Suryo agung wibowo biography of williams
•
26 DAYS COUNTDOWN TO WORLD ATHLETICS UNDER 20 CHAMPIONSHIPS 2021
Lalu Muhammad Zohri is an Indonesian sprinter who was born on July 1, 2000. With a gold medal in the 100m, he becomes the first Indonesian and the only Asian male to win a medal at the IAAF World U20 Championships. He holds the Indonesian national records in the 100m and 200m and is known as the "fastest man in Southeast Asia." Zohri grew up in a house made of wood and woven bamboo in West Pemenang village, Pemenang subdistrict, North Lombok Regency, on the eastern island of Lombok. He is the eldest of four siblings. His mother died when he was a child, and his father died when he was 17 years old. Because he couldn't afford shoes, he had to train barefoot. He was able to persuade his sister to grant him Rp 400,000 (21 Euros) so that he could purchase a pair of spikes for his meetings, despite the fact that the money came partly from his allowance. In a time of 10.27 seconds, he won the 100 meters at the 2018 Asian Junior Athletics Championships in Japan.
In the 100 meters, Zohri represented Indonesia at the 2018 IAAF World U20 Championships. He took first position in the first round with a time of 10.30 seconds. He finished second in the semifinals with a marginally faster time of 10.24, just a fractio
•
Lewis, Pape make memorable Sydney Grand Prix – Athletics Australia – 200 m with Jeremy Wariner
Eight years on from the Olympic Games, track and field returned to its rightful atmosphere of excitement and drama in Sydney on Saturday night. The crowd was abuzz with the performances delivered by Australia’s finest athletes, resulting in two A and nine B-qualifiers for Beijing.
The historians were sent scurrying to the archives following the women’s 800m. Their task: to determine whether two Australians had ever run below two minutes in the same race before.
It was eventually confirmed that it had, but on just one other occasion; Tamsyn Lewis led home Margaret Crowley on the Brisbane warm-up track the week after the 2000 Olympic trials.
And this time it was Lewis again, continuing her fine form this season in holding off a strong run from fellow Victorian Madeleine Pape – 1:59.59 to 1:59.92. Both marks were Olympic A-qualifiers: Lewis’ fifth, but Pape’s first, and under the meet record of 2:00.52 held by the former since 2000.
Lewis followed the pacemaker through a fast first lap of 58 seconds and passed through the 600m mark in 1:28, with Charlene Rendina’s 1976 record of 1:59.0 under threat. It was not to be on this occasion,
•