Huang Qiuyan: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
GrouchoBot (talk | contribs)
m robot Adding: pl:Huang Qiuyan
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Chinese name|[[Huang]]}}
{{Chinese name|[[Huang]]}}


'''Huang Qiuyan''' ({{zh-s|黄秋艳}}, born [[January 5]], [[1980]])<ref>http://www.iaaf.org/athletes/biographies/letter=0/athcode=131257/index.html</ref> is a [[PR China|Chinese]] [[triple jump]]er.
'''Huang Qiuyan''' ({{zh-stp|s=黄秋艳|t=黃秋艷|p=Huáng Qiūyàn}}; born [[January 5]], [[1980]])<ref>http://www.iaaf.org/athletes/biographies/letter=0/athcode=131257/index.html</ref> is a [[PR China|Chinese]] [[triple jump]]er.
Huang holds the current Asian record<ref>[http://www.iaaf.org/statistics/records/gender=W/location=O/recordsType=AR/eventCatCode=/junior=N/area=ASI/index.html Area Outdoor Records - Women - Asia] (IAAF)</ref> in triple jump with 14.72 metres. The result was achieved in [[Guangzhou]] on 22 November 2001.
Huang holds the current Asian record<ref>[http://www.iaaf.org/statistics/records/gender=W/location=O/recordsType=AR/eventCatCode=/junior=N/area=ASI/index.html Area Outdoor Records - Women - Asia] (IAAF)</ref> in triple jump with 14.72 metres. The result was achieved in [[Guangzhou]] on 22 November 2001.
Line 63: Line 63:
[[Category:1980 births]]
[[Category:1980 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Chinese triple jumpers]]
[[Category:Athletes at the 2004 Summer Olympics]]
[[Category:Athletes at the 2004 Summer Olympics]]
[[Category:Chinese triple jumpers]]
[[Category:Olympic athletes of China]]
[[Category:Olympic athletes of China]]



Revision as of 02:31, 12 July 2009

Template:Chinese name

Huang Qiuyan (simplified Chinese: 黄秋艳; traditional Chinese: 黃秋艷; pinyin: Huáng Qiūyàn; born January 5, 1980)[1] is a Chinese triple jumper.

Huang holds the current Asian record[2] in triple jump with 14.72 metres. The result was achieved in Guangzhou on 22 November 2001.

Achievements

Year Tournament Venue Result Extra
2002 Asian Games Busan, South Korea 1st [3]
2003 World Championships Paris, France 13th
Asian Championships Manila, Philippines 1st
2004 Olympic Games Athens, Greece 12th
2005 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 9th
Asian Championships Incheon, South Korea 3rd
East Asian Games Macau, Macau 1st [4]

References