Body
Contents of this article
- 1.Which one is richer, Qin Fen or Wang Sicong?
- 2.Beijing Asian Games Men’s 100m Champion
- 3. Famous Chinese track and field coach
- 4. List of Shandong athletes for the 14th National Games
Which one is richer, Qin Fen or Wang Sicong?
One is spending his father's money, the other is using his father's money to make money
Beijing Asian Games Men's 100m Champion
Mao Xinyuan, men’s 20-kilometer race walk
Zhou Zhaowen, men’s 50-kilometer race walk
Famous Chinese track and field coach
Feng Shuyong, head coach of the Chinese track and field team.
Chinese name Feng Shuyong
Foreign name Frank
Nationality: People's Republic of China
Ethnicity Han
Birthplace: Tianjin
Date of birth: September 23, 1956
Professional coach
Graduation School Beijing Institute of Physical Education
Main achievements: Leading the delegation to participate in the 11th World Athletics Championships
Going to Shanghai to participate in the Golden Grand Prix
The United States participates in the New York and Eugene Grand Prix
Beijing participates in the Olympic Games
Sports Resume Editor
Athlete of Tianjin Sports Team in September 1973
Feng Shuyong
Coach of Tianjin Sports School in June 1977
Student of the Physical Education Department of Beijing Institute of Physical Education in March 1978
1979 In September 2018, he was a graduate student of the Beijing Institute of Physical Education (track and field teaching and training major)
In August 1982, he was appointed as the assistant coach, coach and deputy head coach of the track and field training team of the former National Sports Commission Training Bureau
In December 1997, he was appointed as the track and field manager of the State Sports General Administration National coach of the management center
In January 2002, he was appointed as the assistant director of the Track and Field Management Center of the State Sports General Administration
In March 2004, he was appointed as the deputy director of the Track and Field Management Center of the State Sports General Administration.
List of Shandong athletes for the 14th National Games
There are too many to count.
Ma John (1882-1966), male, was born in Xiamen City, Fujian Province. Graduated from St. John's University in 1911. From 1919 to 1920 and from 1925 to 1926, he went to Springfield College in the United States to study physical education twice. While studying in college, he was the main force of the school's football, tennis, baseball, and track and field teams. He was good at middle and long-distance running. He won the 880-yard championship and the third place in the 440-yard school joint group of the first National Games in 1910. In 1936, he served as the head coach of the Chinese delegation's track and field team and participated in the 11th Olympic Games held in Berlin. Mr. John Ma served as a teaching assistant, professor, and director of the Physical Education Department at Tsinghua University from 1914 to 1966. In the practice of teaching physical education for 52 years, he has studied the laws of sports, consulted domestic and foreign experience, and compiled nearly a hundred sets of freehand exercises with different contents. He has published "The Transfer Value of Sports" and "Our Response to Sports" Some understanding" and other works. He actively advocated sports throughout his life and enthusiastically guided young people to do physical exercises. He was a role model and highly respected, and was highly valued by the country and respected by the people. He was a representative of the first, second and third National People's Congress. Since 1954, he has served as Chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association and Vice Chairman and Chairman of the All-China Sports Federation.
Xia Xiang (1903-1991), male, was born in Danyang County, Jiangsu Province. He graduated from Southeast University in 1926. From 1941 to 1945, he went to Springfield College, Edward University Research Department, and Columbia University School of Education in the United States for further studies, and received a master's degree in education. He was engaged in track and field sports in his youth. He once set a national record in pole vault and represented China in the 6th, 7th and 8th Far Eastern Games. In 1957, he was one of the first to be awarded the title of national track and field team referee. He is the author of "Track and Field Referee Law", "Long Distance Running Series", etc. Mr. Xia Xiang taught at Tsinghua University from 1933 to 1983, and served successively as lecturer, professor, and director of the Physical Fitness Department. In the 1950s, he concurrently served as Vice Chairman of the Beijing Municipal Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and Deputy Director of the Beijing Municipal Sports Commission. In 1964, he served as Vice Chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association. In 1979, he was elected Vice Chairman of the All-China Sports Federation, Vice Chairman of the Chinese Olympic Committee, and Executive Director of the Chinese Sports Science Society. etc., and won the IAAF Veterans Medal in 1987. In 1983, he was awarded the National Sports Medal of Honor.
