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Athletics in Wales

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Athletics has a long history in Wales, with many events recognised today codified during the Victorian period. The first amateur athletic clubs in Wales were formed in the 1870s, while the first championships began in the early 20th century. Wales began competing as a country in international athletic events in the 1920s and has since produced a notable number of world class sportspeople including many medal winning Commonwealth, World, Olympic, Paralympic and European champions. Wales competes in the Commonwealth Games under its own flag but at the Olympic Games, Welsh athletes compete alongside those of Scotland, England and Northern Ireland as part of a Great Britain team.

History

The history of athletics in Wales, primarily the fundamental sporting activities of running, jumping and throwing, can be traced back to ancient times. The 12th century chronicler Gerald of Wales makes reference to climbing and running as part of improving fitness in preparation for war.[1] By the 15th century several references are made to The Twenty Four Feats of Skill, a list of attributes that were expected from the princes of Wales, a form of chivalric code.[2] Jumping and running are listed amongst the feats.[3]

Statue of Guto Nyth Brân in Mountain Ash

Pre-industrialisation, athletic meets were a traditional events on the sporting calendar.[1] The most notable Welsh athlete of this period was Guto Nyth Brân, a runner noted for his incredible long distance stamina. His feats are commemorated each year in the Nos Galan road race, held at Mountain Ash.[4]

During the early 19th century, a more structured form of athletics began to appear. Pedestrianism, in which people were allowed to wager on long distance competitive walking and running events, brought a standardising of athletics which reflected the modernisation of Welsh industrial society.[1] In the second half of the 19th century the Victorian middle-classes began to organise and codify a range of sports. At the forefront of the codification of sports was Welshman John Graham Chambers, who although more famed for devising the Queensberry Rules for boxing, also formed the Amateur Athletic Club in 1866, and was present at the formation of the Amateur Athletic Association in 1880.[5][6] Chambers championed athletics in Wales and organised the country's first Athletics meeting, held at Hafod Estate in Cwmystwyth near Aberystwyth in 1860.[7] In 1875, the Newport Athletic Club was formed, the first in Wales.[8][nb 1] This was followed in 1882 with the creation of Cardiff Roath Harriers, the first pure athletics club in the country with no connections to other winter sports.[9] By the late 19th century professional races were an established means for men to earn money. The Wales rugby captain Arthur Gould, who was also a notable sprinter and hurdler, had by 1890 amassed over £1,000 in foot races alone.[10]

The 1890s saw formalized track, field and cross-country contests throughout Wales and the country's first amateur athletics event was held in 1893. In 1896 the Welsh Cross-Country Association was formed.[11] This was followed in 1901 by the Welsh Professional Union, a body designed to promote and control professional foot and cycle racing in south Wales.[9] Professional athletics continued to develop in Wales and in 1903 the Welsh Powderhall, named after the famous stadium in Edinburgh, was established in Pontypridd and held at Taff Vale Park. The first Welsh Powderhall had a prize of £100, and the venue became the home of Welsh professional running until its final contest in 1934.[9][11] In 1907 the first fully integrated athletics championship were held at Rodney Parade in Newport, and by the 1920s Wales was competing as a nation on the international stage.[11]

The Second World War led to a temporary cessation of competition, but Welsh athletics continued to develop after the war when the Welsh Secondary School AAA was formed in 1946 followed by the first Wales Schools Track and Field Championships in 1947.[11][12] The Welsh Amateur Athletics Association formed in 1948, the first organisation to govern the sport of track and field throughout Wales, and in 1952 women were first allowed to compete in the Welsh championships.[11][12]

The 1950s also witnessed an improvement of the infrastructure of Welsh sport, with the first purpose built athletics venue, Maindy Stadium, opened in 1951 in Cardiff. The stadium held its first international competition, against Ireland, in 1954. In 1958 Cardiff was the host city for the British Empire and Commonwealth Games.[13]

The Isle of Anglesey is a member island of the International Island Games Association. In the 2015 Island Games, held on Jersey, the Isle of Anglesey came 13th in the medal table with five gold and three bronze medals, won in sailing and athletics.[14]

