Dragán Ivanov
Hungarian triple jumper
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | Hungarian |
Born | (1942-01-27) 27 January 1942 (age 82) |
Sport | |
Sport | Athletics |
Event | Triple jump |
Dragán Ivanov (born 27 January 1942) is a Hungarian athlete. He competed in the men's triple jump at the 1968 Summer Olympics.[1]
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Dragán Ivanov Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
- v
- t
- e
New Zealand national champions in men's triple jump
- 1911: Len McKay
- 1912: Fred Hazlett
- 1913: Len McKay
- 1914: Fred Hazlett
- 1915: Ernest Sutherland
- 1916–1919: not held
- 1920: Ernest Sutherland
- 1921–1923: Gordon Plummer
- 1924–1925: Walter Wilton
- 1926–1928: Jack Shirley
- 1929: Bengt Rydbeck
- 1930–1931: George Sullivan
- 1932–1933: Alister Cameron
- 1934–1935: Harold Brainsby
- 1936: Alister Cameron
- 1937: Kenshi Togami (JPN)
- 1938: Alister Cameron
- 1939: Harry Wilkins
- 1940: Campion Alexander Calvert
- 1941–1944: not held
- 1945: C.J. Blewett
- 1946: Keith Forsythe
- 1947: C.J. Blewett
- 1948: Keith Forsythe
- 1949: Bevin Hough
- 1950–1951: Colin Kay
- 1952–1953: Patrick Sharon
- 1954: R. Webb
- 1955: M. Pearce
- 1956: R. Webb
- 1957–1971: Dave Norris
- 1972–1973: Ken Simpson
- 1974–1975: Dave Norris
- 1976: Dragán Ivanov
- 1977: Dave Norris
- 1978–1981: Phil Wood
- 1982: Tuariki Delamere
- 1984: Kevin Todd
- 1985: Peter Beames (AUS)
- 1986: Evan Peterson
- 1987: Mike Makin (GBR)
- 1988: Alan Whitton
- 1989–1990: Nigel Avery
- 1991: Alan Whitton
- 1992: Karl Schierling
- 1993: Nigel Park
- 1994: Jari Lämsä (FIN)
- 1995: Scott Newman
- 1996: Mark Edmond
- 1997: Scott Newman
- 1998: Nigel Park
- 1999: Khamal Ganley
- 2000–2002: Scott Clements
- 2003: Tim Hawkes
- 2004: Tom Davie
- 2005: Tim Hawkes
- 2006: Scott Clements
- 2007: Charles Nicolson
- 2008: Nigel Park
- 2009–2010: Brent Newdick
- 2011–2012: Todd Swanson
- 2013–2015: Phillip Wyatt
- 2016–2019: Ebuka Okpala
- 2020: Andrew Allan
- 2021–2022: Scott Thomson
- 2023: Ebuka Okpala
- 2024: Ethan Olivier
This biographical article relating to Hungarian athletics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e