Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's athletics | ||
Representing China | ||
East Asian Games | ||
2013 Tianjin | Javelin throw | |
2009 Hong Kong | Javelin throw | |
Asian Games | ||
2014 Incheon | Javelin throw |
Zhao Qinggang (Chinese: 赵庆刚; born 24 July 1985) is a Chinese track and field athlete who competes in the javelin throw. His personal best of 89.15 metres, set in 2014, is the current Asian record and Chinese national record. He represented his country at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics.He is the 2014 Asian Games champion.At the East Asian Games he was the runner-up in 2009 and winner in 2013. He is a two-time Chinese champion (2012 and 2013) and was the winner of the 2013 National Games of China.
He began competing at the national level in 2006 and threw over seventy metres for the first time in 2007. He established himself among China's best throwers the following year, having a personal best of 77.20 m at the Good Luck Beijing Olympic test event. He placed second at the Olympic trials and third at the Chinese Athletics Championships. He did not achieve the qualifying standard for the 2008 Beijing Olympics and Chen Qi (the reigning Asian champion) was China's sole representative in the men's javelin. He continued to improve in the 2009 season, placing second at both the Chinese Championships and the 11th Chinese National Games. He ended the season with a personal best of 79.62 metres at the 2009 East Asian Games, which brought him the silver medal behind fellow Chinese Qin Qiang.
In May 2010 he edged closer to eighty metres with a best of 79.80 m to win the Kunshan leg of the Chinese Athletics Grand Prix. He made his first IAAF Diamond League appearance, coming sixth at the Shanghai Golden Grand Prix meet, but missed the podium at the Chinese Championships, coming fourth. His 2011 was low-key, with a throw of 78.40 m at the Kawasaki Super Meet in Japan being the sole highlight. Improvements followed in 2012, however, with a personal best to win the Chinese Universities title, followed by his first national title at the Chinese Championships with a best of 81.74 m (making him the sixth Chinese ever over that mark).