2000 Arab Junior Athletics Championships Explained

9th Arab Junior Athletics Championships
Host City:Damascus, Syria
Events:42
Previous:1998 Damascus
Next:2002 Cairo

The 2000 Arab Junior Athletics Championships was the ninth edition of the international athletics competition for under-20 athletes from Arab countries. It took place in Damascus, Syria – the second consecutive time the city hosted the tournament, and a sixth hosting for Syria. A total of 42 athletics events were contested, 22 for men and 20 for women. Neither Morocco, Algeria nor Qatar—all regional powers in the sport—sent a team to the meeting, which impacted the overall quality of performances.[1]

Egypt topped the table with nineteen gold medals, having won the majority of the women's events. Saudi Arabia was runner-up with ten gold medals – all were in the men's section, reflecting the nation's ban on women athletes.[2] The hosts, Syria, placed third with their six gold medals. Lebanon won its first gold medal in the history of the tournament, topping the podium in the women's 4×100 m relay. The women's programme was expanded with the introduction of the hammer throw, bringing the throws events to parity with men. A minority of track finals had times recorded only to a tenth of a second due to technical restrictions.[1]

The foremost athletes to emerge from the competition were among the Saudi contingent. Mubarak Ata Mubarak added an Asian senior title to his 110 metres hurdles gold that same year. Hamdan Al-Bishi and Hamed Al-Bishi both won multiple sprint medals at the Asian Athletics Championships over the following years.[3] Omar Ahmed El Ghazaly of Egypt won the discus here and later won several African titles in that discipline.[4] Mohammad Al-Azemi, only an 800 m runner-up here, went on to a middle-distance double at the 2011 Asian Athletics Championships.[5] Ismail Ahmed Ismail (1500 m) was also a runner-up in Damascus but went on to the greatest honour among the participants by winning Sudan's first Olympic medal in 2008.[6] On the women's side, his fellow Sudanese middle-distance runner Hind Roko Musa, took an Arab junior double. Egypt's Ines Abul Ala Mohamed (sprints) and Maha Mohamed Mohamed (100 m hurdles, high jump, and heptathlon) were other multiple champions at the competition.[1]

Medal summary

Men

100 metres10.6110.6410.65
200 metres21.4021.6621.84
400 metres46.7847.9148.29
800 metres1:49.811:50.991:51.54
1500 metres3:48.303:48.703:51.92
5000 metres14:50.814:56.515:09.6
10,000 metres31:06.5831:08.7831:15.03
110 m hurdles14.03 CR14.9415.37
400 m hurdles51.4651.6152.02
3000 metres steeplechase9:05.489:13.769:33.79
4×100 m relay40.6141.8843.55
4×400 m relay3:08.82 CR3:16.223:22.27
10,000 m walk48:54.149:52.155:58.6
High jump2.05 m2.02 m2.02 m
Pole vault4.30 m4.20 m4.20 m
Long jump7.28 m7.09 m7.05 m
Triple jump15.21 m15.16 m14.46 m
Shot put15.71 m15.41 m14.65 m
Discus throw53.07 m CR50.19 m49.12 m
Hammer throw55.88 m55.67 m51.41 m
Javelin throw65.94 m61.02 m57.14 m
Decathlon5929 pts5838 pts5628 pts

Women

100 metres12.7612.9412.96
200 metres24.60 CR26.2526.96
400 metres56.3360.2261.03
800 metres2:15.962:17.122:21.10
1500 metres4:49.514:51.544:53.28
3000 metres10:32.910:35.110:37.0
5000 metres18:06.4318:10.6919:26.01
100 m hurdles15.015.916.4
400 m hurdles64.6266.2868.65
4×100 m relay51.3952.3753.57
4×400 m relay4:02.134:06.874:28.39
5000 m walk27:07.227:13.631:34.0
High jump1.64 m1.61 m1.45 m
Long jump5.06 m4.95 m4.77 m
Triple jump11.08 m10.80 m10.31 m
Shot put11.98 m11.94 m10.45 m
Discus throw36.83 m31.36 m30.20 m
Hammer throw45.65 m43.86 m30.88 m
Javelin throw42.05 m41.48 m37.20 m
Heptathlon4068 pts3513 pts3346 pts

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/arj.htm Pan Arab Junior Championships
  2. https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2012/aug/08/sarah-attar-saudi-arabia-olympics Sarah Attar is first Saudi Arabian woman in Olympic track and field
  3. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/asc.htm Asian Championships
  4. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/afc.htm African Championships
  5. http://www.iaaf.org/news/news/liu-xiang-clocks-1322-championships-in-kobe- Liu Xiang clocks 13.22 championships in Kobe - Asian champs, final day
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417171054/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/is/ismail-ahmed-ismail-1.html Ismail Ahmed Ismail