Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "National members of the Confederation of African Athletics" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
It organises the African Championships in Athletics and other continental competitions. The body's current president is Hamad Kalkaba Malboum of Cameroon. The organization was founded on 17 January 1973. Before 1992, the organization was known as the Confederation of African Amateur Athletics and sometimes as the African Amateur Athletics ...
The African Championships in Athletics is a continental athletics event organized by the Confederation of African Athletics (CAA), the continental association for the sport in Africa. Since its inaugural edition in 1979 it was at first organised intermittently with nine editions held in fourteen years until 1993.
The African Championships in Athletics is a quadrennial event which began in 1979. Confederation of African Athletics accepts only athletes who are representing one of the organisation's African member states and the body recognises records set at editions of the African Athletics Championships.
Montreal, Quebec, Canada Sprint medley relay (2,2,4,8) 3:19.03 Canada Tremaine Harris (200 m) Joshue Cunningham (200 m) Austin Cole (400 m) Mohano Khelaf (800 m) 28 April 2018 Penn Relays: Philadelphia, United States [53] 4 × 800 m relay: 7:22.83 Canada Andrew Heaney Matt Lincoln Andrew Maloney Kyle Smith: 21 June 2007 Toronto, Ontario, Canada ...
Athletics Canada or AC (French: Athlétisme Canada) is the national governing body for athletics in Canada, which includes track and field, cross-country running, road running, and race walking. [1] Based in Ottawa, Ontario, Athletics Canada is a non-profit organization. The organization is led by an elected board of directors, with a head ...
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 2000: Joseph-Berlioz Randriamihaja Madagascar: 2002: Shaun Bownes South Africa 2004: Todd Matthews Jouda Sudan: 2006: Aymen Ben Ahmed Tunisia: 2008: Hennie Kotze South Africa 2010: Othman Hadj Lazib Algeria: 2012: Lehann Fourie South Africa 2012: Mark Kiptoo Kenya: 2014: Tyron Akins Nigeria: 2016: Antonio Alkana South Africa 2018 ...