2010 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships

The 2010 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships, also known as the IV Asian Indoor Athletics Championships, was an international indoor athletics event took place in Tehran, Iran, between 24 and 26 February. This was the second edition to be hosted in the country as the first championships was also held at the Aftab Enghelab Complex in Tehran.[1] A total of 23 nations sent athletes to compete at the championships, which featured 26 track and field events.

2010 Asian Indoor Championships
DatesFebruary 24–26
Host cityIran Tehran, Iran
VenueAftab Enghelab Complex
Events26
Participation193 athletes from
23 nations

The championships featured somewhat moderate performances – India, who topped the table at the previous edition, decided against sending a number of their top athletes.[2] However, for many athletes it acted as a testing ground in the build up to the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships in March.[3] The hosts Iran topped the medal table with five golds. China was second with four golds while Kazakhstan had the second greatest medal haul with a total of 14.[4] Six Asian Indoor Championships records were broken or equalled at the championships.

The female events were held separately from the men's events, taking place during the morning sessions. Due to the Islamic country's customs, men were forbidden from watching the female events.[5] All four of Kyrgyzstan's medals were won by only two women: twenty-year-old Viktoriia Poliudina won both the 1500 metres and 3000 metres events while her compatriot Tatyana Borisova managed an 800 metres silver and 1500 m bronze. Kazakhstan's Oksana Verner was another athlete to win two individual medals as she took silver behind Poliudina on both occasions.[3] Satyender Singh's personal best and championship record throw in the shot put was one of highlights of the programme, although the women's pole vault was a less-contested affair as only two athletes took part.[6]

It was later revealed that Oksana Verner and 400 metres gold medallist Munira Saleh failed a drugs test at the event and was banned from the sport for two years and life respectively.[7][8][9]

