Athletics at the 2002 West Asian Games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Athletics
at the 2002 West Asian Games
VenueKAAF Stadium
Date10–12 April 2002
← 1997
2005 →

At the 2002 West Asian Games. the athletics events were held in Kuwait City, Kuwait in April 2002. It had a men's only programme containing seventeen track and field events. Several athletics events usually held at multi-sport events were excluded from the schedule: the steeplechase, 10,000 metres, javelin and discus throws, marathon and race walking events were all absent.

All of the twelve countries present at the games sent athletes to compete in the athletics and eight of them reached the medal table. Qatar finished with the most medals, taking seven gold medals in a haul of sixteen. Saudi Arabia were the next best with five golds and fourteen overall, while the hosts Kuwait took third in the table through their four golds from eleven medals in total. These three countries dominated the events, with Jean-Claude Rabbath's gold for Lebanon and Ali Feizi's silver for Iran being the only top two placings among the rest of the nations.

Some of the best results came from the sprinting events: Salem Al-Yami won the 100 metres in a Saudi Arabian record time of 10.13 seconds, while Fawzi Al-Shammari did a 200/400 metres double, breaking the Kuwaiti national record with a run of 45.25 seconds in the latter.[1] Qatari athletes won six of the nine medals on offer in the middle- and long-distance running events. Qatar also won both of the throwing events, including Bilal Saad Mubarak's shot put victory in 19.10 metres. Saudi Arabia swept the hurdles through Mubarak Ata Mubarak and Hadi Soua'an Al-Somaily with times of 13.60 and 49.04 seconds, respectively – a good standard for the region.

A number of West Asian Games champions went on to win at the 2002 Asian Games later that year: Fawzi Al-Shammari won the 400 m, Hadi Soua'an Al-Somaily won the 400 m hurdles, Khamis Abdullah Saifeldin won the 3000 m steeplechase and Salem Al-Ahmedi won the triple jump. Further to this, West Asian silver medallists Jamal Al-Saffar and Mukhlid Al-Otaibi topped the podium at the Asian Games and Hussein Al-Sabee (third in the long jump here) was another Asian Games champion.[2] Many athletes were also medallists at the 2002 Asian Athletics Championships held in August later that year.

Medalists[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 m Salem Al-Yami
 Saudi Arabia
10.13
GR
Jamal Al-Saffar
 Saudi Arabia
10.19 Khalid Al-Obaidli
 Qatar
10.39
200 m Fawzi Al-Shammari
 Kuwait
20.44
GR
Salem Al-Yami
 Saudi Arabia
20.81 Mohamed Al-Houti
 Oman
21.02
400 m Fawzi Al-Shammari
 Kuwait
45.25
GR
Hamdan Al-Bishi
 Saudi Arabia
46.34 Mohammed Al-Muwalid
 Saudi Arabia
48.13
800 m Adam Abdu Adam
 Qatar
1:48.66
GR
Salem Amer Al-Badri
 Qatar
1:49.70 Jalil Gomehei
 Iran
1:49.81
1500 m Abubaker Ali Kamal
 Qatar
3:51.50
GR
Abdulrahman Suleiman
 Qatar
3:51.76 Faisal Al-Nahli
 Saudi Arabia
3:52.63
5000 m Khamis Abdullah Saifeldin
 Qatar
13:57.25
GR
Mukhlid Al-Otaibi
 Saudi Arabia
13:57.58 Ahmed Ibrahim Warsama
 Qatar
14:08.84
110 m hurdles Mubarak Ata Mubarak
 Saudi Arabia
13.60 Nasser Meziane
 Qatar
14.02 Mubarak Khasif
 Qatar
14.17
400 m hurdles Hadi Soua'an Al-Somaily
 Saudi Arabia
49.04
GR
Bader Al-Fulaij
 Kuwait
49.58 Zahirudin Al-Najem
 Syria
51.15
4 × 100 m relay  Saudi Arabia
Salem Al-Yami
Jamal Al-Saffar
Khalifa Al-Saker
Mubarak Ata Mubarak
39.02
GR
 Qatar 39.10  Kuwait
Abdullah Sekin
Ibrahim Al-Asak
Saad Al-Zaferi
Husein Al-Youhah
41.10
4 × 400 m relay  Kuwait
Fawzi Al-Shammari
Khaled Al-Johar
Bader Al-Fulaij
Basil Al-Fadhli
3:06.51
GR
 Saudi Arabia
Hadi Soua'an Al-Somaily
Hamdan Al-Bishi
Mohammed Al-Muwalid
Bilal Al-Houssaoui
3:06.57  Syria 3:11.75
High jump Jean-Claude Rabbath
 Lebanon
2.10
=GR
Omar Al-Masrahi
 Saudi Arabia
2.07 Salem Al-Anezi
 Kuwait
2.07
Pole vault Fahad Al-Mershad
 Kuwait
4.90
GR
Abdulla Ghanim Saeed
 Qatar
4.80 Pendar Shoghian
 Iran
4.50
Long jump Said Mansoor
 Qatar
7.61
GR
Al-Waleed Abdulla
 Qatar
7.57 Hussein Al-Sabee
 Saudi Arabia
7.55
Triple jump Salem Al-Ahmedi
 Saudi Arabia
16.50 Khaled Al-Bakheet
 Kuwait
16.36 Fayez Al-Kheirat
 Syria
15.96
Shot put Bilal Saad Mubarak
 Qatar
19.10
GR
Ahmad Gholoum
 Kuwait
18.04 Ali Rahmani
 Iran
17.58
Hammer throw Mohamed Faraj Al-Kaabi
 Qatar
66.34
GR
Ali Al-Zenkawi
 Kuwait
66.01 Naser Al-Jarallah
 Kuwait
64.54
Decathlon Ahmad Hassan Moussa
 Qatar
7262
GR
Ali Feizi
 Iran
6838 Khalifa Isa Abdullah
 Bahrain
5682

Medal table[edit]

Mukhlid Al-Otaibi (pictured at the 2008 Olympics) won the 5000 metres silver medal for Saudi Arabia.
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Qatar (QAT)76316
2 Saudi Arabia (KSA)56314
3 Kuwait (KUW)44311
4 Lebanon (LIB)1001
5 Iran (IRI)0134
6 Syria (SYR)0033
7 Bahrain (BRN)0011
 Oman (OMA)0011
Totals (8 entries)17171751

References[edit]

  1. ^ Big-time athletics comes to Sri Lanka – Asian Championships Preview. IAAF (2002-08-06). Retrieved on 2013-04-07.
  2. ^ 2002 Asian Games Official Report, Pages 112–172 Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine. Asian Games. Retrieved on 2013-04-07.

External links[edit]