:57.04
10,000 metres   Rod Dixon (NZL) 28:35.69   Peter Butler (CAN) 28:39.58   John Andrews (AUS) 28:41.70
110 m hurdles   Sam Turner (USA) 13.80   Max Binnington (AUS) 13.88   Pat Fogarty (CAN) 14.22
400 m hurdles   Harald Schmid (FRG) 50.35   Lloyd Guss (CAN) 50.79   Yukihiro Yoshimatsu (JPN) 50.83
3000 metres steeplechase   Bronisław Malinowski (POL) 8:24.02   Bogusław Mamiński (POL) 8:24.04   Greg Duhaime (CAN) 8:26.51
4×100 m relay   Canada (CAN)
Mark McKoy
Tony Sharpe
Desai Williams
Ben Johnson
39.6   Australia (AUS)
Max Binnington
Bruce Frayne
Gerrard Keating
Peter Gandy
39.8   New Zealand (NZL)
Ian Ferguson
Murray Cumberpatch
John Enright
Shane Downey
41.4
4×400 m relay   Australia (AUS)
Garry Brown
John Fleming
Bruce Frayne
Mike Willis
3:07.03   Canada (CAN) 3:08.16   United States (USA) 3:08.18
High jump   Dean Bauck (CAN) 2.21 m   Nat Page (USA) 2.21 m   Cai Shu (CHN) 2.15 m
Pole vault   Tomomi Takahashi (JPN) 5.25 m   Charlie Brown (USA) 5.05 m   Ray Boyd (AUS) 5.05 m
Long jump   Mike Marlow (USA) 7.64 m   Steven Knott (AUS) 7.49 m   Ikko Omura (JPN) 7.36 m
Triple jump   Mike Marlow (USA) 16.49 m   Ken Lorraway (AUS) 16.32 m   Masami Nakanishi (JPN) 16.21 m
Shot put   Colin Anderson (USA) 19.76 m   Bishop Dolegiewicz (CAN) 18.67 m   Mike Mercer (CAN) 17.62 m
Discus throw[nb1]   John Powell (USA) 59.54 m   Robin Tait (NZL) 56.08 m   Rob Gray (CAN) 55.42 m
Hammer throw   Shigenobu Murofushi (JPN) 69.52 m   Dave McKenzie (USA) 67.68 m   Gus Puopolo (AUS) 62.62 m
Javelin throw   Miklós Németh (HUN) 84.56 m   Phil Olsen (CAN) 77.36 m   Mike O'Rourke (NZL) 76.86 m
Decathlon   John Crist (USA) 7869 pts   Mauricio Bardales (USA) 7778 pts   Peter Hadfield (AUS) 7672 pts
  • nb1 Ben Plucknett of the United States was the original men's discus throw winner but his title was removed and his marks erased from the record due to his failing a doping test at the competition.

Women edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Angela Bailey (CAN) 11.46   Diane Holden (AUS) 11.65   Helen Edwards (AUS) 11.67
200 metres   Angela Bailey (CAN) 23.37   Diane Holden (AUS) 23.47   Helen Edwards (AUS) 23.50
400 metres   Michelle Baumgartner (AUS) 52.85   Molly Killingbeck (CAN) 54.01   Marian O'Shaughnessy (AUS) 54.30
800 metres   Leann Warren (USA) 2:03.52   Terri Cater (AUS) 2:04.02   Liz Laban (GBR) 2:04.25
1500 metres   Brit McRoberts (CAN) 4:11.87   Cindy Bremser (USA) 4:12.21   Anna Bukis (POL) 4:14.65
3000 metres   Lorraine Moller (NZL) 9:07.86   Cindy Bremser (USA) 9:09.22   Barbara Moore (NZL) 9:14.94
100 m hurdles   Grażyna Rabsztyn (POL) 13.25   Linda Weekly (USA) 13.77   Emi Akimoto (JPN) 13.83
400 m hurdles   Lyn Foreman (AUS) 57.73   Yumiko Aoi (JPN) 59.74   Terry Yaxley (NZL) 60.10
4×100 m relay   Canada (CAN) 44.5   United States (USA) 45.4   Japan (JPN) 45.7
4×400 m relay   Australia (AUS)
Michelle Baumgartner
Terri Cater
Lyn Foreman
Marian O'Shaughnessy
3:34.20   United States (USA) 3:38.81   Canada (CAN) 3:40.56
High jump   Hisayo Fukumitsu (JPN) 1.89 m   Brigitte Reid (CAN) 1.86 m   Chris Stanton (AUS) 1.83 m
Long jump   Linda Garden (AUS) 6.53 m   Pamela Hendren (NZL) 6.25 m   Jodi Anderson (USA) 6.16 m
Shot put[nb2]   Bev Francis (AUS) 16.17 m   Denise Wood (USA) 14.79 m   Sandy Burke (USA) 14.72 m
Discus throw[nb2]   Zhu Junfang (CHN) 55.48 m   Denise Wood (USA) 52.60 m   Lucette Moreau (CAN) 50.60 m
Javelin throw   Tessa Sanderson (GBR) 61.56 m   Sue Howland (AUS) 60.36 m   Karen Smith (USA) 59.92 m
Pentathlon   Karen Page (NZL) 4348 pts   Glynis Saunders (AUS) 4290 pts   Jill Ross (CAN) 4288 pts
  • nb2 Australia's Gael Mulhall was the original women's shot put and discus throw winner but her titles were removed and her marks erased from the record due to her failing a doping test at the competition.

References edit

  1. ^ Pacific Conference Games. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-01-14.
  2. ^ Australia finish top nation at Games. The Straits Times, pg. 26 (1981-02-03). Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  3. ^ Degun, Tom (2012-05-07). Christchurch's QEII Stadium to be demolished in wake of 2011 earthquake. Inside The Games. Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  4. ^ Litsky, Frank (1981-07-14). PLUNKETT, HOLDER OF DISCUS RECORDS, BARRED ON DRUG USE. New York Times. Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  5. ^ BANNING OF PLUCKNETT CALLED UNFAIR BY PEERS. New York Times (1981-07-29). Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  6. ^ Mitchell, Neil & McMahon, Peg (1981-07-15). Mulhall May Take Life Ban To Court. The Age. Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  7. ^ Webster, Jim (1982-07-29). Mulhall to Start Her Comeback on Sunday. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
  8. ^ Farber, Michael (1982-10-04). Drugs Hurt Career of Aussie Woman. The Montreal Gazette. Retrieved on 2015-01-15.
Medalists

External links edit