Oceania Area Championships in Athletics

Oceania Athletics Championships
Statusactive
GenreAthletics Oceania Championships
Frequencybiennial
Locationvarious
Inaugurated1990
Previous eventSuva 2024
Next eventDarwin 2026
Organised byOceania Athletics
WebsiteOAA Official

The Oceania Athletics Championships is an athletics event organized by the Oceania Athletics Association (OAA) for the World Athletics (WA; formerly the IAAF) member associations of the Oceania region.[1]

The event has been held jointly with the Under-20 Championships since 1994, Under-18 Championships since 2000, the Para Championships since 2022, and the Masters Championships since 2024.

History

First held in 1990 in Suva, it was initially conceived as a quadrennial event; however, after the second edition in 1994, the championships changed to a biennial event. After the 2010 championships, there were significant changes in the format of the competition. Now being held as a regional championships (in 2011 and 2012), the associations were divided into two divisions based on their geographical location (either east or west).[2] However, the competition was revised back to its original format as an area championships in 2013.[3][4]

Since the inaugural championships in 1990 (up until 2017), unlike the rest of the OAA member federations, only Australia and New Zealand send their second tier teams to compete in the championships. This was to allow Pacific Island nations to be competitive and challenge for medals.[5] However, in 2019, the championships increased in competition status with the then IAAF (now World Athletics) changing the qualification criteria for the 2019 World Championships in Doha and the 2020 Summer Olympics, whereby athletes could qualify through World Athletics ranking points: continental - ie. area - championships were granted 'tier-one' status offering more ranking points under the WA world rankings system.[6][7]

The 2021 edition set for Korman Stadium in Port Vila was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, making this the first cancellation of the event.[8]

Editions

Edition Year Host city Host country Date Venue Events Nations Athletes Champions
1 1990 Suva Fiji 11–14 July National Stadium 39  New Zealand
2 1994 Auckland New Zealand 22–26 February 38  New Zealand
3 1996 Townsville Australia 28–30 November 42  New Zealand
4 1998 Nuku'alofa Tonga 27–28 August Teufaiva Stadium 39  New Zealand
5 2000 Adelaide Australia 24–26 August Santos Stadium 40  New Zealand
6 2002 Christchurch New Zealand 12–14 December Queen Elizabeth II Park 40  New Zealand
7 2004 Townsville Australia 16–18 December Townsville Sports Reserve 38  New Zealand
8 2006 Apia Samoa 12–16 December Apia Park 37  New Zealand
9 2008 Saipan Northern Mariana Islands 25–28 June Oleai Sports Complex 39  Fiji
10 2010 Cairns Australia 23–25 September Barlow Park 36  Australia
11 2013 Papeete French Polynesia 3–5 June Stade Pater Te Hono Nui 44  New Zealand
12 2014 Rarotonga Cook Islands 24–26 June BCI Stadium 40  Australia
13 2015 Cairns Australia 8–10 May Barlow Park 60  Australia
14 2017 Suva Fiji 28 June–1 July ANZ National Stadium 57  New Zealand
15 2019 Townsville Australia 25–28 June Townsville Sports Reserve 59  Australia
2021 Port Vila Vanuatu Cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
16 2022 Mackay Australia 7–11 June Mackay Aquatic and Recreation Centre 46  Australia
17 2024 Suva Fiji 4–8 June HFC Bank Stadium 45  Australia
18 2026 Darwin Australia 18–22 May Arafura Stadium 37 TBD

Medals (1990-2024)

The all-time Oceania Athletics Championships medal table is the sum of all medals won by OAA member federations, associate members, as well as invited teams from the very first edition till the most recent championships in 2024. All medals counted are based on the official results posted on the Oceania Athletics Association website.

Associate members with medals are listed in italic. Also listed in italic but are unranked are invited athletics teams.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Australia210208174592
2 New Zealand19813193422
3 Papua New Guinea908880258
4 Fiji756061196
5 Samoa34182274
6 Tonga253441100
7 French Polynesia15232260
8 New Caledonia[1]12212053
9 Solomon Islands10101232
Regional Australia[2]8121030
10 Vanuatu7161639
11 Cook Islands5131331
12 Guam5111632
13 Norfolk Island5229
14 American Samoa23813
15 Kiribati16411
16 Northern Mariana Islands1438
Tahiti West Coast[3]1034
Australian Masters team[4]0202
17 Palau0112
 Wallis and Futuna[1]0112
19 Nauru0044
20 Federated States of Micronesia0011
 Marshall Islands0011
Totals (21 entries)7046646081,976
  • ^[1] Associate members of OAA - Not recognized by World Athletics. Since 2019, associate members are not eligible for championship medals.
  • ^[2] Regional Australia is an invitational team from Northern Australia, competed at every championships since 2013. Since 2019, invitational teams are not eligible for championship medals.
  • ^[3] Tahiti West Coast competed once in 2013 as a local team from the host federation of French Polynesia.
  • ^[4] Australia Masters team competed once in 2015 as an invited team from the host federation of Australia.

As of 2019, only Tuvalu (OAA member federation) and Niue (OAA associate member) have yet to win a medal.

Championship records

See also

References

  1. ^ "Oceania Athletics Area Championships". Oceania Athletics. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  2. ^ History of the Oceania Athletics Championships (PDF), OAA, 19 January 2019, retrieved 22 March 2026
  3. ^ Oceania Regional Championships is only 115 days away!!, OAA, February 25, 2011, retrieved March 8, 2013
  4. ^ Oceania Regional Championships Handbook - includes official program and athletes/federations competing. Updated 14 June 2011 (PDF), OAA, June 14, 2011, p. 23, retrieved March 8, 2013
  5. ^ Australian Team for Oceania Championships Announced, Armidale Athletic Club, 26 October 2004, archived from the original on 22 February 2014, retrieved 14 February 2014
  6. ^ "PRESS RELEASE: ENTRIES OAC 2019". OAA. 9 May 2019. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  7. ^ "Australia and New Zealand to field strong teams at invigorated Oceania Athletics Championships". Inside the Games. 24 June 2019. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  8. ^ "OCEANIA ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIPS 2021". OAA. 16 February 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2021.