Home / 2008 Beijing Olympic Games / Olympic sports / Track & Field / Athletes Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Yang Yaozu
Adjust font size:

Name: Yang Yaozu

Sport: Sprinting

Date of Birth: January 9, 1981

Home: Shanghai

Height: 1.87 meters

Weight: 75 kg

Experience:

1992: Shanghai Sports School

1998: Shanghai Athletic Team

2002: Selected for the national athletic team

Major Achievements:

1999 National Athletic Championships: First, men's 200 meters

2001 The Ninth National Games: Third, men's 200 meters

2002 Pusan Asian Games: Third, men's 200 meters

2002 National Athletic Championships & Grand Prix: First, men's 200 meters

2002 National Athletic Grand Prix, Nanning: Second, men's 200 meters

2003 National Athletic Grand Prix, Nanning: Second, men's 100 meters

2004 Olympic Games: Qualified for the second round of the men's 200 meters

2005 National Games: First, men's 200 meters

2006 Athletic World Cup: Sixth, men's 100 meters

Major Records:

In 2000, at the National Youth Athletic Championships, Yang Yaozu ran the 200 in 20.86 seconds, setting national youth record.

At the 2004 Olympic Games, Yang Yaozu made it to the second round of the 200 meters with a time of 20.69 seconds. He became the first Chinese runner to get past the first round of the 200 at the Olympics.

He shows his unconventional side by wearing sunglasses during races, even at night, something not common among Chinese athletes.

"I'm used to running with sunglasses, because of the glare of the sunlight during the day and the stadium light at night," said Yang. He said that he always wore the sunglasses while training in the US.

"Actually, a lot of American runners wore sunglasses. Why couldn't I do the same?" he said. "It's something that people need to get used to, like I am now."

Yang Yaozu worshipped the Namibian runner Frankie Fredericks, who ran in the 2004 Olympics when he was 36 years old, and was one of the most consistent and successful sprinters in history.

"I want to be like Fredericks in the future and I'll try my best to become like him." Yang said.

He added that he once spent six months training in the US, so he could learn from their regimen. "There's still a gap between the Americans and us in training. I'm now adapting and my coach is also adjusting training methods," Yang said. "I really hope that our efforts will make a difference at the 2008 Olympics."

An Olympic championship may be the ultimate goal for all athletes, but Yang's ambition is larger than that.

"I won't be satisfied by just one championship," he said. "I want a Chinese name to go down in world sprinting history!"

(China.org.cn June 24, 2008)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Sprinter Powell on the comeback trail
- Robles gunning for Olympic title
- South African athletes run into form for Games
Most Viewed >>
- Olympic flame comes to Qinghai Lake
- Overseas Olympic volunteers arrive in Beijing
- Toilet horrors flushed away as Games near
- Schedule
- Lin Dan

Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys