Raúl Mazorra
Cuban sprinter
Raúl Mazorra Zamorra (5 December 1928 – 7 January 2002) was a Cuban sprinter who competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics and in the 1952 Summer Olympics. He finished second in the 1951 Pan American Games 4×100 metres relay (with Rafael Fortún, Angel García, and the non-Olympian Jesús Farrés). Mazorra also finished fifth in the 1951 Pan American Games 200 metres.[1]
Competition record
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Event | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Representing Cuba | |||||
1948 | Olympics | London, England | 3rd, Heat 9 | 100 m | 11.1 |
1948 | Olympics | London, England | 3rd, Heat 7 | 200 m | 23.0 |
1952 | Olympics | Helsinki, Finland | 4th, Heat 2 | 100 m | 11.19 |
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Raúl Mazorra". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
- v
- t
- e
Central American and Caribbean Games Champions in men's 4 × 100 metres relay
- 1926: Mexico (Ahumada, Gómez, Ramírez, Aguilar)
- 1930: Cuba (Torriente, Rodríguez, Alfonso, Seino)
- 1935: Cuba (Rodríguez, Acosta, Torriente, Verrier)
- 1938: Puerto Rico (Villodas, Guerra, Malavé, Vázquez)
- 1946: Panama (Loney, Thomas, Clarke, La Beach)
- 1950: Cuba (Fortún, Farrés, Mazorra, Wilson)
- 1954: Jamaica (LaBeach, Rhoden, Gardner, Laing)
- 1959: Venezuela (Bonas, Murad, Esteves, Romero)
- 1962: Venezuela (Herrera, Murad, Romero, Esteves)
- 1966: Jamaica (Clayton, McNeil, Headley, Fray)
- 1970: Cuba (Ramírez, Montes, Morales, Triana)
- 1974: Cuba (Triana, Montes, Bandomo, Leonard)
- 1978: Trinidad and Tobago (Noel, Crawford, Husbands, Serrette)
- 1982: Cuba (Lara, Casañas, Peñalver, Saborit)
- 1986: Cuba (Lara, Peñalver, Querol, Simón)
- 1990: Cuba (Simón, Peñalver, Stevens, Isasi)
- 1993: Cuba (Simón, I. García, Isasi, Aguilera)
- 1998: Cuba (A. García, Ortiz, I. García, Pérez)
- 2002: Dominican Republic (Matos, Morillo, Sainfleur, Báez)
- 2006: Netherlands Antilles (Mariano, Kwidama, Duzant, Martina)
- 2010: Trinidad and Tobago (Sorrillo, Burns, Callender, Bledman)
- 2014: Cuba (Ruíz, Mena, Luis, Carrero)
- 2018: Barbados (Brathwaite, Burke, Ellis, Hoyte)
- 2023: Trinidad and Tobago (Hosten, Benjamin, Harrison Jr., Augustine)
This biographical article relating to Cuban athletics is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e