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Athletics at the 2005 Jeux de la Francophonie

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Athletics at the V Francophonie Games
Dates11–16 December
Host cityNiamey, Niger Niger
VenueStade Général Seyni Kountché
Events43
Participation362 athletes from
36 nations
Records set2 Games records


At the 2005 Jeux de la Francophonie, the athletics events were held at the Stade Général Seyni Kountché in Niamey, Niger, from 11–16 December 2005. A total of 43 events were contested, of which 23 by male and 20 by female athletes. France sent the largest squad and topped the medal table with 19 gold medals and 39 medals in total. Morocco was the next most successful nation, having won 11 golds and 31 medals altogether. This was large as a result of their middle- and long-distance running dominance which saw them take all three medals in four events, as well as three separate Moroccan 1–2 finishes. Canada and the Ivory Coast were third and fourth in the medal tally. Twenty of the 37 nations competing won a medal, although hosts Niger went empty-handed in the athletics competition.

The performances were down in comparison to the 2001 edition in Ottawa, which had benefited from being held a few weeks before the 2001 World Championships in Athletics, also in Canada that year. Two Games records were broken over the course of the competition, but a number of African athletes broke their national record – home athletes improved six different Nigerien records.[1]

Among the prominent medallists were Moroccans Yassine Bensghir and Seltana Aït Hammou, who completed 800/1500 metres doubles on the men's and women's sides respectively. Their compatriot Zhor El Kamch won both the women's 5000 metres and 10,000 metres while Tarik Bougtaïb took a gold and a silver in the horizontal jumps. Yves Niaré of France was dominant in the throws, winning the shot put and discus throw events. Chad's efforts were led by Kaltouma Nadjina who won two golds for her 200 metres and 400 metres performances – her nation's only medals of the entire multi-sport event that year.

Records

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Name Event Country Record Type
Rachid Kisri Men's marathon  Morocco 2:17:03 GR
Zhor El Kamch Women's 10,000 metres  Morocco 33:41.28 GR
Key:WR — World record  • AR — Area record  • GR — Games record  • NR — National record

Medal summary

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Men

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Idrissa Sanou (BUR) 10.48  Éric Pacôme N'Dri (CIV) 10.52  Amr Ibrahim Mostafa Seoud (EGY) 10.55
200 metres  Ben Youssef Meité (CIV) 20.99  Marius Loua (CIV) 21.01  Oumar Loum (SEN) 21.12
400 metres  Mathieu Gnanligo (BEN) 46.43  Fernando Augustin (MRI) 46.52  Ismael Daif (MAR) 47.13
800 metres  Yassine Bensghir (MAR) 1:47.11  Assane Diallo (SEN) 1:49.10  Abdelkrim Khoudri (MAR) 1:49.52
1500 metres  Yassine Bensghir (MAR) 3:46.58  Youssef Baba (MAR) 3:46.84  Zakaria Mazouzi (MAR) 3:47.84
5000 metres  Adil Kaouch (MAR) 14:16.23  Abdelhalim Zahraoui (MAR) 14:16.39  Dieudonné Disi (RWA) 14:16.41
10,000 metres  Dieudonné Disi (RWA) 29:17.11  Abderrahim Goumri (MAR) 29:18.05  Ahmed Baday (MAR) 29:18.06
110 metres hurdles  Cédric Lavanne (FRA) 13.68  Jared MacLeod (CAN) 13.70  Joseph-Berlioz Randriamihaja (MAD) 14.08
400 metres hurdles  Ibou Faye (SEN) 50.67  Ibrahima Maïga (MLI) 50.71  Barnabé Bationo (BUR) 51.04
3000 metres steeplechase  Hamid Ezzine (MAR) 8:52.73  Abderrahman Mouatassim (MAR) 9:01.03  Nordine Gezzar (FRA) 9:08.33
4×100 metres relay  Ivory Coast (CIV)
Jean-Ukruch Kouassi Tiecura
Marius Loua
Ben Youssef Meité
Éric Pacôme N'Dri
39.79  France (FRA)
Yannick Urbino
Thierry Lubin
Christophe Cheval
Jérôme Éyana
40.09  Mauritius (MRI)
Arnaud Casquette
Fernando Augustin
Henrico Louis
Ommana Kowlessur
40.28
4×400 metres relay  Morocco (MAR)
Younes Frhani
Abdelkrim Khoudri
Younés Belkaifa
Ismael Daif
3:06.87  Mauritius (MRI)
Jean-Francois Degrasse
Ommana Kowlessur
Anton Vieillesse
Fernando Augustin
3:07.46  Senegal (SEN)
El Hadji Sethe Mbow
Jacques Sambou
Ibou Faye
Cheikh Drame
3:11.37
Marathon  Rachid Kisri (MAR) 2:17:03 GR  Zäid Laâroussi (MAR) 2:17:18  Abderrahime Bouramdane (MAR) 2:18:46
20 km walk  Denis Langlois (FRA) 1:30:47  David Boulanger (FRA) 1:31:16  Hassanine Sebei (TUN) 1:32:36
High jump  Mustapha Raifak (FRA) 2.24 m  Kwaku Boateng (CAN)
 Eduard Sebestyén (ROU)
2.20 m Not awarded
Pole vault  Damiel Dossévi (FRA) 5.40 m  Pierre-Charles Peuf (FRA) 5.30 m  Robert Hanson (CAN) 5.20 m
Long jump  Salim Sdiri (FRA) 7.98 m  Tarik Bougtaïb (MAR) 7.78 m (w)†  Arnaud Casquette (MRI) 7.76 m (w)
(wind: 2.4 m/s)
Triple jump  Tarik Bougtaïb (MAR) 16.91 m  Yahya Berrabah (MAR) 16.44 m  Daniel Donovici (ROU) 16.11 m
Shot put  Yves Niaré (FRA) 18.64 m  Stéphane Szuster (FRA) 17.19 m  Badri Obeid (LIB) 15.49 m
Discus throw  Yves Niaré (FRA) 54.15 m  Bertrand Vili (FRA) 54.05 m  Eric Forshaw (CAN) 52.80 m
Hammer throw  James Steacy (CAN) 71.90 m  Christophe Épalle (FRA) 71.41 m  Cosmin Sorescu (ROU) 67.43 m
Javelin throw  David Brisseault (FRA) 71.64 m  Vitoli Tipotio (FRA) 67.79 m  Fabio Ramsamy (MRI) 65.54 m
Decathlon  Romain Barras (FRA) 8046 pts  Nadir El Fassi (FRA) 7307 pts  Patrick Russel (CAN) 7097 pts
  • † = Wind speed was not recorded for this jump

