2004 AAA Championships

2004 AAA Championships
Dates10–11 July
Host cityManchester, England
VenueManchester Regional Arena
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor
2003
2005


The 2004 AAA Championships was an outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA), held from 10 to 11 July at the Manchester Regional Arena in Manchester, England. It was considered the de facto national championships for the United Kingdom.[1][2][3] and was the Olympic trials event for the 2004 Summer Olympics.[4]

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100m Jason Gardener 10.22 Darren Campbell 10.23 Mark Lewis-Francis 10.24
200m Chris Lambert 20.94 Christian Malcolm 21.09 Dwayne Grant 21.27
400m Tim Benjamin 45.58 Daniel Caines 45.88 Sean Baldock 46.24
800m Sam Ellis 1:49.19 Ricky Soos 1:49.42 Joel Kidger 1:49.44
1,500m Chris Mulvaney 3:50.14 Andrew Baddeley 3:50.40 Michael Skinner 3:50.77
5,000m Chris Thompson 13:42.10 Spencer Barden 13:51.41 Chris Davies 13:52.78
10,000m Matt O'Dowd 29:05.08 Kassa Tadesse 29:22.20 Mark Miles 29:27.05
110m hurdles Robert Newton 13.72 Paul Gray 13.88 William Sharman 13.97
400m hurdles Chris Rawlinson 50.04 Dale Garland 51.16 Robert Lewis 51.39
3000m steeplechase Justin Chaston 8:33.69 Jermaine Mays 8:39.44 Kevin Sheppard 8:40.31
5000m walk[5] Dominic King 20:11.35 Daniel King 20:47.19 Steve Hollier 21:02.39
high jump Ben Challenger 2.23 m Dalton Grant 2.15 m Samson Oni 2.15 m
pole vault Tim Thomas 5.45 m Scott Simpson 5.15 m Christian North 5.15 m
long jump Chris Tomlinson 7.84 m Darren Ritchie 7.76 m Nathan Morgan 7.71 m
triple jump Nathan Douglas 16.95 m Tosin Oke 16.49 m Steven Shalders 16.41 m
shot put Carl Myerscough 20.84 m Marcus Gouldbourne 17.20 m Neil Elliott 16.49 m
discus throw Emeka Udechuku 61.60 m Carl Myerscough 61.54 m Scot Thompson 52.65 m
hammer throw Mick Jones 72.04 m Andy Frost 69.94 m Mike Floyd 68.05 m
javelin throw Steve Backley 81.25 m Nick Nieland 79.06 m Mick Hill 79.00 m
decathlon Louis Evling-Jones 7405 pts w Ben Hazell 7176 pts w Adrian Hemery 6937 pts

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100m Abi Oyepitan 11.54 Joice Maduaka 11.56 Emma Ania 11.65
200m Joice Maduaka 23.16 Abi Oyepitan 23.23 Susan Deacon 23.76
400m Christine Ohuruogu 50.98 Lee McConnell 51.29 Helen Karagounis 52.38
800m Kelly Holmes 1:59.39 Jo Fenn 2:01.28 Susan Scott 2:02.13
1,500m Hayley Tullett 4:07.24 Lisa Dobriskey 4:08.14 Helen Clitheroe 4:08.18
5,000m Catherine Berry 15:45.28 Getenesh Tamirat 15:45.82 Collette Fagan 15:49.51
10,000m Kathy Butler 31:36.90 Hayley Yelling 31:45.14 Natalie Harvey 32:14.01
100m hurdles Sarah Claxton 13.21 Diane Allahgreen 13.38 Rachel King 13.39
400m hurdles Katie Jones 58.26 Nicola Sanders 58.63 Sian Scott 59.97
3000m steeplechase Tina Brown 10:13.19 Jo Ankier 10:15.94 Sonia Thomas 10:16.28
5000m walk[5] Niobe Menéndez 23:53.75 Sophie Hales 24:37.37 Rebecca Mersh 24:44.31
high jump Susan Jones 1.89 m Julie Crane 1.82 m Julia Bennett 1.78 m
pole vault Zoe Brown 4.15 m Liz Hughes 3.95 m Kirsty Maguire 3.95 m
long jump Jade Johnson 6.72 m Kelly Sotherton 6.61 m Kate Brewington 6.12 m
triple jump Michelle Griffith 13.43 m Nadia Williams 12.74 m Rebecca White 12.71 m
shot put Julie Dunkley 16.03 m Eva Massey 15.99 m Ade Oshinowo 15.78 m
discus throw Philippa Roles 58.57 m Shelley Newman 55.44 m Kara Nwidobie 52.78 m
hammer throw Lorraine Shaw 68.11 m Shirley Webb 64.67 m Liz Pidgeon 60.82 m
javelin throw Goldie Sayers 60.85 m Kelly Morgan 58.98 m Shelley Holroyd 57.48 m
heptathlon Caroline Pearce 5253 pts Wendy Davidson 5093 pts w Jenny Pacey 4805 pts

References

  1. ^ AAA WAAA and National Championships Medalists. NUTS. Retrieved 2018-02-25.
  2. ^ AAA Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-04-02.
  3. ^ WAAA Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-04-02.
  4. ^ "British Olympic Trials - a nervous weekend ahead| News". www.worldathletics.org.
  5. ^ a b "Walking". West Sussex County Times. 16 July 2004. Retrieved 6 April 2025 – via British Newspaper Archive.