1988 Arab Junior Athletics Championships

3rd Arab Junior Athletics Championships
Host city Damascus, Syria
Events 41


The 1988 Arab Junior Athletics Championships was the third edition of the international athletics competition for under-20 athletes from Arab countries. It took place in Damascus, Syria – the first time the event was staged in West Asia. A total of 41 athletics events were contested, 23 for men and 18 for women. Morocco, a regional power in the sport, did not send a team. Syria entered for the first time.[1]

Several changes were made to the event programme, bringing it into line with the standard set by the 1988 World Junior Championships in Athletics. The men's 30 km road race was changed to a 20 km distance. The 15 km road walk was replaced by a 10,000 m track walk. The steeplechase distance was also extended from 2000 to 3000 m. Two new women's events were added: a 10,000 metres and a 5000 km track walk. The women's walk pre-dated the introduction of such an event at either the Arab Athletics Championships (1989) or the Pan Arab Games (1992), making it a first for the region.[2][3]

The medal table was close, with Algeria, Syria and Tunisia each winning seven gold medals. Tunisia topped the table through their eight silver medals to Syria's six. Egypt was also close behind with six gold medals and nine silver medals. Jordan and Oman won their first gold medals in the competition's history.[1]

Ibrahim Ismail Muftah was the most successful athlete of the championships, winning all three individual men's sprints.[1] He was an Olympic finalist the following year.[4] Noureddine Morceli of Algeria, winner of the 1500 metres, was the most important athlete to emerge from the tournament: we would later win three world titles and an Olympic gold in his specialism.[5] Men's shot put winner Bilal Saad Mubarak of Qatar become one of the finest throwers of the region: he was in the top two at the Asian Athletics Championships from 1991 to 2003 and won three straight titles at the Pan Arab Games.[2][6] Sherif Farouk El Hennawi of Egypt was a clear winner in the hammer throw and would win several African titles in his career. Double long-distance medallist Alyan Sultan Al-Qahtani later won an Asian title.[6]

On the women's side, Hend Kebaoui defended her 400 metres hurdles title and added a 400 metres gold medal and 100 metres silver to that honour. Egypt's Huda Hashem Ismail won both the 100 metres hurdles and heptathlon titles (repeating the feat of Yasmina Azzizi from 1984). Karima Meskin Saad was a medallist in all the women's sprints. All of these athletes won multiple regional titles in their senior careers.[1][3]

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Ibrahim Ismail Muftah (QAT) 10.3  Shaker Marzouk (BHR) 10.4  Fouad Johar (BHR) 10.6
200 metres  Ibrahim Ismail Muftah (QAT) 21.0  Shaker Marzouk (BHR) 21.9  Fouad Johar (BHR) 22.2
400 metres  Ibrahim Ismail Muftah (QAT) 47.1  Sulaiman Jumaa (OMN) 47.9  Amer Zafar (KSA) 48.5
800 metres  Jihad Al-Balawi (JOR) 1:53.2  Abdullah Al-Kobeiri (OMN) 1:53.9  Lyes El Mazzini (TUN) 1:54.4
1500 metres  Noureddine Morceli (ALG) 3:48.8  Lyes El Mazzini (TUN) 3:56.8  Jihad Al-Balawi (JOR) 3:57.2
5000 metres  Alyan Sultan Al-Qahtani (KSA) 15:05.7  Fakhreddine Damerji (TUN) 15:14.1  Anwar Al-Harazi (YAR) 15:50.2
10,000 metres  Moussa Al-Hariri (SYR) 31:23.3  Fakhreddine Damerji (TUN) 32:20.5  Abdulhamid Abdou (SYR) 33:21.5
110 m hurdles  Fouad Saleh Ghanem (BHR) 14.1  Ziad Al-Khader (KUW) 14.3  Amine Hacini (ALG) 14.7
400 m hurdles  Fouad Saleh Ghanem (BHR) 52.8  Amine Hacini (ALG) 54.3  Saleh Abdullah (BHR) 54.9
3000 metres steeplechase  Tahar Mohamed (ALG) 8:57.9  Alyan Sultan Al-Qahtani (KSA) 9:15.7  Hamed Naceur (TUN) 9:26.0
4×100 m relay  Bahrain (BHR) 41.8  Kuwait (KUW) 42.1  Qatar (QAT) 42.2
4×400 m relay  Oman (OMN) 3:17.2  Bahrain (BHR) 3:18.9  Qatar (QAT) 3:18.9
20 km road race  Moussa Al-Hariri (SYR) 1:04:43  Saad Sulaiman (KSA) 1:08:08  Saleh Al-Outaibi (KSA) 1:11:07
10,000 m walk  Hasni Bouzekri (ALG) 49:07.1  Mohammed Saoud (SYR) 51:47.5  Majid Turki (SYR) 52:56.1
High jump  Abdullah Saleh (KSA) 2.03 m  Saleh Zaid Al-Mass (BHR) 2.00 m  Mohamed Haddad (ALG) 2.00 m
Pole vault  Sameh Hassan Farid (EGY) 4.10 m  Ahmed Hamdan (KUW) 4.05 m  Jamal Al-Maai (QAT) 3.90 m
Long jump  Fouad Saleh Ghanem (BHR) 7.19 m  Mohammed Al-Outaibi (KUW) 7.17 m  Nadir Si Mohamed (ALG) 7.09 m
Triple jump  Kader Klouchi (ALG) 15.56 m  Saleh Zaid Al-Mass (BHR) 15.14 m  Youssef Naïli (TUN) 14.98 m
Shot put  Bilal Saad Mubarak (QAT) 15.55 m  Hussain Ali Al-Saeed (KUW) 15.41 m  Malek Tamran (KUW) 14.42 m
Discus throw  Malek Tamran (KUW) 44.94 m  Badr Rashid (QAT) 43.88 m  Sherif Mohamed Abderrahim (EGY) 43.84 m
Hammer throw  Sherif Farouk El Hennawi (EGY) 64.84 m  Adel Katami (QAT) 53.04 m  Magdi Zakaria Abdallah (EGY) 51.64 m
Javelin throw  Ahmed Houri (SYR) 62.84 m  Maher Ridane (TUN) 59.78 m  Saleh Khalaf (KUW) 58.04 m
Decathlon  Zakaria Zarzour (SYR) 6438 pts  Issam Mohamed El Azzazi (EGY) 5927 pts  Majdal Al-Bek (SYR) 4968 pts