Liu Changchun (1909-1983), male, was born in Dalian, Liaoning. He graduated from the Physical Education Department of Northeastern University in 1932 and was good at sprinting. He represented China in the 9th and 10th Far Eastern Games and the 10th and 11th Olympic Games track and field competitions. He is the first athlete from our country to participate in the Olympic Games. In 1933, he set a national 100-meter record of 10.7 seconds at the Nanjing National Games, a record that stood for 25 years. After liberation, Professor Liu Changchun taught at Dalian Institute of Technology for more than 30 years. He was loyal to the party's educational cause, adhered to the spirit of truth-seeking, and published monographs such as "Sprinting". He has successively served as a member of the Fifth National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a member of the Standing Committee of the All-China Sports Federation, vice chairman of the Chinese Olympic Committee, vice chairman of the Liaoning Provincial Sports Association, and a member of the Standing Committee of the Fourth Liaoning Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. Died of illness on March 21, 1983, at the age of 74.
Hu Hongfei (1925--) male, from Shanghai. He has been committed to track and field education for a long time. He once served as the teaching director of Shanghai Nan District Amateur Sports School, a member of the Standing Committee of Shanghai Nan District People's Congress, and the vice chairman of Shanghai Track and Field Association. He has been a coach since 1958 and trained Zhu Jianhua, an outstanding athlete who set the men's high jump world record three times (2.37m, 2.38m, 2.39m). He is a Shanghai model worker and a national advanced amateur coach. In 1981, he was named a national coach. . Won the "National Sports Honor" medal many times. Named the best coach in the country in 1984. Bold and innovative in training and unique. He put forward the dominant idea of "centering on speed and striving to balance with technical strength"; technically put forward the theory of "combination of fast run-up and quick take-off", and wrote "Zhu Jianhua's Quick Run-up and Quick Take-off Technology" and so on. In November 1995, the Chinese Athletics Association awarded Hu Hongfei the title of "Excellent Coach with Outstanding Contribution to my country's Track and Field Industry".
Huang Jian (1927--) male, from Zhongshan, Guangdong. He was sent to the Soviet Union by the party organization to study at an early age. He graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physical Education of the Soviet Union in 1950. He returned to China in 1951 and worked in the Sports Teaching and Research Section of Renmin University of China. He has been the coach and head coach of the national track and field team since 1953, and has trained outstanding high jump athletes such as Zheng Fengrong, Ni Zhiqin, Zheng Dazhen and Yang Wenqin. Among them, Zheng Fengrong and Ni Zhiqin once broke the men's high jump world record. Since 1984, he has served as Vice Chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association. In 1978, he won the "Sports Honor" medal issued by the National Sports Commission. In 1979, he won the title of national coach, and in the same year he was appointed vice chairman of the All-China Sports Federation. In 1978 and 1983, he served as a member of the fifth and sixth National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He has twice been rated as an outstanding coach and awarded by the Asian Athletics Federation. In 1987, he was awarded the Outstanding Track and Field Worker Award by the IAAF. In 1988, the National Sports Commission awarded him the outstanding coach in the 40 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China.
Zhang Shiheng (1931--) male, born in Tianjin. He graduated from Harbin International Studies University in 1951 and was assigned to the Ministry of Aviation Industry as secretary and translator. In 1955, he participated in the National Workers' Games and won the championship in the 200 meters and the runner-up in the 400 meters. He was transferred to the National Sports Commission's Athletic Director Section to become a sprinter. In 1956, he represented Beijing in the National Track and Field Games and broke the national record in the 4X400m relay. From 1957 to 1973, he served as the sprint coach of the national track and field team. He trained outstanding sprinters such as Chen Jiaquan, Jiang Yumin, and He Zufen, and was rated as a national track and field coach. He has successively served as Director of the Athletics Department of the Third Division, Secretary-General and Vice Chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association, member of the Chinese Olympic Committee, technical officer of the IAAF, and member of the Asian Athletics Technical Committee; concurrently served as Chairman of "Athletics" magazine, deputy editor-in-chief of "Athletics News", Visiting professor of Wuhan Institute of Physical Education, etc. He participated in the writing of "Encyclopedia of China. Sports" and "Advanced Course on Track and Field Sports", and presided over the compilation of "History of Chinese Track and Field Sports". In 1987, he won the IAAF Outstanding Track and Field Worker Medal, and in 1990, he was awarded the 11th Asian Games Honorary Award by the IAAF.
