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The 29th European Athletics Indoor Championships were held in the National Indoor Arena (NIA) in Birmingham, England, from Friday, 2 March to Sunday, 4 March 2007. Birmingham also held the 2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships.

Contents

[edit] Men's results

[edit] Track

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 m
(Details)
Jason Gardener
 Great Britain
6.51
EL
Craig Pickering
 Great Britain
6.59
 
Ronald Pognon
 France
6.60
 
 
400 m
(Details)
David Gillick
 Ireland
45.52
NR   EL
Bastian Swillims
 Germany
45.62
PB
Robert Tobin
 Great Britain
46.15
 
 
800 m
(Details)
Arnoud Okken
 Netherlands
1:47.92
 
Miguel Quesada
 Spain
1:47.96
 
Maurizio Bobbato
 Italy
1:48:71
PB
 
1500 m
(Details)
Juan Carlos Higuero
 Spain
3:44.41
 
Sergio Gallardo
 Spain
3:44.51
 
Arturo Casado
 Spain
3:44.73
 
 
3000 m
(Details)
Cosimo Caliandro
 Italy
8:02.44
 
Bouabdellah Tahri
 France
8:02.85
 
Jesús España
 Spain
8:02.91
 
 
60 m H
(Details)
Gregory Sedoc
 Netherlands
7.63
=PB
Marcel van der Westen
 Netherlands
7.64
 
Jackson Quiñónez
 Spain
7.65
 
 
4 X 400 m
(Details)
 Great Britain
Robert Tobin
Dale Garland
Philip Taylor
Steven Green
3:07.04
 
 Russia
Ivan Buzolin
Vladislav Frolov
Maksim Dyldin
Artem Sergeyenkov
3:08.10
 
 Poland
Piotr Kędzia
Marcin Marciniszyn
Łukasz Pryga
Piotr Klimczak
3:08.14
 
Germany were originally awarded the gold medal, however, on an appeal by the Russian Team, were disqualified for pushing meaning the gold medal went to Great Britain & NI.[1]

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Field

Event Gold Silver Bronze
High Jump
(Details)
Stefan Holm
 Sweden
2.34
 
Linus Thörnblad
 Sweden
2.32
 
Martyn Bernard
 Great Britain
2.29
 
 
Pole Vault
(Details)
Danny Ecker
 Germany
5.71
 
Denys Yurchenko
 Ukraine
5.71
SB
Björn Otto
 Germany

5.71  
 
Long Jump
(Details)
Andrew Howe
 Italy
8.30
NR   EL   PB
Loúis Tsátoumas
 Greece
8.02
 
Salim Sdiri
 France
8.00
 
 
Triple Jump
(Details)
Phillips Idowu
 Great Britain
17.56
WL   CR
Nathan Douglas
 Great Britain
17.47
PB
Aleksandr Sergeyev
 Russia
17.15
SB
 
Shot Put
(Details)
Mikuláš Konopka
 Slovakia
21.57
NR   EL
Pavel Lyzhyn
 Belarus
20.82
PB
Joachim Olsen
 Denmark
20.55
 
 

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Combined

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Heptathlon
(Details)
Roman Šebrle
 Czech Republic
6196
WL
Aleksandr Pogorelov
 Russia
6127
 
Andrei Krauchanka
 Belarus
6090
PB
 

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Women's results

[edit] Track

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 m
(Details)
Kim Gevaert
 Belgium
7.12
 
Yevgeniya Polyakova
 Russia
7.18
 
Daria Onyśko
 Poland
7.20
PB
 
400 m
(Details)
Nicola Sanders
 Great Britain
50.02
WL   NR   PB
Ilona Usovich
 Belarus
51.00
PB
Olesya Zykina
 Russia
51.69
SB
 
