First event | 1970 |
---|---|
Occur every | year |
Purpose | Athletics event for under-20 athletes of the Balkans |
Website | Official website |
The Balkan Athletics U20 Championships is an annual track and field competition for athletes under-20 years old from the Balkans. Formerly known as the Balkan Athletics Junior Championships, it was first held in 1970 and is organised by Balkan Athletics.[1] It is one of the oldest youth athletics championships, being created in the same year at the European Athletics Junior Championships, though predated by the South American U20 Championships in Athletics.[2][3]
Nations
- Greece (from 1970)
- Romania (from 1970)
- Bulgaria (from 1970)
- Turkey (from 1970)
- Albania (from 1970)
- Slovenia (from 1992)
- Croatia (from 1992)
- North Macedonia (from 1992)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (from 1992)
- Montenegro (from 2006)
- Serbia (from 2006)
- Armenia (from 2013)
- Cyprus (from 2014)
- Slovenia (from 2014)
- Georgia (from 2014)
- Israel (from 2015)
- Kosovo (from 2016)
Former nations
- Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1970-1990)
- Serbia and Montenegro (1992-2005)
Editions
Edition | Year | City | Country | Date | Stage | No. Athletes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1970 | Piraeus | Greece | 25–26 July | Georgios Karaiskakis Stadium | |
2 | 1971 | Piraeus | Greece | 31 July – 1 August | Georgios Karaiskakis Stadium | |
3 | 1972 | Izmir | Turkey | 22–23 July | Halkapinar Arena | |
4 | 1973 | București | Romania | 28–29 July | Stadionul Republicii | |
5 | 1974 | Varna | Bulgaria | 10–11 August | Yuri Gagarin Stadium | |
6 | 1975 | Karlovac | Croatia | 26–27 July | Stadion Branko Čavlović-Čavlek | |
7 | 1976 | Kavala | Greece | 21–22 August | Kavala National Stadium Anthi Karagianni Stadium | |
8 | 1977 | București | Romania | 30–31 July | Stadionul Republicii | |
9 | 1978 | Ankara | Turkey | 1–2 July | 19th May Stadium | |
10 | 1979 | Yambol | Bulgaria | 28–29 September | "Tundzha" Stadium | |
11 | 1980 | Thessaloniki | Greece | 6–7 August | Kaftanzoglio Stadium | |
12 | 1981 | Pleven | Bulgaria | 25–26 July | Stadion Pleven | |
13 | 1982 | Drama | Greece | 3–4 July | Municipal Stadium of Drama | |
14 | 1983 | București | Romania | 30–31 July | Stadionul Republicii | |
15 | 1984 | Maribor | Slovenia | 28–29 July | Athletic Stadium | |
16 | 1985 | Chania | Greece | 27–28 July | Stadium Elena Venizelou | |
17 | 1986 | Izmir | Turkey | 26–27 July | Halkapinar Arena | |
18 | 1987 | Pitești | Romania | 26–27 July | Stadium Nicolae Dobrin | |
19 | 1988 | Alexandroupolis | Greece | 9–10 July | Fotis Kosmas Stadium | |
20 | 1989 | Stara Zagora | Bulgaria | 15–16 July | Beroe Stadium | |
21 | 1990 | Lubljana | Slovenia | 29–30 July | Stadion Žak - Ljubljana | |
22 | 1991 | Thessaloniki | Greece | 27–28 July | Kaftanzoglio Stadium | |
23 | 1992 | Constantinople | Turkey | 15–16 August | Atatürk Olympic Stadium | |
24 | 1993 | Thessaloniki | Greece | 10–11 July | Kaftanzoglio Stadium | |
25 | 1994 | Ankara | Turkey | 2–3 July | 19 Mayıs Stadyumu | |
26 | 1995 | Nis | Serbia | 6–7 July | Čair Stadiumu | |
27 | 1996 | București | Romania | 6–7 July | ||
28 | 1997 | Izmir | Turkey | 12–13 July | Halkapinar Arena | |
29 | 1998 | Constantinople | Turkey | 11–12 July | ||
30 | 1999 | Komotini | Greece | 24–25 July | Ethniko Panthrakiko Stadio | |
31 | 2000 | Constanța | Romania | 16–17 September | Stadionul "Gheorghe Hagi" | |
32 | 2001 | Ankara | Turkey | 15–16 September | 19 Mayıs Stadyumu | |
33 | 2002 | Constantinople | Turkey | 14–15 September | Atatürk Olympic Stadium | |
34 | 2003 | Constanţa | Romania | 13–14 September | Stadionul "Gheorghe Hagi" | |
35 | 2004 | Banja Luka | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 25–26 July | Banja Luka City Stadium | |
36 | 2005 | Katerini | Greece | 24–25 September | Katerini Municipal Stadium | |
37 | 2006 | Tripolis | Greece | 9–10 September | Athletic center of Tripolis | |
38 | 2007 | Kragujevac | Serbia | 8–9 September | Čika Dača Stadium | |
39 | 2008 | Bursa | Turkey | 19–20 July | Bursa Atatürk Stadium | |
40 | 2009 | Schimatari | Greece | 5–6 September | Shimatari Municipal Stadium / 'Evangelos Depastas' | |
41 | 2010 | |||||
42 | 2011 | Edirne | Turkey | 16–17 July | ||
43 | 2012 | Eskişehir | Turkey | 23–24 June | ||
44 | 2013 | Denizli | Turkey | 6–7 July | ||
45 | 2014 | Serres | Greece | 5–6 July | Serres Municipal Stadium | 733 |
46 | 2015 | Pitești | Romania | 4–5 July | Stadium Nicolae Dobrin | |
47 | 2016 | Bolu | Turkey | 2–3 July | Bolu Atatürk Stadium | |
48 | 2017 | Pitești | Romania | 1–2 July | Stadium Nicolae Dobrin | |
49 | 2018 | Bursa | Turkey | 23–24 June | Bursa Atatürk Stadium | |
50 | 2019 | Cluj Napoca | Romania | 2–3 July | Cluj Arena | |
51 | 2020 | Constantinople | Turkey | 12–13 September | Atatürk Olympic Stadium | |
52 | 2021 | Constantinople | Turkey | 12–13 June | Atatürk Olympic Stadium | |
53 | 2022 | Denizli | Turkey | 16–17 July | Turkish Sports Stadium | |
54 | 2023 | Canceled | 1–2 July |
References
- ↑ Results. Balkan Athletics. Retrieved 2019-06-09.
- ↑ South American Junior Championships (Men). GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2019-06-09.
- ↑ European Junior Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2019-06-09.
External links
- Balkan Games results at GBRAthletics
- Balkan Athletics
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