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Oudtshoorn, South Africa Pole vault: 6.03 m Okkert Brits: 18 August 1995 Cologne, Germany Long jump: 8.65 m A (+1.3 m/s) Luvo Manyonga: 22 April 2017 South African Championships Potchefstroom, South Africa [44] Triple jump: 17.35 m (+0.2 m/s) Godfrey Mokoena: 14 September 2014 IAAF Continental Cup: Marrakech, Morocco [45] Shot put: 21.97 m ...
South Africa 5 March 2005 Oudtshoorn, South Africa Pole vault: 6.03 m Okkert Brits South Africa 18 August 1995 Cologne, Germany Long jump: 8.65 m A (+1.3 m/s) Luvo Manyonga South Africa 22 April 2017 South African Championships Potchefstroom, South Africa [49] Triple jump: 17.82 m (+0.2 m/s) [e] Hugues Fabrice Zango Burkina Faso 6 July 2021
South Africa 15 September 1999 1999 Games: Johannesburg, South Africa Pole vault: 4.35 m Miré Reinstorf South Africa 19 March 2024 2023 Games: Accra, Ghana [23] Long jump: 6.79 m Janice Josephs South Africa 21 July 2007 2007 Games: Algiers, Algeria [24] Triple jump: 14.70 m A: Françoise Mbango Etone Cameroon: 18 September 1999 1999 Games
Athletics South Africa is the national governing body for the sport of athletics (including track and field, cross country, road running and racewalking) in South Africa, recognised by the IAAF, [3] and also a member of Confederation of African Athletics. [4] The association is based in Johannesburg.
Athletics South Africa; R. List of South African records in athletics This page was last edited on 25 March 2013, at 22:53 (UTC). Text ...
Together with Jopie van Oudtshoorn, Hendrick Mokganyetsi and Adriaan Botha he also held the South African record in the 4 × 400 metres relay with 3:00.20 minutes, achieved at the 1999 World Championships in Seville. In those World Championships, he ran the fastest split ever recorded by a South African man, with 43.78s, helping his team win ...
National records in athletics are the marks achieved by a nation's best athlete or athletes in a particular athletics event. These records are ratified by the respective national athletics governing body. A national record may also be the respective continental record (also called "area record" (AR)), or even the world record (WR) in that event.
The competition was organised and attended only by White South Africans (mostly of Dutch and British heritage). An open championship was established in 1974, including all races and international athletes. The International Amateur Athletic Association (IAAF) banned South Africa from international athletics in 1976 for its apartheid policy. As ...