Misplaced Pages

World Challenge

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The IAAF Grand Prix was an annual, global circuit of one-day outdoor track and field competitions organized by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). It was created in 1985 as the IAAF's first seasonal track and field circuit and lasted until 2009. Athletes scored points based on their performances on the circuit and the top athletes were invited to the annual IAAF Grand Prix Final .

#997002

17-678: World Challenge may refer to: IAAF World Challenge Meetings World Challenge Expeditions , an outdoor education company World Challenge (golf) , an offseason golf tournament GT World Challenge , Continental auto racing series SWAT World Challenge , annual competition of law enforcement SWAT teams The World Challenge (TV series) , 1986 documentary television series World Club Challenge , an annual rugby league competition World Football Challenge , an exhibitional international club association football competition featuring football clubs from Europe and North America, which has been held since

34-633: A Golden Four group of top-level European meetings within the series. In response, the IAAF Grand Prix series was again expanded with the foundation of the IAAF Golden League in 1998, which split out the Golden Four meetings (plus the Herculis and Golden Gala meets) as a new top tier within the IAAF Grand Prix circuit. After this point, the IAAF Grand Prix referred to multiple concepts in that it

51-598: The IAAF Golden League , the IAAF Super Grand Prix , IAAF Grand Prix and IAAF Grand Prix II . IAAF/Area Permit Meetings were also attached to the series, allowing athletes to score additional points in certain events at lower level meetings. In 2003 the series concept was renamed at the IAAF World Outdoor Meetings and the Grand Prix was reduced to a single tier of competitions within that tour. The series

68-1424: The IAAF Grand Prix and IAAF Super Grand Prix series to form the second tier of international one-day meetings, after the IAAF Diamond League . Unlike the Diamond League, the IAAF World Challenge comprised stand-alone meetings, and no overall winners are crowned. The series was made defunct at the end of 2019 and was replaced by the World Athletics Continental Tour , which includes series winners for non-Diamond League events. Editions [ edit ] Edition Year Start date End date Meets Ref. 1 2010 4 March 1 September 13 2 2011 3 March 13 September 14 3 2012 3 March 9 September 14 4 2013 6 April 8 September 15 5 2014 22 March 7 September 13 6 2015 21 March 13 September 13 7 2016 5 March 6 September 12 8 2017 20 May 29 August 9 9 2018 19 May 4 September 9 10 2019 28 April 3 September 9 The Rieti Meeting

85-528: The IAAF Grand Prix Final , which athletes gained qualification to based on their performances at the series' meetings. The competing athletes at the final earned additional points for their performances there, and the series winner of each event was the athlete with the highest score (as opposed to the Grand Prix Final event winner). In 1993 the Grand Prix format was amended so that the event winner

102-599: The IAAF World Outdoor Meetings brand superseded the IAAF Grand Prix to the umbrella series concept and Grand Prix levels I and II continued within that series. In 2006, the IAAF World Athletics Tour was formed to replace the World Outdoor Meetings and at this time the IAAF Grand Prix II tier was dropped in favour of an Area Permit Meeting structure. The IAAF Grand Prix was made defunct along with

