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Record Athlete Date Meet Place Ref. 100 m: 11.13 (+0.7 m/s) Rhasidat Adeleke: 30 June 2024 Irish Championships Dublin, Ireland [35] 200 m: 22.34 (+1.8 m/s) Rhasidat Adeleke: 14 April 2023 Tom Jones Memorial Gainesville, United States [36] 300 m: 37.04 Phil Healy: 22 May 2024 Trond Mohn Games Bergen, Norway [37] 35.38+ Rhasidat Adeleke: 12 July ...
The AAI in its present form was established in 2000, but the history of sports governing bodies in Ireland is complicated because of the partition of the country in 1923. In 1884 the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) was formed and the Irish Amateur Athletic Association (IAAA) was formed in 1885.
European records in the sport of athletics are ratified by the European Athletic Association. Records are kept for all events contested at the Olympic Games and some others. Unofficial records for some other events are kept by track and field statisticians. Records are kept for events in track and field, road running, and racewalking.
National Indoor Arena (Ireland) 200m (indoor) Tartan Dublin Lucan Harriers 400m Tartan Lucan Harriers Dublin Éamonn Ceannt Park, Crumlin: 400m Cinder Dublin Chapelizod: 300m Tartan Donore Harriers: Dublin Tallaght: 400m Tartan Tallaght Athletics Club Galway Ballinasloe: 400m Tartan Galway Galway, Dangan 400m Tartan synthetic track Galway ...
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Jerry Kiernan's 1982 time of 2:13:45 was a long-standing men's course record. This was finally improved upon by Lezan Kipkosgei Kimutai over twenty years later in 2004, but Russian runner Aleksey Sokolov twice broke the record with consecutive wins in 2006/07, running 2:11:39 then 2:09:07 the next year. Moses Kangogo Kibet became the first man ...
Sergey Bubka's 1993 pole vault world indoor record of 6.15 m was not considered to be a world record, because it was set before the new rule came into effect. Bubka's world record of 6.14 m, set outdoors in 1994, was surpassed by six consecutive records set indoors, most recently by Armand Duplantis in 2023 with a 6.22 m mark. In 2020 ...
A record crowd of 84,000 people crammed into Croke Park, all anticipating a high-scoring game. The game was a close and tense affair, with Cork coming from four-points down to win by 1–9 to 1–6. It was a third consecutive All-Ireland title for Cork and a record eighth All-Ireland winners’ medal for Christy Ring.