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1910 AAA Championships

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1910 AAA Championships
Dates2 July 1910
Host cityLondon, England
VenueStamford Bridge (stadium)
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
Events16
1909
1911


The 1910 AAA Championships was the 1910 edition of the annual outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA). It was held on Saturday 2 July 1910 at the Stamford Bridge (stadium) in London, England.[1][2]

The Championships consisted of 16 events.

Results

[edit]
Ernest Webb successfully defended both of his walk titles
Paul Lagarde runner-up in the Pole jump

[3]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 yards United States Frederick L. Ramsdell 10.4 South Africa Reginald Walker 1 ft William Applegarth 2 yd
220 yards United States Frederick L. Ramsdell 22.4 Ernest Haley inches John Wells 3 yd
440 yards Lionel Reed 51.0 Edward Ryle 2 ft Wales David Jacobs 3 yd
880 yards Leinster James Hill 2:01.4 Eddie Owen 1½ yd Scotland Dougles McNicol 1 yd
1 mile Emil Voigt 4:26.2 Eddie Owen 3 yd Scotland Douglas McNicol 5 yd
4 miles Albert Hill 20:00.6 William Scott 20:03.4 Whit Norgrove 20:35.4
10 miles Leinster Francis O'Neill 52:41.4 William Scott 52:41.8 Frank Reay 52:58.0
steeplechase Joseph English 11:11.6 Reginald Noakes 5-6 yd Sydney Frost
120yd hurdles Gerard Anderson 16.0 Alfred Healey inches Kenneth Powell 1 yd
2 miles walk Ernest Webb 13:54.4 Harold Ross 13:58.6 R. Steels 14:21.0
7 miles walk Ernest Webb 51:37.0 Alfred Pateman 54:17.4 Will Ovens 54:21.0
high jump Benjamin Howard Baker 1.753 Clive Taylor 1.727 only 2 competitors
pole jump Hungary Kálmán Szathmáry 3.54 France Paul Lagarde 3.20 Joseph Young 3.15
long jump Leinster Percy Kirwan 6.72 Edward Paget-Tomlinson 6.52 Hungary Kálmán Szathmáry 6.36
shot put Leinster Denis Horgan 13.03 Henry Alan Leeke 11.20 Scotland Wilfred Bleaden 10.49
hammer throw Alf Flaxman 35.80 Henry Alan Leeke 33.97 only 2 competitors

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Athletics". Evening Star. 3 July 1910. Retrieved 11 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  2. ^ "AAA Championships". The Scotsman. 4 July 1910. Retrieved 11 July 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "AAA, WAAA and National Championships Medallists". National Union of Track Statisticians. Retrieved 11 July 2024.