Balkan Masters Athletics Championships

The Balkan Masters Athletics Championships is an annual international athletics competition between masters athletes aged 35 and over from nations in the Balkans. It is typically held over two or three days in September. It features a full programme of track and field events, plus a half marathon.[1] Organised by Balkan Masters Athletics, it was first held in 1991 and has been held every year since. The competition was the organisation's first regular championships, and was followed by a Balkan Masters Cross Country Championships in 2007 and a Balkan Masters Indoor Athletics Championships in 2015.[2][3]

Nations

[4]

  1.  Albania
  2.  Bosnia and Herzegovina
  3.  Bulgaria
  4.  Croatia
  5.  Greece
  6.  Moldova
  7.  Montenegro
  8.  North Macedonia
  9.  Romania
  10.  Serbia
  11.  Slovenia
  12.  Turkey
  13.  Kosovo

Editions

Outdoor

Edition Year City Country Dates
11991AthensGreece21 September
21992IstanbulTurkey19 September
31993BucharestRomania18–19 September
41994SofiaBulgaria17–18 September
51995IstanbulTurkey16–17 September
61996AthensGreece28–29 September
71997BucharestRomania6–7 September
81998ThessalonikiGreece11–12 July
91999İzmirTurkey23–24 October
102000KateriniGreece9–10 September
112001BelgradeSerbia15–16 September
122002IstanbulTurkey7–8 September
132003KateriniGreece20–21 September
142004IstanbulTurkey11–12 September
152005Novi SadSerbia24–25 September
162006AthensGreece23–24 September
172007PlovdivBulgaria6–7 October
182008BarMontenegro4–5 October
192009İzmirTurkey26–27 September
202010LarissaGreece18–19 September
212011DomžaleSlovenia2–4 September
222012İzmirTurkey21–23 September
232013ZagrebCroatia6–8 September
242014BucharestRomania19–21 September
252015ThessalonikiGreece18–19 September
262016Novi SadSerbia23–25 September
272017Stara ZagoraBulgaria22–24 September
282018CeljeSlovenia21–23 September
292019BucharestRomania19–22 September
302021KorceAlbania17–19 September
312022ThessalonikiGreece23–25 September

2020 not held.

Indoor

  1. 21-22/2/2015, Istanbul, TURKEY
  2. 12-13/3/2016, Bucharest, ROMANIA
  3. 10-11/3/2018, Belgrade, SERBIA
  4. 02-03/03/2019, Istanbul, TURKEY
  5. 07-08/03/2020, Belgrade, SERBIA
  6. 12-13/03/2022, Novo Mesto, SLOVENIA

Cross Country

  1. 15/4/2007, Smendarevo, SERBIA
  2. 2008, Plovdiv, BULGARIA
  3. 5/4/2009, Tirana, ALBANIA
  4. 2010, Istanbul, TURKEY
  5. 29/4/2012, Belgrade, SERBIA
  6. 14/4/2013, Athens, GREECE
  7. 13/4/2014, Bucharest, ROMANIA
  8. 12/3/2016, Bucharest, ROMANIA

Medals

Source:[5]

Outdoor

1991-2022:[6]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Greece1971144510744490
2 Romania157810777403395
3 Bulgaria12678296032699
4 Turkey11179946992810
5 Slovenia7494022511402
6 Serbia5224793541355
7 Croatia329244169742
8 Bosnia and Herzegovina1329353278
9 Albania11788156361
10 Montenegro1037455232
11 Moldova593324116
12 Kosovo53917
13 North Macedonia37717
Totals (13 entries)79525768419417914

30th Albania 2021:[7][8][9]

Indoor

2015-2018:[10]

Cross Country

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.