Wang Kui (1931--) male, from Xinmin, Liaoning. Vice Chairman of the Chinese Race Walking Association, national coach, and coach of the Liaoning Provincial Race Walking Team. After graduating from Shenyang Institute of Physical Education in 1961, he engaged in education. From 1973 to 1977, he served as the middle and long-distance running coach. In 1978, the Liaoning Race Walking Team was established and trained world-class female race walkers such as Chen Yueling, Jin Bingjie, and Wang Yan. Since 1984, he has won the "Sports Medal of Honor" issued by the National Sports Commission several times. In 1989, he was selected as one of China's 40 outstanding coaches in the 40 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China. During the Sixth National Games, Wang Kui was selected as the "Top 20 Best Coaches in the Country" since the Third Plenary Session of the Eleventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China sponsored by the Sports Newspaper and won the "Red Rock" Cup. In 1987, he was awarded the "IAAF Medal" by the IAAF.
Yang Chuanguang (1933--), male, is from Taitung County, Taiwan Province, of the Gaoshan ethnic group. He graduated from the Physical Education Department of the University of California, USA in 1964. In 1952, he won the decathlon championship in the 2nd Asian Games with 5454 points. In the 16th Olympic Games in 1956, he finished eighth in the decathlon. In 1958, he won the championship again at the 3rd Asian Games and created the highest score in Asia of 7107. In early 1960, he broke the decathlon world record with 8426 points, and then won the silver medal with 8334 points at the 17th Olympic Games. This is the first time a Chinese has won a medal at the Olympics. In April 1963, he set a world record of 9121 points (8009 points according to the 1985 scoring scale) at the International Decathlon Competition held at St. Anne's University in California, USA. In the same year he was named the "Best Athlete in the World". Since the late 1960s, Yang Chuanguang has been coaching the Taiwan track and field team for a long time. In 1990, he led the Taipei team to participate in the track and field competition of the 11th Asian Games in Beijing.
Lou Dapeng (1936--) male, native of Ningbo, Zhejiang. He lived in the UK since childhood, returned to his motherland in 1953, and graduated from the Mechanical Department of Beijing Iron and Steel Institute in 1959. He was an excellent hurdler in college and broke the national record in the men's 200-meter low hurdles with a time of 25.2 seconds. From 1959 to 1966, he taught in the Physical Education and Research Section of Beijing Iron and Steel Institute, and later transferred to the National Sports Commission, where he served successively as deputy director of the International Department, deputy director of the Third Training and Competition Department, vice chairman and chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association. Since the 1980s, he has served as the vice-president of the Asian Athletics Federation and concurrently as the director of the race walking and technical committees, a director of the IAAF, and the vice-president of the Asian Federation of Individual Sports Federations. He has won the IAAF Veteran Medal and the National Sports Medal of Honor issued by the National Sports Commission (one of the collective award members of the China Olympic Working Group).
Zheng Fengrong (1937-) female, from Jinan, Shandong. In 1953, he represented the Shandong team in the first track and field games in East China and won second place in the high jump and first place in the long jump. In the same year, he was selected into the national track and field team. In 1954, she broke the national record for women's high jump with a height of 1.45 meters. On November 17, 1957, she broke the women's high jump world record of 1.76 meters held by American athlete M. McDaniel with a height of 1.77 meters. In 1959, he was awarded the "Sports Medal of Honor" by the National Sports Commission. In 1969, he was elected as a representative of the Third National People's Congress. In 1978 and 1983, he served as a member of the fifth and sixth National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. In 1984, he was named one of the outstanding athletes in the 35 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China. In 1989, he was named one of the outstanding athletes in the 40 years since the founding of the People's Republic of China. He currently serves as Vice Chairman of the Chinese Athletics Association and Deputy Secretary-General of the All-China Sports Federation.
Male from Maode Town (1937--), a native of Dalian City, Liaoning Province. He was a national track and field team runner in the late 1950s. He later returned to Dalian Amateur Sports School to work as a coach and trained outstanding athletes such as Mu Weiguo and Sun Ripeng. At a critical moment, he stepped forward and took on the coaching work of Wang Junxia, the two world record holder in 3000 meters and 3000 meters. After hard work, Wang Junxia's ability gradually recovered from a low state and gradually reached a high level. Won gold and silver medals in the 5000m and 5000m at the 26th Olympic Games.
Chen Jiaquan (1938-) male, from Wanxian County, Chongqing. From 1959 to 1965, he broke the 100-meter national record six times. On October 24, 1965, he participated in the second National Games report and exhibition competition in Sichuan Province. In the final, he tied the men's record set by Harry of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1960 by 10 seconds. 100m world record. He was included in the French "Sports Encyclopedia" in 1973 and listed as a character introduction. In 1977, the British "Encyclopedia of Athletics" listed his time of 10 seconds in the world record. Later he served as the sprint coach of the national track and field team.
