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Enfield and Haringey Athletic Club
British athletics club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Enfield and Haringey Athletic Club is an athletics club based in North London, England. The club are based at three venues; New River Stadium, Lee Valley Athletics Centre and the Queen Elizabeth II Stadium (Enfield).
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History



The origins of the club began with the creation of three clubs. The Enfield Athletic Club was founded 1920 and the Ponders End Athletic Club was founded in 1922. Another club known as Southgate Harriers, were formed in 1932 by a breakaway group from the Southgate and Wood Green Sports Association.[1]
In 1965 the Enfield AC and Ponders End AC merged to become the Borough of Enfield Harriers in 1965 and nine years later in 1974, Southgate AC moved from Broomfield Park to White Hart Lane Community Sports Centre and became known as the Haringey & Southgate AC, which was later shortened to Haringey AC.[1]
In 1999 the Borough of Enfield Harriers and Haringey AC merged to become the name that it used today, that of Enfield and Haringey AC.[2][1]
In September 2006, Enfield and Haringey Athletic Club won the National Young Athletes League Final. In doing so, stopping the three year stranglehold on the title by Blackheath and Bromley Harriers.[citation needed]
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Honours
Senior Men:
- British Athletics League
- First place: 1984, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1993
- Second place: 1981, 1982, 1983, 1987, 1989, 1992
- Third place: 1985, 1995
- European Champion Clubs Cup
- Second place: 1992
- Third place: 1985, 2008
- National U17 Champions for 8 successive years
- National U20 Champions for 9 successive years
- European U20 Champions in 2003 and finalists for past 7 years.
Notable athletes
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Enfield and Haringey AC, and while under its former names, has produced a considerable number of successful athletes.[3][4]
Olympians
Other
- Bernard Eeles: 1934 British Empire Games[14]
- William Land; 1934 British Empire Games
- Graham Eggleton: 1982 Commonwealth Games
- Michelle Campbell Edwards: 1991 World Championships
- Solomon Wariso: 1998 Commonwealth Games
- Leon Baptiste: 2010 Commonwealth Games
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References
External links
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