1963 Nordic Athletics Championships

The 1963 Nordic Athletics Championships was the second edition of the international athletics competition between Nordic countries and was held in Gothenburg, Sweden. It consisted of 34 individual athletics events, 22 for men and 12 for women. This covered a track and field programme plus a men's marathon race.

1963 Nordic Athletics Championships
Host cityGothenburg, Sweden
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events34
Records set14 championship records
1961
1965


Finland defended its team title in the men's points classification with 225.5 points and Sweden repeated as women's team champions with 104 points. Iceland took part in the men's competition only and was the only nation not to have an athlete top the podium. Among the athletes in attendance were 1962 European Athletics Championships medalists Pentti Nikula, Stig Pettersson, Rainer Stenius and Pentti Eskola.[1]

Ulla-Britt Wieslander of Sweden was the most successful athlete of the tournament, defending both her 100 metres and 200 metres titles as well as adding the 80 metres hurdles championship to her honours. Bengt-Göran Fernström was the only man to win two individual titles, taking the 200 m and 400 metres races. Athletes to successfully defend their 1961 titles were Carl Fredrik Bunæs (100 m), Stig Pettersson (high jump), Stein Haugen (discus), Birger Asplund (hammer), Karen Inge Halkier (shot put) and Nina Hansen (pentathlon).

Medal summary edit

Men edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Carl Fredrik Bunæs (NOR) 10.6   Pauli Ny (FIN) 10.7   Sven Hörtevall (SWE) 10.8
200 metres   Bengt-Göran Fernström (SWE) 21.9   Sven-Åke Löfgren (SWE) 22.0   Richard Simonsen (NOR) 22.1
400 metres   Bengt-Göran Fernström (SWE) 47.5   Hans-Olof Johansson (SWE) 48.2   Matti Honkanen (FIN) 48.4
800 metres   Erkki Niemelä (FIN) 1:49.7   Olavi Salonen (FIN) 1:50.0   Pekka Juutilainen (FIN) 1:50.8
1500 metres   Olavi Salonen (FIN) 3:49.0   Sven-Olof Larsson (SWE) 3:49.7   Arne Hamarsland (NOR) 3:51.7
5000 metres   Sven-Olof Larsson (SWE) 14:15.0   Odd Fuglem (NOR) 14:23.6   Reijo Höykinpuro (FIN) 14:24.8
10,000 metres   Jan-Erik Karlsson (SWE) 30:10.8   Simo Saloranta (FIN) 30:10.8   Pål Benum (NOR) 30:14.6
Marathon   Eino Oksanen (FIN) 2:22:01 CR   Paavo Pystynen (FIN) 2:22:07   Eino Valle (FIN) 2:23:40
3000 metres steeplechase   Bengt Persson (SWE) 8:50.2 CR   Esko Sirén (FIN) 8:51.6   Jouko Kuha (FIN) 8:56.8
110 m hurdles   Kjellfred Weum (NOR) 14.9   Juhani Vuori (FIN) 14.9   Raimo Asiala (FIN) 15.0
400 m hurdles   Jaakko Tuominen (FIN) 52.4   Hannu Ehoniemi (FIN) 52.9   Jussi Rintamäki (FIN) 53.2
High jump   Stig Pettersson (SWE) 2.11 m   Kjell-Åke Nilsson (SWE) 2.08 m   Henrik Hellén (FIN) 2.05 m
Pole vault   Pentti Nikula (FIN) 4.72 m CR   Taisto Laitinen (FIN) 4.72 m   Risto Ankio (FIN) 4.60 m
Long jump   Pentti Eskola (FIN) 7.65 m CR   Rainer Stenius (FIN) 7.34 m   Aarre Asiala (FIN) 7.27 m
Triple jump   Yrjö Tamminen (FIN) 15.49 m CR   Martin Jensen (NOR) 15.43 m   Asko Ruuskanen (FIN) 15.33 m
Shot put   Bjørn Bang Andersen (NOR) 17.35 m CR   Matti Yrjölä (FIN) 17.22 m   Erik Uddebom (SWE) 17.20 m
Discus throw   Stein Haugen (NOR) 52.88 m   Niilo Hangasvaara (FIN) 52.80 m   Pentti Repo (FIN) 52.68 m
Hammer throw   Birger Asplund (SWE) 61.06 m   Sverre Strandli (NOR) 60.72 m   Kalevi Horppu (FIN) 60.21 m
Javelin throw   Pauli Nevala (FIN) 78.92 m   Terje Pedersen (NOR) 78.43 m   Gunnar Arntsen (NOR) 76.89 m
Decathlon   Markus Kahma (FIN) 7034 pts   Valbjörn Thorláksson (ISL) 6931 pts   Seppo Suutari (FIN) 6641 pts
4 × 100 m relay   Finland (FIN) 41.0 CR   Denmark (DEN) 42.2 Only two teams finished
4 × 400 m relay   Sweden (SWE) 3:16.1   Finland (FIN) 3:16.3   Norway (NOR) 3:20.9

Women edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Ulla-Britt Wieslander (SWE) 11.9 CR   Else Hadrup (DEN) 11.9   Maija Koivusaari (FIN) 12.1
200 metres   Ulla-Britt Wieslander (SWE) 24.4 CR   Else Hadrup (DEN) 24.9   Hilkka Kivistö (FIN) 25.7
400 metres   Hilkka Hivisto (FIN) 57.2   Elisabeth Östberg (SWE) 57.3   Eeva Haimi (FIN) 57.8
800 metres   Yvonne Strandberg (SWE) 2:18.2   Anita Aittala (FIN) 2:18.7   Eeva-Liisa Kalliolahti (FIN) 2:19.4
80 m hurdles   Ulla-Britt Wieslander (SWE) 11.1 CR   Nina Hansen (DEN) 11.4   Sirkka Norrlund (FIN) 11.5
High jump   Berit Larsson (SWE) 1.64 m   Leena Kaarna (FIN) 1.64 m   Pirkko Heikkilä (FIN) 1.55 m
Long jump   Gunilla Cederström (SWE) 5.87 m CR   Berit Tøien (NOR) 5.77 m   Nina Hansen (DEN) 5.68 m
Shot put   Karen Inge Halkier (DEN) 13.70 m   Gun-Britt Flink (SWE) 13.35 m   Eila Ronkonen (FIN) 13.05 m
Discus throw   Wivianne Freivald (SWE) 48.18 m CR   Marjatta Mäkinen (FIN) 47.05 m   Inkeri Lehtonen (FIN) 45.34 m
Javelin throw   Unn Thorvaldsen (NOR) 50.10 m   Raija Talvensaari (FIN) 45.99 m   Britt Johansson (SWE) 45.42 m
Pentathlon   Nina Hansen (DEN) 4513 pts CR   Lena Kindberg (SWE) 4202 pts   Tuovi Vahtera (FIN) 4124 pts
4 × 100 m relay   Denmark (DEN) 47.4 CR   Sweden (SWE) 47.7   Finland (FIN) 47.9

Points table edit

 
World record-breaking pole vaulter Pentti Nikula helped Finland to a second men's title
 
Ulla-Britt Wieslander defended her 100 m and 200 m titles to lead the Swedish women to a second team title

Men edit

Rank Country Points
1   Finland 225.5
2   Sweden 131
3   Norway 87.5
4   Denmark 19
5   Iceland 8

Women edit

Rank Country Points
1   Sweden 104
2   Finland 84
3   Denmark 53
4   Norway 17

References edit

  1. ^ European Championships (Men). GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-04-29.