Misplaced Pages

Women's long jump Italian record progression

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.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Women's long jump Italian record progression" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Antonella Capriotti broke the Italian record in 1985, 18 years after the previous one set by Maria Vittoria Trio.
Claudia Testoni (left) broke the record 8 times; Ondina Valla (right), two times.
Fiona May, first over 7 metres and current record-holder

The Italian record progression women's long jump is recognised by the Italian Athletics Federation (FIDAL).

Record progression

  Breaking down barriers   Indoor records
Record Athlete Venue Date Notes
4.25 m Olga Barbieri Italy Rome 20 May 1922
4.49 m Olga Barbieri Italy Este 25 June 1922
4.51 m Maria Piantanida Italy Milan 11 March 1923
4.56 m Maria Piantanida Italy Milan 6 May 1923
4.63 m Olga Barbieri Italy Milan 26 May 1923
4.705 m Emma Ghiringhelli Italy Milan 30 September 1923
4.90 m Luigia Bonfanti Italy Bergamo 30 September 1923
5.05 m Derna Polazzo Italy Bologna 14 October 1928
5.11 m Claudia Testoni Italy Verona 1 October 1933
5.15 m Claudia Testoni Italy Udine 8 October 1933
5.195 m Claudia Testoni United Kingdom London 11 August 1934
5.28 m Claudia Testoni Austria Vienna 23 September 1934
5.28 m Claudia Testoni Hungary Budapest 26 September 1934
5.365 m Ondina Valla Italy Bologna 9 August 1935
5.39 m Ondina Valla Italy Bologna 11 August 1935
5.46 m Claudia Testoni Italy Turin 15 September 1935
5.57 m Claudia Testoni Italy Biella 25 June 1937
5.65 m Claudia Testoni France Paris 8 August 1937
5.66 m Silvana Pierucci Czechoslovakia Zlín 7 August 1949
5.74 m Piera Fassio Italy Turin 12 June 1955
5.80 m Elisabetta Mattana Italy Genoa 10 June 1956
5.83 m Piera Tizzoni Italy Turin 24 May 1959
5.91 m Magalì Vettorazzo Italy Aosta 19 August 1962
6.01 m Magalì Vettorazzo Italy Aosta 19 August 1962
6.01 m Magalì Vettorazzo Italy Asti 30 June 1963
6.08 m Magalì Vettorazzo Italy Trieste 21 July 1963
6.11 m Magalì Vettorazzo Italy Belluno 4 August 1963
6.12 m Maria Vittoria Trio Italy Turin 2 June 1964
6.14 m Maria Vittoria Trio Italy Belluno 24 August 1964
6.26 m Maria Vittoria Trio Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zagreb 20 September 1964
6.26 m Maria Vittoria Trio Italy Turin 2 June 1965
6.27 m Maria Vittoria Trio Brazil Rio de Janeiro 24 September 1965
6.39 m Maria Vittoria Trio Italy Macerata 31 July 1966
6.39 m Maria Vittoria Trio Italy Turin 24 September 1967
6.52 m Antonella Capriotti Italy Formia 4 May 1985
6.56 m Antonella Capriotti Soviet Union Moscow 18 August 1985
6.57 m (i) Antonella Capriotti Italy Florence 21 January 1987
6.65 m (i) Antonella Capriotti Spain Valencia 17 February 1988
6.72 m (i) Antonella Capriotti Italy Florence 24 February 1988
6.58 m Antonella Capriotti Italy San Giovanni Valdarno 21 May 1988
6.62 m Valentina Uccheddu Italy Trento 4 June 1988
6.65 m Antonella Capriotti Italy Brescia 12 June 1988
6.70 m Antonella Capriotti Italy Brescia 12 June 1988
6.79 m Fiona May Italy San Giovanni Valdarno 15 July 1994
6.80 m Valentina Uccheddu Italy Sestrieres 31 July 1994 At
6.95 m Fiona May Italy Sestrieres 31 July 1994 At
6.96 m Fiona May France Villeneuve-d'Ascq 5 June 1995
7.02 m Fiona May United States Atlanta 2 August 1996
7.03 m Fiona May Greece Athens 17 June 1998
7,08 m Fiona May Russia Saint Petersburg 28 June 1998
7.11 m Fiona May Hungary Budapest 22 August 1998

See also

References

  1. Annuario dell'Atletica 2009. FIDAL. 2009. p. 578.
  2. First jump over five metres.
  3. First jump over six metres.
  4. Record broken after the greatest time spent (18 years).
  5. First jump over seven metres.
Category: