2010 Asian Junior Athletics Championships

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14th Asian Junior Championships
Hanoi2010logo.png
Dates1–4 July 2010
Host cityVietnam Hanoi, Vietnam
VenueMy Dinh National Stadium
LevelJunior (under-20)
Events44
Participation37 nations
Records set2 Championship records

The 2010 Asian Junior Athletics Championships was the 14th edition of the international athletics competition for Asian under-20 athletes, organised by the Asian Athletics Association. It took place from 1 to 4 July 2010 at the My Dinh National Stadium in Hanoi – the first time the competition was held in Vietnam.[1] A total of 44 events were contested, which were divided equally between male and female athletes. Three championship records were improved over the course of the four-day competition and numerous national junior records were also bettered. The competition, including its opening and closing ceremonies, was broadcast live on Vietnamese carrier VTV3.[2]

China was easily the most successful nation, topping the medal tally with thirteen gold medals and 26 medals in total. Kazakhstan initially had the second greatest number of winners, with 5 of their eight medals being gold medals, but positive doping tests later reduced them to eighth in the ranking.[3] Second-placed Japan (with four golds) had a much larger overall haul, taking 22 medals at the competition. Chinese Taipei placed third with four golds and thirteen medals in total, while India had the third highest medal tally, with fourteen medals. Among the 21 nations that won medals in Hanoi, Thailand, Qatar and Bahrain were others to feature prominently on the podiums. The hosts, Vietnam, did not manage to secure a gold medal, but they still finished with a total of five medals.

The track and field within the host stadium.

Some athletes used the championships as their final preparation before the 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics, which was held in Moncton, Canada, later that month. Mutaz Essa Barshim provided one of the event highlights in the men's high jump as he broke the championship record as well setting the Qatari senior record with a clearance of 2.31 m.[4] Another Qatari, Mohamed Al-Garni completed a double in the men's 800 metres and 1500 metres. Thailand's Supachai Chimdee set a championship record in the men's 200 metres and also helped the Thais to victory in both relay events. India's was the third competition record-breaker, winning the hammer throw in 71.53 metres – also an Indian junior record.[5]

of Kazakhstan initially scored a sprint triple, winning the 100 metres, 200 m and 4×100 metres relay, but at the event she had a positive drug test for the banned substance nandrolone, which saw all of her results at the competition retrospectively annulled.[3] Iraq's Gulustan Mahmood Ieso took the 400 metres and 800 metres. Chinese athlete Gu Siyu was dominant in the women's throws, winning both the shot put and discus competitions. Her compatriot took 100/200 m silvers and a relay bronze, while was also twice runner-up (in the 800 and 1500 m). Genzebe Shumi led Bahrain's success in the middle- and long-distance track events, winning the 1500 m and taking 3000 metres silver.

Records[]

Men[]

Name Event Country Record Type
Mutaz Essa Barshim Men's high jump  Qatar 2.31 NR, CR
Men's hammer throw  India 71.53 NJR
Supachai Chimdee Men's 200 metres  Thailand 20.80 CR
Sajjad Hashemi Men's 200 metres  Iran 21.09 NR
Farkhod Kuralov Men's 800 metres  Tajikistan 1:49.41 NJR

Ng Ka Fung
Ho Man Lok
Men's 4×100 m relay  Hong Kong 40.51 NJR
Hsiang Chun-Hsien Men's high jump  Chinese Taipei 2.13 NJR
Men's triple jump  Iran 15.78 NJR
Cheng Chao-Tsun Men's javelin throw  Chinese Taipei 73.26 NJR, NYR

Women[]

Name Event Country Record Type
Women's 200 metres  Kazakhstan 23.41 (annulled) NJR[3]
Women's 400 metres hurdles  Singapore 1:01.69 NJR
Women's triple jump  India 13.58 NJR
Key:0000 CR — Championship record  • NR — National record  • NJR — National junior record  • NYR — National youth record

Medal summary[]

Men[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
(wind: −2.1 m/s)
 Zheng Dongsheng (CHN) 10.65  Hassan Taftian (IRI) 10.81   (JPN) 10.86 PB
200 metres
(wind: −0.9 m/s)
 Supachai Chimdee (THA) 20.80 CR  Zheng Dongsheng (CHN) 21.03 PB   (JPN) 21.05 PB
400 metres  Sajjad Hashemi (IRI) 47.18   (CHN) 47.26  Chen Chieh (TPE) 47.85
800 metres  Mohamed Al-Garni (QAT) 1:48.13  Hamza Driouch (QAT) 1:48.79  Abdulaziz Mohamed (KSA) 1:48.97 PB
1500 metres  Mohamed Al-Garni (QAT) 3:55.94   (JPN) 3:58.28 PB   (IRI) 3:59.27 PB
5000 metres   (BHR) 15:08.14   (JPN) 15:08.93   (JPN) 15:21.45
10,000 metres   (IND) 31:53.68   (JPN) 32:47.16  Shingo Hayashi (JPN) 35:58.95
110 m hurdles   (TPE) 13.90 PB  Siddhanth Thingalaya (IND) 13.96 PB   (CHN) 14.15 PB
400 m hurdles  Seiya Kato (JPN) 50.83 PB  Chen Chieh (TPE) 51.13   (JPN) 51.21 PB
3000 metres steeplechase   (JPN) 9:10.66   (BHR) 9:30.80   (TPE) 9:36.63
4×100 m relay  Thailand (THA)


Weerawat Pharueang
Supachai Chimdee
39.82  Hong Kong (HKG)

Ng Ka Fung
Ho Man Lok
40.51 NJR  Japan (JPN)



40.64
4×400 m relay  Thailand (THA)



Supachai Chimdee
3:11.39  Japan (JPN)


Seiya Kato
Kengo Yamazaki
3:12.14  Iran (IRI)



Sajjad Hashemi
3:16.90
10,000 m walk  Wang Zhendong (CHN) 44:35.95 PB   (JPN) 45:01.73   (IND) 45:06.51 PB
High jump  Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.31 m NR CR  Zhang Guowei (CHN) 2.23 m PB  Hsiang Chun-Hsien (TPE) 2.19 m NJR
Pole vault  Nikita Filippov (KAZ) 5.05 m  Sergey Grigoryev (KAZ) 4.95 m   (JPN) 4.65 m
Long jump  Lin Ching-hsuan (TPE) 7.94 m (w)  Supanara Sukhasvasti na Ayudhya (THA) 7.84 m (w)  Ankit Sharma (IND) 7.77 m (w)
Triple jump  Cao Shuo (CHN) 16.84 m (w)  Arpinder Singh (IND) 16.13 m PB   (IRI) 15.78 m NJR
Shot put   (IRI) 19.07 m   (CHN) 18.56 m   (SYR) 17.48 m
Discus throw   (SYR) 56.25 m   (IND) 54.13 m   (IND) 53.23 m
Hammer throw   (IND) 71.53 m NJR   (IRI) 64.11 m PB   (KUW) 62.49 m
Javelin throw   (CHN) 73.38 m PB  Cheng Chao-Tsun (TPE) 73.26 m NJR/NYR  Huang Shih-Feng (TPE) 72.43 m
Decathlon   (QAT) 7078 pts   (KSA) 6850 pts   (UZB) 6677 pts

Women[]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
(wind: −1.5 m/s)
  (CHN) 11.96   (INA) 12.10  Olga Safronova (KAZ) 12.17
200 metres   (CHN) 24.04 PB   (IND) 24.46 PB  Viktoriya Zyabkina (KAZ) 24.55
400 metres  Gulustan Mahmood Ieso (IRQ) 54.17   (CHN) 54.81  Zhao Yanmin (CHN) 55.03
800 metres  Gulustan Mahmood Ieso (IRQ) 2:14.4   (CHN) 2:16.0   (VIE) 2:16.7
1500 metres  Genzebe Shumi (BHR) 4:30.76   (CHN) 4:31.79   (JPN) 4:35.26
3000 metres   (JPN) 9:36.47  Genzebe Shumi (BHR) 9:37.57 PB   (CHN) 9:39.89
5000 metres  Tejitu Daba (BHR) 16:21.30   (JPN) 16:31.22   (KOR) 16:37.10
100 m hurdles  Wu Shuijiao (CHN) 13.77   (TPE) 14.18   (IND) 14.56
400 m hurdles   (JPN) 1:00.20   (KAZ) 1:01.04   (SIN) 1:01.69 NJR
3000 metres steeplechase   (KAZ) 11:21.68   (SRI) 11:38.02   (VIE) 12:01.11
4×100 m relay  India (IND)



45.82  China (CHN)


Wu Shuijiao
Lu Minjia
45.87  Chinese Taipei (TPE)
Liao Ching-Hsien


45.90
4×400 m relay  Thailand (THA)

Pornpan Hoemhuk

3:53.77  Vietnam (VIE)



Thi Thuy Nguyen
3:58.39  Hong Kong (HKG)



Fong Yee Pui
4:13.78
10,000 m walk   (CHN) 49:11.93 PB   (JPN) 49:25.87  Ayman Kozhakhmetova (KAZ) 50:17.04
High jump   (TPE) 1.78 m  Tran Huy Hoa (VIE) 1.76 m   (HKG) 1.68 m
Pole vault  Xu Huiqin (CHN) 3.90 m   (JPN) 3.65 m   (TPE) 3.40 m PB
Long jump  Lu Minjia (CHN) 6.47 m   (IND) 6.11 m (w)   (IND) 6.05 m (w)
Triple jump   (CHN) 13.75 m PB   (IND) 13.58 m NJR   (CHN) 13.15 m
Shot put  Gu Siyu (CHN) 15.47 m  Lee Sung-Hye (KOR) 14.49 m   (UZB) 13.61 m PB
Discus throw  Gu Siyu (CHN) 52.52 m  Subenrat Insaeng (THA) 46.54 m   (KOR) 44.32 m
Hammer throw  Galina Mityaeva (TJK) 56.05 m   (JPN) 46.77 m Not awarded
Javelin throw  Anastasiya Svechnikova (UZB) 54.32 m   (CHN) 52.64 m  Yuka Sato (JPN) 48.46 m
Heptathlon   (TPE) 4848 pts   (THA) 4551 pts  Bùi Thị Thu Thảo (VIE) 4170 pts
  • † = The following results and medals for Kazakhstan were retrospectively annulled after Yulia Gavrilova's positive doping test:[3]
    • 100 metres:   (KAZ) (11.85)
    • 200 metres:   (KAZ) (23.41 NJR)
    • 4×100 m relay:  Kazakhstan (KAZ) , Olga Bludova, Viktoriya Zyabkina, (45.57)

2010 Medal table[]

Mutaz Essa Barshim was one of four Qatari gold medallists.

  *   Host nation (Vietnam)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan (JPN)49922
2 Chinese Taipei (TPE)43613
3 Thailand (THA)4307
4 Qatar (QAT)4105
5 Bahrain (BHR)3205
6 Iran (IRI)2237
7 Iraq (IRQ)2002
8 Uzbekistan (UZB)1023
9 Syria (SYR)1012
10 Tajikistan (TJK)1001
11 Vietnam (VIE)*0235
12 Hong Kong (HKG)0123
 South Korea (KOR)0123
14 Saudi Arabia (KSA)0112
15 Indonesia (INA)0101
 Sri Lanka (SRI)0101
17 Kuwait (KUW)0011
 Singapore (SIN)0011
Totals (18 nations)26273184


  • † = All tallies marked with the above symbol signify retrospective amendments due to Yulia Gavrilova's doping ban. Kazakhstan lost three gold medals due to this, but also gained two bronze medals as other Kazakh athletes were elevated in ranking. Chinese Taipei gained a relay bronze medal. China saw two silver medals and a bronze elevated to two golds and a silver, India has a silver and a bronze upgraded to gold and a silver, while Indonesian had one bronze amended to a silver medal. This profoundly effected Kazakhstan's final rankings – initially the runner-up, they were down graded to joint eighth position. Japan and Chinese Taipei became the second- and third-ranked countries. India moved from eighth to sixth, while Indonesia went from joint 19th to joint 18th.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ Asian Junior Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2010-08-28.
  2. ^ 14th Asian Junior Athletics Championship 2010 Archived 2010-08-18 at the Wayback Machine. Asian Athletics Association. Retrieved on 2010-08-28.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Yuliya Rakhmanova. Tilastopaja. Retrieved on 2013-12-27.
  4. ^ Krishnan, Ram. Murali (2010-07-05). Barshim scales 2.31m in Hanoi – Asian junior championships. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-08-28.
  5. ^ India wins a gold and bronze in Asian Junior Athletics. Times of India (2010-07-02). Retrieved on 2010-08-28.
  6. ^ AsC Hanoi VIE 1 - 4 July. Tilastopaja.org (5 July 2010). Retrieved on 2013-12-27.
Results

External links[]

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