Women

[edit]
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Véronique Mang (FRA) 11.40  Amandine Allou Affoue (CIV) 11.67  Fabienne Beret-Martinel (FRA) 11.72
200 metres  Kaltouma Nadjina (CHA) 22.92  Aurélie Kamga (FRA) 23.72  Phara Anacharsis (FRA) 23.75
400 metres  Kaltouma Nadjina (CHA) 52.12  Fatou Bintou Fall (SEN) 52.57  Solen Désert (FRA) 53.57
800 metres  Seltana Aït Hammou (MAR) 2:04.63  Mihaela Neacșu (ROU) 2:05.30  Saïda El Mehdi (MAR) 2:06.49
1500 metres  Seltana Aït Hammou (MAR) 4:34.32  Saïda El Mehdi (MAR) 4:34.46  Mariem Alaoui Selsouli (MAR) 4:35.60
5000 metres  Zhor El Kamch (MAR) 16:19.71  Bouchra Chaâbi (MAR) 16:21.54  Christine Bardelle (FRA) 16:38.02
10,000 metres  Zhor El Kamch (MAR) 33:41.28 GR  Malika Asahssah (MAR) 34:41.23  Fatima Ayachi (MAR) 34:59.34
100 metres hurdles  Joanna Bujak (FRA) 13.47  Carole Kaboud Mebam (CMR) 13.58  Elisabeth Davin (BEL) 13.65
400 metres hurdles  Sylvanie Morandais (FRA) 58.27  Aïssata Soulama (BUR) 58.40  Aurore Kassambara (FRA) 59.45
4×100 metres relay  France (FRA)
Véronique Mang
Fabienn Beret-Martinel
Aurélie Kamga
Carima Louami
44.61  Ivory Coast (CIV)
Estelle Brou
Makari Sanganoko
Louise Ayétotché
Amandine Allou Affoue
45.36  Burkina Faso (BUR)
Mariette Mien
Sarah Tondé
Kadidiatou Traoré
Béatrice Kamboulé
45.99 NR
4×400 metres relay  France (FRA)
Phara Anacharsis
Aurelie Kamga
Aurore Kassambara
Sylvanie Morandais
3:37.91  Canada (CAN)
Lauren Seibel
Tasha Monroe
Melina Thibodeau
Esther Akinsulie
3:40.96  Morocco (MAR)
Saïda El Mehdi
Halima Hachlaf
Seltana Aït Hammou
Hanane Skhyi
3:42.48
Marathon  Céline Cormerais (FRA)
 Eléna Fétizon (FRA)
2:45:28 Not awarded  Epiphanie Nyirabaramé (RWA) 2:50:13
High jump  Whitney Evans (CAN) 1.83 m  Andreea Ispan (ROU) 1.83 m  Beatrice Lundmark (SUI) 1.79 m
Pole vault  Kelsie Hendry (CAN) 4.15 m  Syrine Balti (TUN) 4.05 m  Amélie Delzenne (FRA) 3.95 m
Long jump  Elise Vesanes (FRA) 6.42 m  Céline Laporte (SEY) 6.24 m  Alina Militaru (ROU) 6.22 m
Triple jump  Mariette Mien (BUR) 13.23 m  Latifa Ezziraoui (MAR) 13.18 m  Béatrice Kamboulé (BUR) 13.05 m
Shot put  Jessica Cérival (FRA) 16.32 m  Elena Hila (ROU) 15.93 m  Amel Ben Khaled (TUN) 14.81 m
Discus throw  Ileana Brânduşoiu (ROU) 52.28 m  Agnès Teppe (FRA) 49.52 m  Suzanne Kragbé (CIV) 48.72 m
Hammer throw  Stéphanie Falzon (FRA) 65.12 m  Amélie Perrin (FRA) 64.02 m  Mihaela Melinte (ROM) 61.96 m
Javelin throw  Lindy Leveau (SEY) 53.92 m  Sephora Bissoly (FRA) 52.71 m  Karine Hervieu (FRA) 51.34 m

Medal table

[edit]
Romain Barras broke the 8000-point barrier in the decathlon to become one of 19 French victors.
Salim Sdiri of France won the long jump
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 France1912839
2 Morocco1111931
3 Canada3339
4 Ivory Coast2417
5 Burkina Faso2136
6 Chad2002
7 Romania1449
8 Senegal1225
9 Seychelles1102
10 Rwanda1023
11 Benin1001
12 Mauritius0235
13 Tunisia0123
14 Cameroon0101
 Mali0101
16 Belgium0011
 Egypt0011
 Lebanon0011
 Madagascar0011
 Switzerland0011
Totals (20 entries)444342129
  • Note: Arnaud Casquette of Mauritius won long jump and relay bronze medals, but then tested positive for cannabis and was given a six-month ban. However, his medals were not stripped.[2]

Participating nations

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References

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  1. ^ Fuchs, Carole (2005-12-17). Francophone Games – Final Day. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-08-01.
  2. ^ News Décember 2005. Africa Athlé. Retrieved on 2010-08-01.
Results
Daily reports
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