Glasgow International Match

The Sainsbury's International Match, formerly known as the Aviva International Match, was an annual indoor track and field athletics meeting which takes place in late January in Glasgow, Scotland. The televised competition is the first major indoor event in the United Kingdom's athletics calendar. It was held at the Kelvin Hall International Sports Arena from 1988 to 2012. It moved to the Commonwealth Sports Arena from 2013 onwards.

The facade of Kelvin Hall – the meeting's venue from 1988 to 2012.

The International Match was an international team competition, with representatives typically competing for five different squads: Great Britain, a "World" or Commonwealth select team, and three other countries. In each athletic event, athletes score points for their team depending on performance and the team with the greatest number of points at the end of all competitions is declared the winner.[1]

History

World record holder Mike Powell competed at the meeting in 1993.

The inaugural edition (primarily a contest between French and British athletes) was held in 1988 as the Dairy Crest International and it attracted participants such as Linford Christie and Butch Reynolds.[2] The event was broadcast on ITV and was well received with around 2.75 million viewers in total.[3] The Kelvin Hall became a prominent indoor venue, hosting the 1990 European Athletics Indoor Championships, and the 1990 Dairy Crest Games pitted a British team against a select team from East Germany.[4] After a change of sponsor, the Pearl International Games featured a Great Britain vs Russia competition, as well as high calibre guest athletes including world champions Michael Johnson and Mike Powell.[5] France returned as the rival team to the hosts in the 1995 and 1996 competitions.[6][7]

The competition was sponsored by Norwich Union from 2000 to 2009. During this time, the international competition developed from a two-team to a multi-team contest: Swedish, Russian and German athletes competed against British athletes in 2002,[8] and by 2004 it had become a five-way team contest (with athletes representing Great Britain, Russia, Sweden, Italy and a World select team). The indoor International Match became a testing ground for young and upcoming British athletes as the country's established international athletes often trained abroad or avoided indoor competition in favour of more prestigious outdoor competitions.[9][10]

In spite of this, the event continued to attract many of Britain's prominent athletes as well as significant foreign competition; in 2003 the 60 metres featured the then-world record holder Tim Montgomery and Dwain Chambers, with world long jump champion Dwight Phillips and Olympic medallist Bernard Williams also on the programme.[11]

Following the renaming of Norwich Union, the competition became known as the Aviva International Match in 2010.[12] Great Britain won the 2010 competition, highlighted by Jessica Ennis' win in British record-time against reigning 60 metres hurdles world champion Lolo Jones.[13] The 2011 competition saw a five-team competition between Germany, Great Britain, the United States, Sweden and a Commonwealth Select team, which was won by the German team. Helen Clitheroe produced a stadium record in the 3000 m, embarking on a solo run to victory.[14] In the 2013 competition, the United States and Russia tied with 58 points each.[15]

The last edition was in 2015. In 2016 the Birmingham Indoor Grand Prix moved to the Emirates Arena in Glasgow for the very first time, as part of the inaugural IAAF World Indoor Tour.[16]

Events

Aviva International Match events
Men60 m200 m400 m800 m1500 m3000 m60 m hurdlesLong jumpTriple jumpHigh jumpPole vault
Women60 m200 m400 m800 m1500 m3000 m60 m hurdlesLong jumpTriple jumpHigh jumpPole vault

Meeting Records

Men

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRefVideo
60 m6.50James Dasaolu  Great Britain25 January 2013[17]
150 m15.84Kim Collins  Saint Kitts and Nevis25 January 2013[18]
200 m20.67John Regis  United Kingdom11 February 1995
400 m45.33Danny Everett  United States8 February 1992
600 m1:15.70Duane Solomon  United States26 January 2013[19][20]
800 m1:46.22Tom McKean  United Kingdom4 March 1990
1500 m3:34.94Abdelaati Iguider  Morocco20 February 2016[21]
3000 m7:39.55Mo Farah  Great Britain20 February 2016[22]
60 m hurdles7.36Colin Jackson  United Kingdom12 February 1994
High jump2.37 mVyacheslav Voronin  Russia5 March 2000
Long jump8.08 mFabrice Lapierre  Australia20 February 2016[23]
Triple jump17.20 mChristian Olsson  Sweden27 February 2007
4 × 400 m relay3:06.27Luke Lennon Ford
Richard Buck
Conrad Williams
Nigel Levine
 Great Britain25 January 2013[24]

Women

EventRecordAthleteNationalityDateRef
60 m7.04Merlene Ottey  Jamaica8 February 1992
150 m17.32Desiree Henry  Great Britain25 January 2013[25]
200 m22.81Natalya Pomoshchnikova-Voronova  Russia30 January 1993
400 m50.62Olga Zaytseva  Russia28 January 2006
800 m1:58.46Maria Mutola  Mozambique24 January 2004
1500 m4:01.40Sifan Hassan  Netherlands20 February 2016[26]
3000 m8:42.59Hellen Obiri  Kenya28 January 2012[27]
60 m hurdles7.74Ludmila Engquist  Sweden4 March 1990
High jump1.93 mAlessia Trost  Italy20 February 2016[28]
Levern Spencer  Saint Lucia
Isobel Pooley  Great Britain
Pole vault4.76 mSvetlana Feofanova  Russia2 February 2003
Yelena Isinbayeva  Russia24 January 2004
Long jump6.85 mGalina Chistyakova  Soviet Union3 March 1990
4 × 400 m relay3:33.49Meghan Beesley
Kelly Massey
Laura Wake
Victoria Ohuruogu
 Great Britain25 January 2013[29]

References