Athletics at the 2001 East Asian Games
At the 2001 East Asian Games, the athletics events were held in Osaka, Japan from 23 to 26 May 2001. A total of 45 events were contested, of which 23 by male and 22 by female athletes. All events were held at the Nagai Stadium, with the exception of the racewalking and half marathon events. A team of Australian athletes took part in the competition but they were excluded from the medal tally.[1] This was the last time that Kazakhstan competed in the competition.
Athletics at the 2001 East Asian Games | |
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![]() The Nagai Stadium hosted most events | |
Dates | 23 – 26 May |
Host city | Osaka, Japan![]() |
Venue | Nagai Stadium |
Level | Senior |
Events | 45 |
Participation | ? athletes from 9 (+1 guest) nations |
Records set | 20 Games records 3 Japanese records |
← 1997 2005 → |
In the third edition of the multi-sport event, 20 Games records were improved over the four-day athletics competition. China had the greatest gold medal haul with 27, largely due to the success of their women athletes, who won all but three of the women's events. The hosts, Japan, won the most medals overall, winning 11 golds, 22 silvers and 51 medals in total. The women's events over 400 metres brought a number of Japanese records: Kazue Kakinuma broke the 400 m sprint record, Makiko Yoshida set a new record in the 400 metres hurdles, and the 4×400 metres relay team made a new national best of 3:33.06. Seventeen-year-old Liu Xiang set a new 110 metres hurdles record of 13.42 for the first gold medal of his career.
All the Games records in the relay races were broken, meaning that both Shingo Suetsugu (who broke the 200 metres record) and Bu Fanfang (who broke the 400 m record) made new Games records in multiple events. Some athletes took on two individual events in the competition schedule and doubled their medal hauls: Gennadiy Chernovol took 100 m gold and 200 m silver while his Kazakh compatriot Mihail Kolganov won gold in the 800 and 1500 m. Wu Wen-Chien did a bronze double in the 5000 m and steeplechase for Chinese Taipei, and Dong Yanmei won two golds in the 5000 and 10,000 m events. Kumiko Ikeda of Japan set personal bests in the long jump and 100 metres hurdles for a silver and bronze medal, respectively.[2]
Records
Key: | WR — World record • AR — Asian record • GR — Games record • NR — National record |
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Medal summary
Men
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres | ![]() | 10.28 | ![]() | 10.31 | ![]() | 10.44 |
200 metres | ![]() | 20.34 GR | ![]() | 20.55 | ![]() | 20.92 |
400 metres | ![]() | 45.25 GR | ![]() | 45.47 | ![]() | 46.17 |
800 metres | ![]() | 1:49.00 GR | ![]() | 1:49.18 | ![]() | 1:49.39 |
1500 metres † | ![]() | 3:46.43 | ![]() | 3:49.63 | ![]() | 3:51.13 |
5000 metres | ![]() | 13:56.23 | ![]() | 14:08.53 | ![]() | 14:15.50 |
10,000 metres | ![]() | 28:42.19 GR | ![]() | 28:50.20 | ![]() | 29:33.23 |
110 metre hurdles | ![]() | 13.42 GR | ![]() | 13.47 | ![]() | 13.98 |
400 metre hurdles | ![]() | 49.18 GR | ![]() | 49.28 | ![]() | 49.42 |
3000 metre steeplechase | ![]() | 8:33.98 GR | ![]() | 8:36.48 | ![]() | 8:44.15 |
4×100 metre relay | ![]() Shingo Kawabata Akihiro Yasui Shingo Suetsugu Hideki Ishizuka | 38.93 GR | ![]() | 39.29 | ![]() | 40.13 |
4×400 metre relay | ![]() Mitsuhiro Sato Jun Osakada Dai Tamesue Ryuji Muraki | 3:03.74 GR | No other medalling team | No other medalling team | ||
Half marathon | ![]() | 1:04:49 GR | ![]() | 1:08:24 | ![]() | 1:09:47 |
20 km walk | ![]() | 1:24:10 | ![]() | 1:24:26 | ![]() | 1:24:41 |