Notable Welsh athletes

Marathon runner Steve Jones in 1984

Although Wales only began competing as a country in various athletic tournaments since the 1920s, Welsh athletes have made an impression on the international stage before this as part of Great Britain teams along with sportspeople from England, Scotland and Northern Ireland. In 1906 Wallis Walters became the first Welsh athlete to represent Great Britain in a track and field event in the Olympics, competing in the 110m hurdles.[12][15] The first Welsh athlete to win an Olympic medal was David Jacobs who was awarded the gold as part of the 4 × 100 m relay at the 1912 games in Stockholm.[12][16] In 1948, Tom Richards became the first Welshman to be awarded an individual medal when he took silver in the marathon.[12][16] Michelle Probert was the first woman from Wales to win an Olympic medal, running in the 4 × 400 m relay, while no female athlete from Wales has won an individual Olympic medal.[16]

Some of the more notable Welsh athletes include Lynn Davies, gold medalist in the long jump in the 1964 Summer Olympics. Nicknamed 'Lynn the Leap', Davies was also the flagbearer for the Great Britain team in the 1968 games and is the only Welsh athlete to have won gold in an individual Olympic track and field event.[17] 110m hurdler Colin Jackson is a former world record holder and the winner of numerous Olympic, World and European medals. Marathoner Steve Jones set the world record for the marathon in Chicago in 1984 with a time of 2:08:05. He also won a bronze medal at the Commonwealth games in the 10,000m in 1986.

Ralph Evans won a bronze medal for boxing in the light fly-weight division in the 1972 Summer Olympics, but only boxed for 3 years and retired at the age of 19. Ralph was the first Welshman to win an Olympic medal in boxing. Wales has also produced Great Britain's most successful Paralympian, Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson. Grey-Thompson won 16 Paralympic medals between 1988 and 2004 in wheelchair track events, ten of the medals were gold. She has also won gold in two world championships and has won the women's wheelchair race at the London Marathon on six occasions.[18]

Key to tables

Key:   Pending ratification   Record not kept by Welsh Athletics   Not ratified or later rescinded by Welsh Athletics

+ = en route to longer distance
h = hand timing

Welsh records (outdoor)

Men

Event Record Athlete Nationality Date Meet Place Ref
100 m 10.11 (-0.2 m/s) Christian Malcolm  Wales 5 August 2001 World Championships Edmonton, Canada
150 m (straight) 15.28 (1.5 m/s) Christian Malcolm  Wales 15 May 2011 Great Manchester City Games Manchester, England
200 m 20.08 (1.0 m/s) Christian Malcolm  Wales 5 August 2001 World Championships Edmonton, Canada
300 m 32.06 Jamie Baulch  Wales 31 May 1997 BMC Cardiff Cardiff, Wales
400 m 44.36 Iwan Thomas  Wales 13 July 1997 British Championship Birmingham, England
500 m 63.55 Sean Price  Wales 12 August 1990 Electric Games Haringey, England
600 m 1:17.2 Joe Thomas  Wales 5 May 2008 Brewer Games Open Graded Cheltenham, England
800 m 1:44.98 Gareth Warburton  Wales 7 June 2012 Bislett Games Oslo, Norway
1000 m 2:17.36 Neil Horsfield  Wales 9 August 1991 Pearl Assurance Gateshead, England
1500 m 3:33.99 Jake Heyward  Wales 29 May 2021 Portland Track Festival Portland, United States
3:32.82 Jake Heyward  Wales 5 August 2021 Olympic Games Tokyo, Japan
Mile 3:52.50 Jake Heyward  Wales 13 July 2021 Diamond League Gateshead, England
2000 m 4:57.61 Piers Copeland  Wales 19 August 2020 Irena Szewińska Memorial Bydgoszcz, Poland
3000 m 7:46.40 Ian Hamer  Wales 20 January 1990 CGWU Auckland, New Zealand
Two miles 8:20.28 David James  Wales 27 June 1980 Talbot International Games Crystal Palace, England
5000 m 13:09.80 Ian Hamer  Wales 9 June 1992 Golden Gala Rome, Italy
5 km (road) 13:40 Roger Hackney  Wales 27 March 1985 Newcastle, England
10000 m 27:39.14 Steve Jones  Wales 9 July 1983 Bislett Games Oslo, Norway
10 km (road) 27:59 Steve Jones  Wales 23 April 1984 AAA's 10KM Birmingham, England
Half marathon 60:59 Steve Jones  Wales 8 June 1986 GNR/AAA Newcastle, England
One hour
Marathon 2:07:13 Steve Jones  Wales 20 October 1985 Chicago, United States
110 m hurdles 12.91 (+0.5 m/s) Colin Jackson  Wales 20 August 1993 World Championships Stuttgart, Germany
300 m hurdles 37.1 Phil Harries  Wales 29 April 1993 Burton-on-Trent, England
400 m hurdles 47.83 Dai Greene  Wales 6 July 2012 Diamond League Paris, France
2000 m steeplechase 8:30.50 Roger Hackney  Wales 22 August 1987 DCrest Crystal Palace, England
3000 m steeplechase 8:18.91 Roger Hackney  Wales 30 July 1988 Hechtel, Belgium
High jump 2.25 m Rob Mitchell  Wales 28 July 2001 AAA Combined Events Championships Bedford, England
Pole vault 5.60 m Neil Winter  Wales 19 August 2995 British Athletics League Division 1 Enfield, England
Long jump 8.23 m (+2.0 m/s) Lynn Davis  Wales 30 June 1968 Berne, Switzerland
Triple jump 17.61 m (+1.7 m/s) Steven Shalders  Wales 3 September 2005 UK Challenge Final Manchester, England
Shot put 20.45 m Shaun Pickering  Wales 17 August 1997 The SPAR British Challenge UK Athletics Crystal Palace, England
Discus throw 66.84 m Brett Morse  Wales 30 June 2013 Welsh Championships Cardiff, Wales
Hammer throw 73.89 m Osian Jones  Wales 25 August 2019 British Championships Birmingham, England
Javelin throw 81.70m (Current design) Nigel Bevan  Wales 28 June 1992 AAA Championships Birmingham, England
Decathlon 7882 pts Ben Gregory  Wales 13–14 April 2016 Mt SAC Relays/CA Invitational Combined-Events Azusa, United States
100m (wind) Long jump (wind) Shot put High jump 400m 110H (wind) Discus Pole vault Javelin 1500m
(m/s) m (m/s) m m (m/s) m m m

