These are the official results of the Men's High Jump event at the 1982 European Championships in Athens, Greece, held at the Olympic Stadium "Spiros Louis" on 10 and 11 September 1982.[1]
| Men's high jump at the European Athletics Championships |
|---|
Medalists
edit| Gold | Dietmar Mögenburg |
| Silver | Janusz Trzepizur |
| Bronze | Gerd Nagel |
Results
editFinal
edit11 September
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dietmar Mögenburg | 2.30 | CR | ||
| Janusz Trzepizur | 2.27 | |||
| Gerd Nagel | 2.24 | |||
| 4 | Andre Schneider-Laub | 2.24 | ||
| 5 | Valeriy Sereda | 2.21 | ||
| 6 | Vladimir Granyenkov | 2.21 | ||
| 7 | Roland Dalhäuser | 2.21 | ||
| 8 | Franck Bonnet | 2.18 | ||
| 9 | Thomas Eriksson | 2.18 | ||
| 10 | Patrik Sjöberg | 2.15 | ||
| 10 | Josef Hrabal | 2.15 | ||
| Jacek Wszoła | DNS |
Qualification
edit10 September
| Rank | Name | Nationality | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Janusz Trzepizur | 2.24 | Q | ||
| Gerd Nagel | 2.24 | Q | ||
| Franck Bonnet | 2.21 | q | ||
| Jacek Wszoła | 2.21 | q | ||
| Thomas Eriksson | 2.21 | q | ||
| Roland Dalhäuser | 2.21 | q | ||
| Valeriy Sereda | 2.21 | q | ||
| Dietmar Mögenburg | 2.21 | q | ||
| Vladimir Granyenkov | 2.21 | q | ||
| Josef Hrabal | 2.21 | q | ||
| Patrik Sjöberg | 2.21 | q | ||
| Andre Schneider-Laub | 2.21 | q | ||
| Roberto Cabrejas | 2.18 | |||
| Geoff Parsons | 2.18 | |||
| Novica Čanović | 2.18 | |||
| Gianni Davito | 2.18 | |||
| Franck Verzy | 2.15 | |||
| Sorin Matei | 2.15 | |||
| Massimo Di Giorgio | 2.15 | |||
| Aleksey Demyanyuk | 2.15 | |||
| Miguel Moral | 2.10 | |||
| Michail Minoudis | 2.10 |
Participation
editAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.
Czechoslovakia (1)
France (2)
Greece (1)
Italy (2)
Poland (2)
Romania (1)
Soviet Union (3)
Spain (2)
Sweden (2)
Switzerland (1)
United Kingdom (1)
West Germany (3)
Yugoslavia (1)
See also
edit- 1978 Men's European Championships High Jump (Prague)
- 1980 Men's Olympic High Jump (Moscow)
- 1983 Men's World Championships High Jump (Helsinki)
- 1984 Men's Olympic High Jump (Los Angeles)
- 1986 Men's European Championships High Jump (Stuttgart)
- 1987 Men's World Championships High Jump (Rome)
- 1988 Men's Olympic High Jump (Seoul)
References
edit- ↑ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 – STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 436–443, retrieved 13 August 2014