119-4609: The Wayback Machine (archived 2019-11-09) v t e IAAF World Challenge Seasons 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 [REDACTED] Meetings Beijing Belém/Rio Berlin Daegu Dakar Hengelo Kawasaki/Tokyo Kingston Madrid Melbourne Moscow Nanjing Osaka Ostrava Ponce Rabat Rieti Turku Zagreb Zhukovsky v t e Defunct athletics competitions World IAAF Continental Cup IAAF World Road Relay Championships IAAF World Women's Road Race Championships IAAF World U18 Championships World Masters Non-Stadia Championships International Cross Country Championships Goodwill Games Women's World Games World Festival of Youth and Students IAAF World Marathon Cup Commonwealth Mountain and Ultra Distance Running Championships Pacific Conference Games Pacific Ocean Games Regional Africa African Championships Half Marathon Marathon Mountain Running Race Walking African Zone VI Championships Afro-Asian Games Central African Games East Africa Athletics Half Marathon East and Central African Championships Maghreb Championships North Africa Athletics Combined Events and Race Walking West Africa Athletics Cross Country West African Games West and North African Championships Asia Afro-Asian Games Asian University Championships East Asian Games Far Eastern Championship Games West Asian Games Europe Baltic Indoor Baltic Sea Games Europe Cup Indoor Cup Mediterranean Athletics Championships Nordic Indoor Combined Events Indoor Race Walking Junior Race Walking Marathon Women's Cup Americas British West Indies Championships Central American and Caribbean Cross Country Junior Athletics North America 5K Men's Marathon Relay South American University Championships Oceania Australasian Championships South Pacific Championships National Czechoslovakia East Germany Outdoor Indoor Soviet Union Outdoor Indoor Spartakiad United Kingdom AAC Outdoor AAA Outdoor AAA Indoor WAAA Outdoor UK Outdoor West Germany Outdoor Indoor USA–USSR Track and Field Dual Meet Series Yugoslavia Cross Country Track and field Seasonal Golden Events Golden Four Grand Prix Grand Prix II Super Grand Prix Final World Athletics Tour Final Golden League World Challenge Indoor Permit Meetings World Cross Challenge Cross Country Permit Meetings Race Walking Challenge Final Hammer Throw Challenge Races Avon International Marathon Mezzalama Skyrace Sapporo Half Marathon The Greatest Race on Earth Yokohama International Women's Ekiden Meetings Adidas Grand Prix Colorful Daegu Championships Meeting Helsinki Grand Prix Malmö Games Meeting Lille-Métropole Meeting Nikaïa Rieti Meeting U.S. Open Track and Field Vardinoyiannia Weltklasse in Köln Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IAAF_World_Challenge&oldid=1236445786 " Categories : IAAF World Challenge Recurring sporting events established in 2010 Recurring sporting events disestablished in 2019 Annual athletics series World Athletics competitions Defunct athletics competitions Hidden category: Webarchive template wayback links IAAF Grand Prix The IAAF Grand Prix expanded over its lifetime to incorporate

136-473: The World Athletics Tour in 2010, as both were replaced by the IAAF Diamond League and IAAF World Challenge series. The IAAF Grand Prix calendar was subject to change during its lifetime, with the number of meetings, the constituent meetings, the categorisation of meetings, and the duration of the series all regularly changing from year to year. Athletes received points based on their performances at

153-555: The 💕 (Redirected from IAAF World Challenge Meetings ) IAAF World Challenge [REDACTED] Sport Track and field Founded 2010 Ceased 2019 Continent global Official website IAAF World Challenge The IAAF World Challenge was an annual, global circuit of one-day track and field competitions organized by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). First held in 2010, it replaced

170-401: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=World_Challenge&oldid=1249629354 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages IAAF World Challenge Meetings From Misplaced Pages,

187-568: The meetings on the circuit, with more points being given at the more prestigious and competitive competitions. From 2006 to 2009, series points could also be scored in certain events at Area Permit Meeting qualifiers (APM-Qs), although the meetings themselves were not considered a formal part of the meeting series. A total of seven meeting categories existed over the lifetime of the circuit: Key:    As part of IAAF World Athletics Tour    As part of IAAF World Outdoor Meetings In addition to event-level winners decided after

SECTION 10

#1732851566998

204-486: The summer of 2009. See also [ edit ] [REDACTED] Search for "world challenge"  or "world challenges" on Misplaced Pages. All pages with titles beginning with World Challenge All pages with titles containing World Challenge Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title World Challenge . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

221-548: The world's top athletes to encourage seasonal engagement with the sport outside of the Olympic cycle. The creation of the IAAF Grand Prix circuit came two years after the first World Championships in Athletics in 1983 , highlighting the sports governing body 's pivot to a more direct role in organising athletics competitions. From 1985 to 1992 the series featured Grand Prix Meetings and IAAF Permit Meetings. The series culminated in

238-545: Was again folded into the IAAF World Athletics Tour upon its creation in 2006, before being rendered defunct by the introduction of the IAAF Diamond League and IAAF World Challenge in 2010. Created in 1985, the IAAF Grand Prix was the first global series of outdoor invitational track and field meetings organised by the IAAF. It followed on from the IAAF Golden Events (1978–82), where the IAAF helped finance meetings between

255-568: Was both an annual series of track and field meetings incorporating four tiers (the IAAF Golden League , IAAF Grand Prix, IAAF Grand Prix II and Area Permit Meetings) as well as a term to refer to the second and third tiers of that series. In 2003, an IAAF Super Grand Prix level was added to the circuit, the IAAF Permit Meeting tier was dropped, and the Grand Prix Final was replaced with the IAAF World Athletics Final . In 2003

272-9724: Was included in the original series schedule in 2016, but was later cancelled Meetings [ edit ] Meeting City Country 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Years Golden Spike Ostrava Ostrava Czech Republic X X X X X X X X X X 10 Fanny Blankers-Koen Games Hengelo Netherlands X X X X X X X X X X 10 ISTAF Berlin Berlin Germany X X X X X X X X X X 10 Hanžeković Memorial Zagreb Croatia X X X X X X X X X X 10 Meeting de Atletismo Madrid Madrid Spain X X X X X X X X X — 9 Grande Premio Brasil Caixa de Atletismo Belém Brazil X X X X X — X X X X 9 Golden Grand Prix Kawasaki Japan — X X X X X X X X X 9 Jamaica International Invitational Kingston Jamaica — X X X X X X X X X 9 Rieti Meeting Rieti Italy X X X X X X X — — — 7 Melbourne Track Classic Melbourne Australia X X X X X X X — — — 7 Meeting de Rabat Rabat Morocco X X X X X X — — — — 6 Ponce Grand Prix de Atletismo Ponce Puerto Rico — — X X X X — — — — 6 IAAF World Challenge Dakar Dakar Senegal X X — X — X X — — — 5 IAAF World Challenge Beijing Beijing China — — — X X X X — — — 4 Paavo Nurmi Games Turku Finland — — — — — — — X X X 3 Colorful Daegu Championships Meeting Daegu South Korea X X X — — — — — — — 3 Moscow Challenge Moscow Russia — — X X — — — — — — 2 Brothers Znamensky Memorial Zhukovsky Russia X X — — — — — — — — 2 Osaka Grand Prix Osaka Japan X — — — — — — — — — 1 Nanjing World Challenge Nanjing China — — — — — — — — — X 1 Series records [ edit ] Men [ edit ] Event Record Name Date Place Ref. 100 m 9.78 (+0.9 m/s) [REDACTED]   Nesta Carter   ( JAM ) 2010 Rieti 200 m 19.77 (+0.0 m/s) [REDACTED]   Isaac Makwala   ( BOT ) 2017 Madrid 300 m 30.81 [REDACTED]   Wayde van Niekerk   ( RSA ) 2017 Ostrava 400 m 44.16 [REDACTED]   LaShawn Merritt   ( USA ) 2014 Ostrava 800 m 1:41.01 [REDACTED]   David Rudisha   ( KEN ) 2010 Rieti 1500 m 3:29.90 [REDACTED]   Nixon Chepseba   ( KEN ) 2012 Hengelo Mile 3:56.95 [REDACTED]   Charlie Grice   ( GBR ) 20 June 2019 Ostrava 3000 m 7:28.70 [REDACTED]   Tariku Bekele   ( ETH ) 2010 Rieti 5000 m 12:57.56 [REDACTED]   Telahun Haile Bekele   ( ETH ) 2019 Hengelo 110 m hurdles 12.97 (+1.2 m/s) [REDACTED]   Aries Merritt   ( USA ) 2012 Berlin 400 m hurdles 47.66 [REDACTED]   L. J. van Zyl   ( RSA ) 2011 Ostrava 3000 m steeplechase 8:02.55 [REDACTED]   Paul Kipsiele Koech   ( KEN ) 2011 Ostrava High jump 2.40 m [REDACTED]   Bohdan Bondarenko   ( UKR ) 2014 Tokyo Pole vault 5.92 m [REDACTED]   Renaud Lavillenie   ( FRA ) 2013 Ostrava Long jump 8.66 m (+1.0 m/s) [REDACTED]   Juan Miguel Echevarría   ( CUB ) 13 June 2018 Ostrava Triple jump 17.57 m (-1.1 m/s) [REDACTED]   Christian Taylor   ( USA ) 2017 Ostrava Shot put 22.28 m [REDACTED]   Ryan Crouser   ( USA ) 2016 Zagreb Discus throw 71.84 m [REDACTED]   Piotr Małachowski   ( POL ) 2013 Hengelo Hammer throw 83.44 m [REDACTED]   Paweł Fajdek   ( POL ) 2017 Ostrava Javelin throw 91.28 m [REDACTED]   Thomas Röhler   ( GER ) 2016 Turku Women [ edit ] Event Record Name Date Place Ref. 100 m 10.76 (+1.1 m/s) [REDACTED]   Veronica Campbell-Brown   ( JAM ) 2011 Ostrava 200 m 22.02 (-0.3 m/s) [REDACTED]   Dafne Schippers   ( NED ) 2016 Hengelo 300 m 34.41 [REDACTED]   Shaunae Miller-Uibo   ( BAH ) 2019 Ostrava 400 m 