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Athletics at the 2013 Asian Youth Games

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Host city
  
Nanjing, China

Main stadium
  
Olympic Sports Center

Date(s)
  
19–22 August

Events
  
34

Athletics at the 2013 Asian Youth Games

Participation
  
376 athletes from 37 nations

At the 2013 Asian Youth Games, the athletics events were held in Nanjing, Jiangsu province in China from 19–22 August. A total of 34 events were contested, split evenly between the sexes. The Nanjing Olympic Sports Center was the host stadium for the athletics – this was the venue's second hosting of a multi-sport event after the 2005 National Games of China.

Contents

The events attracted average crowds of 20,000 people per day to the stadium. The competition was open to any youth athletes aged fifteen or sixteen. It was part of the buildup to the 2014 Youth Olympics, to be held at the same location. A total of 376 athletes from 37 nations participated at the event. Indian athletes were entered as Independent Olympic Participants due to the suspension of the Indian Olympic Association. Poor organisation between the Athletics Federation of India and the national association meant the country sent eighteen athletes who was born before 1997 and could not compete due to their being over the age limit. One of Myanmar's two entrants was dismissed for the same reason.

The host nation China easily topped the medal table, taking over half the available gold medals (18) and ending the competition with a total of 33 medals. Japan won the next most gold medals with four in their haul of nine medals. Third and fourth placers Thailand and Chinese Taipei shared the second largest medal hauls, each having three golds in their totals of eleven medals. Sri Lanka entered ten athletes, four of them won a medal for their country. Three of North Korea's four entrants also won a medal. Eighteen teams reached the medal table.

Chinese sprinter Hang Guifen was the only athlete to win two gold medals, having won the girl's 200 metres and 400 metres events. Japan's Yume Ando was a double silver medallist in the boy's throws (discus and shot put) and Nutthapong Veeravongratanasiri of Thailand was runner-up in both the boy's short sprints. A fourth multiple medallist was Iranian Ata Asadi who reached the podium in both middle-distance running events. The standard of performances was much higher than the inaugural edition in 2009 and only ten of the games records from that event went unbeaten. Twenty-six new games records were set, with eight new events being introduced (200 m, 3000 metres, 2000 m steeplechase and hammer throw for both sexes).

The team of athletics officials was led by Singapore's Maurice R. Nicholas, one of the country's top coaches. An anti-doping programme was led by Japan's Fumihiro Yamasawa.

Several athletes who competed at the 2013 World Youth Championships in Athletics a month previously were present at the games.

100 m

Final

20 August

200 m

Final

22 August

400 m

20 August

1500 m

20 August

3000 m

22 August

2000 m steeplechase

21 August

High jump

22 August

Pole vault

19 August

Triple jump

21 August

Shot put

19 August

Discus throw

22 August

Hammer throw

20 August

Javelin throw

19 August

100 m

Final

20 August

200 m

Final

22 August

1500 m

20 August

3000 m

22 August

400 m hurdles

22 August

2000 m steeplechase

21 August

High jump

19 August

Pole vault

20 August

Triple jump

22 August

Shot put

21 August

Discus throw

22 August

Hammer throw

20 August

Javelin throw

21 August

References

Athletics at the 2013 Asian Youth Games Wikipedia