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres  Nadia Abdou (ALG) 12.1  Hend Kebaoui (TUN) 12.2  Karima Miskin Saad (EGY) 12.5
200 metres  Nadia Abdou (ALG) 24.9  Karima Miskin Saad (EGY) 25.0  Samia Sassi (TUN) 26.0
400 metres  Hend Kebaoui (TUN) 55.8  Karima Miskin Saad (EGY) 57.9  Hasna Dhébaïbi (TUN) 60.7
800 metres  Maha Herzallah (JOR) 2:20.5  Sonia Makni (TUN) 2:24.5  Hasna Dhébaïbi (TUN) 2:30.0
1500 metres  Houda Chabbouh (TUN) 4:41.9  Maha Herzallah (JOR) 5:05.5  Nada Ayach (SYR) 5:17.4
3000 metres  Houda Chabbouh (TUN) 10:33.8  Amira Yousef (SYR) 10:44.3  Nada Ayach (SYR) 11:54.7
10,000 metres  Amira Yousef (SYR) 42:26.4  Rola Sannoufi (SYR) 48:46.0  Asma Al-Arabi (TUN) 53:23.3
100 m hurdles  Huda Hashem Ismail (EGY) 14.8  Badia Ali Abdessamia (EGY) 15.5  Fazia Gaouaoui (ALG) 15.8
400 m hurdles  Hend Kebaoui (TUN) 60.3  Samia Sassi (TUN) 65.2  Mouna Ayach (SYR) 74.9
4×100 m relay  Tunisia (TUN) 49.2  Egypt (EGY) 49.9  Syria (SYR) 52.0
4×400 m relay  Tunisia (TUN) 3:54.0  Egypt (EGY) 4:02.7  Syria (SYR) 4:13.4
5000 m walk  Amira Yousef (SYR) 27:50.8  Amani Mohamed Adel (EGY) 28:57.1  Firial Odesho (SYR) 29:33.2
High jump  Badia Ali Abdessamia (EGY) 1.51 m  Haifa Abbas (SYR) 1.51 m  Mountaha Mohammed (JOR) 1.45 m
Long jump  Nadia Abdou (ALG) 5.73 m  Basma Fkih (TUN) 5.36 m  Hala Saka (SYR) 5.24 m
Shot put  Lamia Naouara (TUN) 12.38 m  Lina Hazouri (SYR) 10.82 m  Shaala Ramash (SYR) 9.45 m
Discus throw  Lina Hazouri (SYR) 39.02 m  Rida Mahmoud Farghali (EGY) 35.38 m  Douha Al-Shoufi (SYR) 25.78 m
Javelin throw  Maya Ali Abdessamad (EGY) 32.90 m  Lina Hazouri (SYR) 32.42 m  Roueida Fadel (SYR) 20.44 m
Heptathlon  Huda Hashem Ismail (EGY) 4323 pts  Badia Ali Abdessamia (EGY) 3773 pts  Nadima Hussain (PLE) 2665 pts

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Pan Arab Junior Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
  2. 1 2 Pan Arab Games. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
  3. 1 2 Pan Arab Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
  4. Ibrahim Ismail. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
  5. Noureddine Morceli. IAAF. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
  6. 1 2 Asian Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2015-02-22.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.