1965 Nordic Athletics Championships

The 1965 Nordic Athletics Championships was the third and final edition of the international athletics competition between Nordic countries and was held in Helsinki, Finland. 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.

1965 Nordic Athletics Championships
Host cityHelsinki, Finland
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events34
Records set20 championship records
1963
2023


Finland won its third team title in the men's points classification with 161 points and dethroned Sweden in the women's team competition with a total of 77 points. Iceland took part in the men's competition only and had its first and only champion at this edition – Valbjörn Thorláksson in the decathlon. Among the athletes in attendance were 1962 European Athletics Championships medalists Stig Pettersson, Rainer Stenius and Pentti Eskola.[1]

Berit Berthelsen of Norway was the athlete of the tournament, taking a sweep of the women's sprints from 100 metres to 400 metres as well as the long jump. Finland's Marjatta Mäkinen won the shot put and discus throw events. No man won an individual double at this edition. Nina Hansen won the women's pentathlon, making her the only athlete in the competition's history to win three straight titles in an event. Carl Fredrik Bunæs (twice 100 m champion) returned to win a third title, this time in 400 m. Athletes to defend their 1963 titles included Bengt Persson (steeplechase) and Bjørn Bang Andersen (shot put).

Medal summary edit

Men edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Ole Bernt Skarstein (NOR) 10.6   Aarno Musku (FIN) 10.7   Jorma Ehrström (FIN) 10.8
200 metres   Aarno Musku (FIN) 21.6   Ole Bernt Skarstein (NOR) 21.7   Bo Althoff (SWE) 21.9
400 metres   Carl Fredrik Bunæs (NOR) 47.2   Bengt-Göran Fernström (SWE) 48.0   Heikki Pippola (FIN) 48.1
800 metres   Juha Väätäinen (FIN) 1:50.7   Anders Gärderud (SWE) 1:50.8   Keijo Ceder (FIN) 1:50.9
1500 metres   Karl-Uno Olofsson (SWE) 3:46.4   Stig Rekdal (NOR) 3:46.6   Keijo Ceder (FIN) 3:47.1
5000 metres   Bengt Nåjde (SWE) 14:05.0 CR   Gunnar Larsson (SWE) 14:14.8   Odd Fuglem (NOR) 14:19.0
10,000 metres   Gunnar Larsson (SWE) 30:18.4   Bjarne Sletten (NOR) 30:36.4   Erkki Rantala (FIN) 30:42.0
Marathon   Tenho Salakka (FIN) 2:24:51   Per Gunnar Lien (NOR) 2:24:51   Paavo Pystynen (FIN) 2:26:56
3000 metres steeplechase   Bengt Persson (SWE) 8:40.0 CR   Esko Sirén (FIN) 8:40.6   Jouko Kuha (FIN) 8:41.0
110 m hurdles   Bo Forssander (SWE) 14.0 CR   Ove Andersson (SWE) 14.8   Sture Fröberg (SWE) 14.8
400 m hurdles   Bertil Vistam (SWE) 52.0   Jan Gulbrandsen (NOR) 52.5   Lennart Bring (SWE) 52.6
High jump   Kjell-Åke Nilsson (SWE) 2.08 m   Pertti Lantti (FIN) 2.08 m   Stig Pettersson (SWE) 2.08 m
Pole vault   Aulis Kairento (FIN) 4.85 m CR   Tapio Mertanen (SWE) 4.80 m   Hans Lagerqvist (SWE) 4.75 m
Long jump   Rainer Stenius (FIN) 7.89 m CR   Pentti Eskola (FIN) 7.77 m   Juhani Manninen (FIN) 7.65 m
Triple jump   Pertti Pousi (FIN) 15.61 m CR   Kjell Arthur Paulsen (NOR) 15.50 m   Jorma Gröhn (FIN) 15.41 m
Shot put   Bjørn Bang Andersen (NOR) 17.80 m CR   Matti Yrjölä (FIN) 17.43 m   Harald Lorentzen (NOR) 17.30 m
Discus throw   Lars Haglund (SWE) 57.68 m CR   Pentti Repo (FIN) 55.24 m   Niilo Hangasvaara (FIN) 54.78 m
Hammer throw   Oddvar Krogh (NOR) 64.30 m CR   Birger Asplund (SWE) 63.46 m   Reino Suuripää (FIN) 60.46 m
Javelin throw   Jorma Kinnunen (FIN) 82.90 m CR   Willy Rasmussen (NOR) 80.72 m   Väinö Kuisma (FIN) 76.40 m
Decathlon   Valbjörn Thorláksson (ISL) 6902 pts   Tore Carbe (SWE) 6801 pts   Stig Nymander (FIN) 6782 pts
4 × 100 m relay   Finland (FIN) 40.3 CR   Sweden (SWE) 41.5   Norway (NOR) 41.6
4 × 400 m relay   Sweden (SWE) 3:10.3 CR   Norway (NOR) 3:10.3 Only 2 teams finished

Women edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres   Berit Berthelsen (NOR) 12.0   Karin Wallgren (SWE) 12.0   Lone Hadrup (DEN) 12.2
200 metres   Berit Berthelsen (NOR) 24.4   Karin Wallgren (SWE) 24.6   Else Hadrup (DEN) 25.1
400 metres   Berit Berthelsen (NOR) 54.4 CR   Elisabeth Östberg (SWE) 55.6   Tove Bakkejord (NOR) 55.8
800 metres   Jette Andersen (DEN) 2:12.0 CR   Gunilla Olausson (SWE) 2:13.0   Elisabeth Östberg (SWE) 2:14.0
80 m hurdles   Sirkka Norrlund (FIN) 10.9 CR   Nina Hansen (DEN) 11.3   Lena Kindberg (SWE) 11.5
High jump   Agneta Falkengren (SWE) 1.64 m CR=   Monica Lidholt (SWE) 1.64 m   Margareta Bergqvist (SWE) 1.64 m
Long jump   Berit Berthelsen (NOR) 6.37 m CR   Oddrun Hokland (NOR) 6.08 m   Maija Koivusaari (FIN) 5.90 m
Shot put   Marjatta Mäkinen (FIN) 15.66 m CR   Karen Inge Halkier (DEN) 14.23 m   Gun-Britt Flink (SWE) 14.00 m
Discus throw   Marjatta Mäkinen (FIN) 51.70 m CR   Sirkka Kauppinen (FIN) 44.90 m   Inkeri Lehtonen (FIN) 44.70 m
Javelin throw   Ellen Kortsen (DEN) 47.72 m   Raija Mustonen (FIN) 45.14 m   Gun-Britt Liljergren (SWE) 44.74 m
Pentathlon   Nina Hansen (DEN) 4477 pts   Oddrun Hokland (NOR) 4475 pts   Pirkko Heikkilä (FIN) 4311 pts
4 × 100 m relay   Norway (NOR) 47.0 CR   Sweden (SWE) 47.5   Finland (FIN) 47.8

Points table edit

 
Future European champion Juha Väätäinen won the 800 m to help Finland to a third men's title
 
Karin Wallgren of Sweden was runner-up in the short sprints and in the women's competition with Sweden

Men edit

Rank Country Points
1   Finland 161
2   Sweden 147
3   Norway 106
4   Iceland 10
5   Denmark 9

Women edit

Rank Country Points
1   Finland 77
2   Sweden 69
3   Norway 54
4   Denmark 47

References edit

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