Results edit

Men edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 m Samuel Francis
  Qatar
6.58
CR
Reza Ghasemi
  Iran
6.67 Barakat Al-Harthi
  Oman
6.68
400 m Bibin Mathew
  India
47.81
CR, NR
Reza Bouazar
  Iran
48.14 Shahabeddin Tahmasebi
  Iran
48.15
800 m Mohammad Al-Azemi
  Kuwait
1:53.22 Musaeb Abdulrahman Balla
  Qatar
1:54.25 Masato Yokota
  Japan
1:54.71
1500 m Abubaker Ali Kamal
  Qatar
3:51.78 Mohamed Al-Garni
  Qatar
3:53.12 Rouhollah Mohammadi
  Iran
3:55.64
3000 m James Kwalia
  Qatar
7:57.73 Essa Ismail Rashed
  Qatar
7:57.77 Mohammad Khazaei
  Iran
8:26.33
60 m hurdles Jiang Fan
  China
7.75
=CR
Fawaz Al-Shammari
  Kuwait
7.90 Mohammad Goudarzi
  Iran
7.95
4×400 m relay   Iran
Shahabeddin Tahmasebi
Reza Bouazar
Mohsen Zarrin-Afzal
Mehdi Zamani
3:15.02   India
Bibin Mathew
Ajay Kumar
Shake Mortaja
V. B. Bineesh
3:16.05   Kazakhstan
Dmitriy Korabelnikov
Sergey Zaikov
Vyacheslav Muravyev
Nazar Mukhametzhan
3:17.06
NR
High jump Mutaz Essa Barshim
  Qatar
2.20 Keivan Ghanbarzadeh
  Iran
2.17 Jean-Claude Rabbath
  Lebanon
2.17
Pole vault Mohsen Rabbani
  Iran
5.20 Nikita Filippov
  Kazakhstan
5.10 Eshagh Ghaffari
  Iran
4.90
Long jump Rikiya Saruyama
  Japan
7.65 Zhuang Haitao
  China
7.58 Mohammad Ibrar
  India
7.56
Triple jump Dong Bin
  China
16.73
CR
Nobuaki Fujibayashi
  Japan
16.33 Roman Valiyev
  Kazakhstan
16.25
Shot put Satyender Singh
  India
19.17
CR
Mashari Mohammad
  Kuwait
18.78 Hamid Reza Nodehi
  Iran
18.58
Heptathlon Hadi Sepehrzad
  Iran
5292 pts Abdoljalil Tomaj
  Iran
5054 pts P. J. Vinod
  India
4981 pts
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Women edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 m Jiang Lan
  China
7.51 Han Ling
  China
7.55 Olga Bludova
  Kazakhstan
7.57
400 m Marina Maslyonko
  Kazakhstan
53.89 Jauna Murmu
  India
54.56 Yelena Dombrovskaya
  Kazakhstan
55.47
800 m Truong Thanh Hang
  Vietnam
2:12.75 Tatyana Borisova
  Kyrgyzstan
2:14.60 Mina Pourseifi
  Iran
2:15.87
1500 m Viktoriia Poliudina
  Kyrgyzstan
4:29.65 Tatyana Borisova
  Kyrgyzstan
4:32.06 Leila Ebrahimi
  Iran
4:36.26
3000 m Viktoriia Poliudina
  Kyrgyzstan
9:39.35 Leila Ebrahimi
  Iran
10:05.42 Mahboubeh Ghayour
  Iran
10:29.31
60 m hurdles Wong Wing Sum
  Hong Kong
8.79 Somayyeh Mehraban
  Iran
9.41 Elnaz Kompani
  Iran
9.49
4×400 m relay   India
Priyanka Pawar
Jauna Murmu
A. C. Ashwini
Karnatapu Sowjanya
3:43.83   Kazakhstan
Yelena Dombrovskaya
Marina Maslyonko
Olga Bludova
?
3:44.20   Iran
Mina Pourseifi
Maryam Tousi
Soulmaz Azimian
Soudabeh Sobhani
4:00.03
High jump Marina Aitova
  Kazakhstan
1.93
=CR
Anna Ustinova
  Kazakhstan
1.86 Qiao Yanrui
  China
1.83
Pole vault Roslinda Samsu
  Malaysia
4.00 Tatyana Turkova
  Kazakhstan
3.70 None awarded
Long jump Lyudmila Grankovskaya
  Kazakhstan
5.98 Chen Yaling
  China
5.95 Reshmi Bose
  India
5.93
Triple jump Liu Yanan
  China
13.66 Lyudmila Grankovskaya
  Kazakhstan
12.95 Tatyana Konysheva
  Kazakhstan
12.82
Shot put Leila Rajabi
  Iran
17.32
NR
Meng Qianqian
  China
17.03 Ma Qiao
  China
16.97
Pentathlon Zahra Nabizadeh
  Iran
2691 pts Bahar Khasrou
  Iraq
2682 pts Farzaneh Mashayekhi
  Iran
2541 pts
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Medal table edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Iran561223
2  China44210
3  Qatar4307
4  Kazakhstan35513
5  India3238
6  Kyrgyzstan2204
7  Kuwait1203
8  Japan1113
9  Hong Kong1001
  Malaysia1001
  Vietnam1001
12  Iraq0101
13  Lebanon0011
  Oman0011
Totals (14 entries)26262577

Participating nations edit

A total of 23 nations were represented by athletes competing at the 2010 championships.[4] This was a smaller amount than the total number of nations that attended the 2008 edition (29).

References edit

  1. ^ Tehran to host Asian Indoor Athletics Championships. Tehran Times (2010-02-01). Retrieved on 2010-02-19.
  2. ^ Top Indian athletes to miss Asian Indoor Championships. The Times of India (2010-02-22). Retrieved on 2010-02-27.
  3. ^ a b Krishnan, Ram. Murali (2010-02-27).Asian Indoor Championships close. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-27.
  4. ^ a b Medal Tally Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Amateur Athletic Federation of Islamic Republic of Iran. Retrieved on 2010-02-27.
  5. ^ Krishnan, Ram. Murali (2010-02-25). Kwalia and Aitova steal the limelight in Tehran - Asian Indoor Champs, Day 1. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-27.
  6. ^ Krishnan, Ram. Murali (2010-02-26).Singh takes Shot Put gold for India – Asian Indoor champs day 2. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-27.
  7. ^ IAAF Newsletter Edition 114 Archived 2012-10-26 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF (2010-06-28). Retrieved on 2010-08-08.
  8. ^ IAAF Newsletter Edition 113 Archived 2012-10-26 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF (2010-05-27). Retrieved on 2010-08-08.
  9. ^ مثبت شدن دوپينگ دو دونده آسيايي Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine. ISNA (2010-04-16). Retrieved on 2010-08-08.

External links edit