Women

Event Record Athlete Nationality Date Meet Place Ref
100 m 11.39 (1.5 m/s) Sallyanne Short  Wales 12 July 1992 Welsh Championship Cwmbran, Wales
11.39 (2.0 m/s) Elaine O’Neil  Wales 4 July 2010 Résisprint International La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland
11.39 (-0.6 m/s) Hannah Brier  Wales 16 July 2015 World Youth Championships Cali, Colombia
150 m (straight) 17.61(-0.3 m/s) Catherine Murphy  Wales 11 August 1996 Performance Games Crystal Palace, England
200 m 22.80 (0.5 m/s) Michelle Scutt  Wales 12 June 1982 UK Championships Cwmbran, Wales [19]
400 m 50.63 Michelle Scutt  Wales 31 May 1982 Cwmbran, Wales
800 m 1:57.42 Kirsty Wade  Wales 24 June 1985 UlsG Belfast, Ireland
1000 m 2:33.70 Kirsty Wade  Wales 9 August 1985 Kodak 1 Mile Gateshead, England
1500 m 3:59.95 Hayley Tullett  Wales 31 August 2003 IAAF World Championships Paris, France
Mile
2000 m
3000 m
Two miles
5000 m
5 km (road)
10000 m
10 km (road)
Half marathon

Welsh records (indoors)

Colin Jackson's European and world record in the 60 metre hurdles remains unbeaten.
Christian Malcolm’s multiple welsh records, welsh sprinting legend representing wales and Great Britain in the world championship and Olympic Games.
lynn Davies’s, indoor and outdoor welsh record holder in the long jump with leaps of 8.23 outdoors and 7.97 indoors respectively. Lynn remains as the only athlete to win Olympic gold in track and field since his win in 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo Japan. Lynn Davies remains the only with jumper to leap over 8 metres, and his welsh record remains untouched for 53 years.