49.95 [REDACTED]   Sanya Richards-Ross   ( USA ) 2015 Kingston 800 m 1:55.68 [REDACTED]   Caster Semenya   ( RSA ) 2016 Berlin 1500 m 3:56.14 [REDACTED]   Sifan Hassan   ( NED ) 2017 Hengelo Mile 4:22.45 [REDACTED]   Marta Pen   ( POR ) 2018 Berlin 3000 m 8:22.22 [REDACTED]   Almaz Ayana   ( ETH ) 2015 Rabat 5000 m 14:37.22 [REDACTED]   Margaret Chelimo Kipkemboi   ( KEN ) 9 June 2019 Hengelo 100 m hurdles 12.39 (+2.0 m/s) [REDACTED]   Jasmin Stowers   ( USA ) 2015 Kingston 400 m hurdles 53.32 [REDACTED]   Zuzana Hejnová   ( CZE ) 2013 Ostrava 2000 m steeplechase 5:52.80 [REDACTED]   Gesa-Felicitas Krause   ( GER ) 1 September 2019 Berlin 3000 m steeplechase 9:03.70 [REDACTED]   Norah Jeruto   ( KEN ) 2017 Berlin High jump 2.06 m [REDACTED]   Mariya Lasitskene   ( RUS ) 20 June 2019 Ostrava Pole vault 4.90 m [REDACTED]   Yarisley Silva   ( CUB ) 2013 Hengelo Long jump 6.96 m (+1.1 m/s) [REDACTED]   Ivana Španović   ( SRB ) 2016 Zagreb Triple jump 15.02 m (-0.4 m/s) [REDACTED]   Yulimar Rojas   ( VEN ) 2016 Madrid Shot put 20.88 m [REDACTED]   Valerie Adams   ( NZL ) 2013 Ostrava Discus throw 70.83 m [REDACTED]   Sandra Perković   ( CRO ) 2017 Zagreb Hammer throw 79.72 m [REDACTED]   Anita Włodarczyk   ( POL ) 2017 Ostrava Javelin throw 70.53 m [REDACTED]   Mariya Abakumova   ( RUS ) 2013 Berlin References [ edit ] ^ IAAF Diamond League reaches agreement on meetings for 2020 season . IAAF (2019-10-21). Retrieved 2019-10-23. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2010 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2011 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2012 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2013 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2014 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2015 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2016 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2017 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2018 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ IAAF World Challenge Calendar 2019 . IAAF. Retrieved 2019-09-01. ^ Bob Ramsak (20 June 2019). "Miller-Uibo breaks 300m world best, Lasitskene tops 2.06m and Kirt joins 90-metre club in Ostrava" . IAAF . Retrieved 7 September 2019 . ^ "Long Jump Results" (PDF) . zlatatretra.cz . 13 June 2018 . Retrieved 21 June 2018 . ^ Eric Roeske (10 June 2019). "Victories for Kendricks, Kipkemboi and Bekele in Hengelo" . IAAF . Retrieved 7 September 2019 . ^ "Krause smashes 2000m steeplechase world best in Berlin" . IAAF . 1 September 2019 . Retrieved 8 September 2019 . ^ Bob Ramsak (20 June 2019). "Miller-Uibo breaks 300m world best, Lasitskene tops 2.06m and Kirt joins 90-metre club in Ostrava" . IAAF . Retrieved 7 September 2019 . External links [ edit ] IAAF World Challenge website at

289-512: Was the first place athlete at the Final competitions, rather than the seasonal points leader, and this format continued until the last Grand Prix Final in 2002 . In 1993 the IAAF Council approved a new tier of IAAF Grand Prix II meetings, which Permit-level meetings could apply for after two years. That same year four of the Grand Prix meetings ( Oslo , Zurich , Brussels and Berlin ) organised

#997002