800 m
(Details)
Oksana Zbrozhek
 Russia
1:59.23
 
Tetyana Petlyuk
 Ukraine
1:59.84
 
Jolanda Čeplak
 Slovenia
2:00.00
 
 
1500 m
(Details)
Lidia Chojecka
 Poland
4:05.13
 
Natalya Pantelyeva
 Russia
4:06.04
PB
Olesya Chumakova
 Russia
4:06.48
SB
 
3000 m
(Details)
Lidia Chojecka
 Poland
8:43.25
 
Marta Domínguez
 Spain
8:44.40
SB
Silvia Weissteiner
 Italy
8:44.81
NR   PB
 
60 m H
(Details)
Susanna Kallur
 Sweden
7.87
 
Aleksandra Antonova
 Russia
7.94
 
Kirsten Bolm
 Germany
7.97
SB
 
4 X 400 m
(Details)
 Belarus
Yuliana Yuschanka
Iryna Khliustava
Svetlana Usovich
Ilona Usovich
3:27.83
NR   CR
 Russia
Olesya Zykina
Natalya Ivanova
Zhanna Kashcheyeva
Natalya Antyukh
3:28.16
 
 Great Britain
Emma Duck
Nicola Sanders
Kim Wall
Lee McConnell
3:28.69
NR  
 

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Field

Event Gold Silver Bronze
High Jump
(Details)
Tia Hellebaut
 Belgium
2.05
WL   CR   NR
Antonietta di Martino
 Italy
1.96
 
Ruth Beitia
 Belgium
1.96
 
Venelina Veneva ( Bulgaria) originally took the bronze with 1.96 m but was later disqualified after testing positive for testosterone.
Pole Vault
(Details)
Svetlana Feofanova
 Russia
4.76
SB
Yuliya Golubchikova
 Russia
4.71
PB
Anna Rogowska
 Poland
4.66
 
 
Long Jump
(Details)
Naide Gomes
 Portugal
6.89
WL   NR
Concepción Montaner
 Spain
6.69
 
Denisa Ščerbová
 Czech Republic
6.64
=NR
 
Triple Jump
(Details)
Carlota Castrejana
 Spain
14.64
EL   NR   PB
Olesya Bufalova
 Russia
14.50
PB
Teresa Nzola Meso Ba
 France
14.49
NR   PB
 
Shot Put
(Details)
Assunta Legnante
 Italy
18.92
 
Irina Khudoroshkina
 Russia
18.50
 
Olga Ryabinkina
 Russia
18.16
 
 

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Combined

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Pentathlon
(Details)
Carolina Klüft
 Sweden
4944
WL
Kelly Sotherton
 Great Britain
4927
NR
Karin Ruckstuhl
 Netherlands
4801
NR
 

WR world record | ER European record | CR championship record | NR national record | WL world leading | EL European leading | PB personal best | SB seasonal best

[edit] Medals table

Rank Nation Gold medal icon.svg Silver medal icon.svg Bronze medal icon.svg Total
1.  Great Britain 4 3 3 10
2.  Italy 3 1 2 6
3.  Sweden 3 1 0 4
4.  Russia 2 9 4 15
5.  Spain 2 4 3 9
6.  Netherlands 2 1 1 4
7.  Poland 2 0 3 5
8.  Belgium 2 0 0 2
9.  Belarus 1 2 1 4
10.  Germany 1 1 2 4
11.  Czech Republic 1 0 1 2
12.  Ireland 1 0 0 1
12.  Portugal 1 0 0 1
12.  Slovakia 1 0 0 1
15.  Ukraine 0 2 0 2
16.  France 0 1 3 4
17.  Greece 0 1 0 1
18  Bulgaria 0 0 1 1
18  Denmark 0 0 1 1
18  Slovenia 0 0 1 1

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  1. ^ Turner, Chris (2007-03-04). "European lead garners Gardener fourth title - Euro Indoors, Day 3, PM – MEN". IAAF. http://www.iaaf.org/news/Kind=2/newsId=37839.html. Retrieved 2007-03-05. 



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