AAA Indoor Championships

AAA Indoor Championships
SportIndoor track and field
Founded1935
Ceased2006
CountryEngland/United Kingdom

The AAA Indoor Championships was an annual indoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association of England. It was the foremost indoor domestic athletics event during its lifetime.[1][2]

The event was first held in 1935, following the construction of an adequate venue in Wembley Arena in London for the 1934 British Empire Games. The first iteration of the competition lasted for five editions and featured around nine men's indoor track and field events and six for women. The onset of World War II meant the competition was not held in 1940. The second iteration of the competition began in 1962, returning to its Wembley venue. The championships had a long residency at RAF Cosford indoor arena from 1965 to 1991, then from 1992 to 2001 at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham. The final few editions for held at the English Institute of Sport, Sheffield.[3] The event ceased in 2006, being replaced by the UK Athletics-organised British Indoor Athletics Championships.

Though organised by the English governing body, it was open to all athletes from the United Kingdom, and also to overseas athletes. (Most of the foreign athletes who competed were Irish or UK-based.) It served as the de facto British Championships, given the absence of such a competition during its history. It was typically held over two days over a weekend in February.

It was among the earliest and most significant annual indoor track and field competitions, being preceded only by the AAU Indoor Track and Field Championships in the United States (established in 1907). The restarting of the AAA Indoor Championships in 1962 came alongside similar national developments elsewhere, including the German Indoor Championships in 1954 and Soviet Indoors in 1964.[4][5] The European Athletics Indoor Championships became the first regular indoor international championship in 1966.[6]

  1. ^ AAA Indoor Championships (Men). GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2020-01-29.
  2. ^ AAA Indoor Championships (Women). GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2020-01-29.
  3. ^ Knight, Tom (2004-02-06). Britain's indoor revolution. Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  4. ^ Soviet Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  5. ^ German Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  6. ^ European Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved 2018-03-10.

AAA Indoor Championships

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