Men

Event Record Athlete Nationality Date Meet Place Ref
50 m 5.81 Christian Malcolm  Wales 24 February 2002 Meeting Gaz de France Lievin, France
60 m 6.49 Colin Jackson  Wales 11 March 1994 European Indoor Championships Paris, France
200 m 20.54 Christian Malcolm  Wales 26 February 2001 European Indoor Championships Ghent, Belgium
400 m 45.39 Jamie Baulch  Wales 8 February 1997 World Championship Trials Birmingham, England
800 m 1:46.33 Joe Thomas  Wales 23 February 2012 XL Galan Stockholm, Sweden
1000 m 2:21.25 Tom Marshall  Wales 4 February 2018 Non-Thomas Open Cardiff, Wales
1500 m 3:38.55 Piers Copeland  Wales 13 February 2021 Bryggen Sports Invitational Watford, England
Mile 3:57.71 James Thie  Wales 15 February 2003 New York, United States
3000 m 7:51.49 Ian Hamer  Wales 14 March 1992 Birmingham, England
5000 m 13:44.70 Adam Bitchell  Wales 13 December 2013 Hoosier Open Bloomington, Indiana, United States
50 m hurdles 6.40 Colin Jackson  Wales 5 February 1999 HIGP Budapest, Hungary
60 m hurdles 7.30 Colin Jackson  Wales 6 March 1994 Sindelfingen, Germany
High jump 2.24 m Rob Mitchell  Wales 24 January 2009 Welsh Championships Cardiff, Wales
Pole vault 5.45m Paul Walker  Wales 2 March 2014 Cardiff Invitation Pole Vault Cardiff, Wales
Long jump 7.97m Lynn Davies  Wales 12 February 1966 Los Angeles, United States
Triple jump 15.92 m Steven Shalders  Wales 27 February 2005 BUSA Championships Sheffield, England
Shot put 19.47m Paul Edwards  Wales 6 February 1994 England vs Austria vs Czech Vienna, Austria
Heptathlon 5834pts Ben Gregory  Wales 4-5 March 2017 Scottish National Combined Events Glasgow, Scotland
60m Long jump Shot put High jump 60m H Pole vault 1000m
7.29 7.30m 13.22m 1.99m 8.22 4.97m 2:40.92
4×200 m relay 1:30.5 [[]]
[[]]
[[]]
[[]]
 Wales 3 February 2007 Celtic Indoor Cup Cardiff, Wales
4×400 m relay 3:16.71 [[]]
[[]]
[[]]
[[]]
 Wales 21 February 2010 Celtic International Cardiff, Wales
4×800 m relay

Women

Event Record Athlete Nationality Date Meet Place Ref
50 m
60 m
200 m
400 m
800 m
1000 m
1500 m

Footnotes

Notes
  1. ^ The date of formation of Newport Athletics club, originally called the Newport Cricket, Athletic and Football Club, is contested by several sources. Archives Network Wales states 1875, while The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales (2008) returns a date of 1877 (p.41). David Smith in his study of the Welsh Rugby Union, Field of Dreams(1980) states that Richard Mullock was secretary of Newport Athletic Club since 1874 (p.36).
References
  1. ^ a b c Davies (2008), p.40
  2. ^ Davies (2008) p.893
  3. ^ Jenkins, Bethan (2007). "The twenty-four measures of a man". sirwilliamhope.org. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  4. ^ Rowland, Mike. "Guto Nyth Bran". BBC Online. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  5. ^ Holt, Richard. "Amateur Athletic Association (act. 1880–1991)". oxforddnb.com. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  6. ^ Williams, Clive. "Welsh Athletics: Our History". welshathletics.org. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  7. ^ "Wales' first athletic meet marked". BBC.co.uk. 14 July 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  8. ^ "Gwent Archives: Newport Harriers Athletic Club and Newport Athletic Club, photographs and ephemera". Archives Network Wales. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  9. ^ a b c Morgan, Prys, ed. (1988). Glamorgan County History, Volume VI, Glamorgan Society 1780 to 1980. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 389. ISBN 0-904730-05-0.
  10. ^ Smith, David; Williams, Gareth (1980). Fields of Praise: The Official History of The Welsh Rugby Union. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 70. ISBN 0-7083-0766-3.
  11. ^ a b c d e Davies (2008), p.41
  12. ^ a b c d e "Welsh Athletics: Our History". welshathletics.org. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  13. ^ "1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games". the cgf.com. Archived from the original on 2017-04-14. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  14. ^ "Medal Table". jersey2015results.com. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  15. ^ "Wallis Walters". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  16. ^ a b c "Wales' Olympic roll of honour". BBC Sport. 22 August 2008. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  17. ^ "Lynn Davies". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  18. ^ "Grey Thompson confirms retirement". BBC Sport. 28 February 2007. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
  19. ^ Williams, Clive (October 2013). "Michelle Scutt". www.welshathletics.org. Welsh Athletics Ltd. Retrieved 5 August 2021.

Bibliography

  • Davies, John; Jenkins, Nigel (2008). The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6.