Kong Xiangding (1938--), male, was born in Peixian County, Jiangsu Province. In August 1958, he entered Nanjing Institute of Physical Education and was engaged in javelin throw training. In June 1960, he joined the national track and field team and became a javelin throw athlete. Since 1970, he has been the javelin coach of the national team and has trained a number of outstanding javelin throwers such as Shen Maomao, Li Baolian, Zhang Lianbiao, and Pubu Tsering. Among them, Xu Demei won the women's javelin throw championship at the 3rd World Athletics Championships in 1991. In 1992, he was awarded the Sports Medal of Honor. National level coach.
He Zengsheng (1938--) male, from Hebei. Graduated from Baoding Sports School. Since 1973, she has served as the women's shot put coach of the Hebei Provincial Sports Team, and has trained outstanding athletes such as Li Meisu who has reached the world's advanced level and Yang Yanqin, the runner-up of the World University Games. He has served as the leader of the national sports team and the head coach of the women's shot put team. He has served as the coach of the Chinese track and field team in many world competitions. Won the "Sports Medal of Honor" of the People's Republic of China, the Advanced Individual in Political and Ideological Work of the National Outstanding Sports Team, and the Outstanding Intellectual of Hebei Province. In 1987, he won the Asia's Best Coach Award and the "IAAF Certificate". He is currently the vice chairman of the Hebei Provincial Athletics Association, a member of the Provincial Political Consultative Conference, and the deputy director of the Coaching Committee of the Chinese Athletics Association.
Liu Xuchang (1939--), male, was born in Baoding City, Hebei Province. In 1958, he was selected as a race walker of Shandong Province, reaching the standard of an athlete and breaking national records many times. He graduated from the Sports Department of Shanghai Institute of Physical Education in 1967 and was assigned to be a physical education teacher in Jinan No. 1 Middle School. In September 1978, he was transferred to the race walking coach of the Shandong Provincial Track and Field Team and has successively trained outstanding race walkers such as Guan Ping, Li Sujie, and Mao Xinyuan. Among them, Guan Ping and Li Sujie won the World Cup race walking team championship twice and broke world records a total of 8 times. In 1987, he won the "IAAF Certificate of Merit" issued by the IAAF. Currently, he is a senior track and field coach at Shandong Sports Technology College.
Huang Taisen (1940--) was born in Sichuan Province, male. Women's sprint coach of Sichuan Province. The athlete he trained, Gao Han, cooperated with his teammates in 1992 and won the 6th World Cup Women's 4X100m Relay Championship and won the Sports Medal of Honor awarded by the National Sports Commission. Hu Zurong (1940--) male, native of Shanghai. In April 1962, he broke the men's pole vault national record held by Cai Yishu with a score of 4.52 meters. In 1964, with a score of 4.58 meters, he became the highest jumper using metal poles in the history of Asian pole vaulting. Won the championship in the first Emerging Power Games and the second Games. Since 1965, the national record has been updated five times, with the highest result reaching 4.90 meters. Unfortunately, he was injured and disabled during training in 1971. After that, he collected and consulted a large amount of domestic and foreign sports materials, combined with his personal experience, wrote two books, "1400 Examples of Physical Training" and "Pole Vault", and drew thousands of sketches of technical movements by himself. . In 1980, he was commended by the National Sports Commission and awarded the "Sports Medal of Honor" by Vice Premier Wan Li himself. In October 1983, he was elected vice chairman of the China Disabled Sports Association.
Xiao Haoping (1941--) female, from Jiangxi. Senior coach of the track and field team of the National Sports Commission Training Bureau. She was China's first female long jumper to break 6 meters. She broke the national record five times. In 1965, she set the Asian record for women's long jump of 6.44 meters, ranking ninth in the world that year. In 1966, she won first place in the women's long jump and 4X100-meter relay at the first Asian Emerging Power Games. In 1974, he also won the 7th Asian Games championship with a time of 6.31 meters and broke the Asian Games record. After becoming a coach, he trained outstanding athletes such as Li Huirong (women's triple jump world record), Liao Wenfen (Asian record and 2-time Asian Games champion). In 1986, he was named a national outstanding coach, and in 1990, he was awarded a special award by the Chinese Athletics Association. He served as a member of the National Youth Federation and a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference for two terms.
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