High jump | ![]() | 2.23 | ![]() | 2.20 | ![]() ![]() | 2.15 |
Pole vault | ![]() | 5.60 GR | ![]() | 5.20 | ![]() | 5.20 |
Long jump | ![]() | 8.07 | ![]() | 8.02 | ![]() | 7.77 |
Triple jump | ![]() | 16.56 | ![]() | 16.45 | ![]() | 16.13 |
Shot put | ![]() | 18.70 | ![]() | 18.50 | ![]() | 17.43 |
Discus throw | ![]() | 60.08 | ![]() | 55.88 | ![]() | 55.74 |
Hammer throw | ![]() | 79.68 GR | ![]() | 72.17 | ![]() | 68.55 |
Javelin throw | ![]() | 81.55 GR | ![]() | 76.36 | ![]() | 71.44 |
Decathlon | ![]() | 7567 | ![]() | 7536 | ![]() | 7416 |
Women
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 metres | ![]() | 11.48 | ![]() | 11.58 | ![]() | 11.71 |
200 metres | ![]() | 22.87 GR | ![]() | 23.39 | ![]() | 23.69 |
400 metres | ![]() | 52.31 GR | ![]() | 52.39 | ![]() | 52.95 NR |
800 metres | ![]() | 2:03.21 | ![]() | 2:03.43 | ![]() | 2:08.98 |
1500 metres | ![]() | 4:12.13 | ![]() | 4:16.09 | ![]() | 4:21.81 |
5000 metres | ![]() | 15:32.71 GR | ![]() | 15:44.51 | ![]() | 15:47.02 |
10,000 metres | ![]() | 32:30.35 | ![]() | 32:36.15 | ![]() | 32:47.21 |
100 metre hurdles | ![]() | 13.12 GR | ![]() | 13.33 | ![]() | 13.48 PB |
400 metre hurdles † | ![]() | 56.43 | ![]() | 56.94 | ![]() | 57.33 NR |
4×100 metre relay | ![]() Zeng Xiujun Liu Xiaomei Qin Wangping Li Xuemei | 44.08 GR | ![]() | 44.24 | Only two starters | |
4×400 metre relay | ![]() Yan Jiankui Li Yulian Chen Yuxiang Bu Fanfang | 3:30.51 GR | ![]() Miho Sugimori Kazue Kakinuma Sakie Nobuoka Makiko Yoshida | 3:33.06 NR | ![]() | 3:50.89 |
Half marathon | ![]() | 1:11:18 GR | ![]() | 1:13:31 | ![]() | 1:13:53 |
20 km walk | ![]() | 1:32:06 GR | ![]() | 1:32:31 | ![]() | 1:35:36 |
High jump | ![]() | 1.92 GR | ![]() | 1.90 | ![]() | 1.80 |
Pole vault | ![]() | 4.20 | ![]() | 4.05 | ![]() | 4.05 |
Long jump | ![]() | 6.61 GR | ![]() | 6.52 PB | ![]() | 6.38 w |
Triple jump | ![]() | 13.80 | ![]() | 13.51 | ![]() | 13.20 |
Shot put | ![]() | 18.47 | ![]() | 18.07 | ![]() | 16.92 |
Discus throw | ![]() | 60.99 | ![]() | 55.28 | ![]() | 50.87 |
Hammer throw † | ![]() | 63.98 | ![]() | 63.12 | ![]() | 60.27 |
Javelin throw | ![]() | 61.10 | ![]() | 56.61 | ![]() | 55.13 |
Heptathlon | ![]() | 6078 GR | ![]() | 5597 | Only two finishers |
- Events marked † were won by Australian guest athletes:
- Men's 1500 m – Clinton Mackevicius in 3:44.87
- Women's 400 m hurdles – Sonia Brito with 56.17 m
- Women's hammer – Bronwyn Eagles with 67.08 m
Medal table
* Host nation (Japan)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() | 27 | 12 | 10 | 49 |
2 | ![]() | 11 | 22 | 18 | 51 |
3 | ![]() | 5 | 5 | 6 | 16 |
4 | ![]() | 1 | 4 | 4 | 9 |
5 | ![]() | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 |
6 | ![]() | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
![]() | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Totals (7 nations) | 45 | 44 | 43 | 132 |
References
- General
- East Asian Games. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-25). Day One of the East Asian Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-25). Day two of the East Asian Games in Osaka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Sato, Shigemi (2001-5-27). Ma's protege wins second gold at East Asian Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-28). Day three of the East Asian Games in Osaka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-28). Day Four of the East Asian Games in Osaka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Specific
- East Asian Games. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.
- Nakamura, Ken (2001-05-28). Day three of the East Asian Games in Osaka. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-02-28.