- Source: 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships
The 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics was held between 12 and 14 March at the Aspire Dome in Doha, Qatar. The championships was the first of six IAAF World Athletics Series events to take place in 2010.
Bidding and organisation
The IAAF announced on March 25, 2007, at an IAAF Council meeting in Mombasa, Kenya that it had received bids from Turkey and Qatar to host the championships. On November 25, in a Council meeting in Monaco, the IAAF announced that Doha would host the championships. This was the first time that a world athletics championship was held in the Middle-East and the second time the World Indoor Championships was held outside of Europe or North America (after the 1999 Championships in Japan).
The venue for the event was the indoor arena located within Doha's Aspire Zone – the ASPIRE Dome, which has previously hosted indoor athletics for the 2008 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships. The World Indoor Championships was the first of two significant athletics events to take place in Doha in 2010 – the inaugural 2010 IAAF Diamond League will begin with the Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix meeting in May.
Prior to the championships, the Qatar organising committee held the Doha Indoor Athletics Meeting for Juniors as a test event for the venue. The meeting began on 26 February and featured junior athletes from 11 countries within the region competing in a total of 13 events.
The competition set a new high for the number of nations at the World Indoor Championships: 150 countries sent teams to the championships, with a total of 374 men and 283 women athletes entered to compete.
The competition mascot was an anthropomorphic caracal named Saham – the caracal is a medium-sized cat which is native to the Middle-East. The inclusion of a mascot follows on from the mainstream success of the 2009 World Championships in Athletics mascot – Berlino the Bear.
The IAAF extended live audio and video coverage of the championships to the internet for certain countries, including a deal with IEC in Sports which saw events available live and on-demand via Dailymotion. This was the first deal of its kind for the competition.
= Drug tests
=Anna Alminova, a Russian athlete who competed in the 1500 m failed a drug test while at the championships. She tested positive for pseudoephedrine, which was present in a cold medicine she was taking, and received a three-month ban.
Schedule
All dates are AST (UTC+3)
Results
= Men
=2006 | 2008 | 2010 | 2012 | 2014
= Women
=2006 | 2008 | 2010 | 2012 | 2014
Medal table
Participating nations
References
External links
Official site Archived 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine
Doha 2010 Statistics Handbook - Part One
Doha 2010 Statistics Handbook - Part Two
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kejuaraan Dunia Dalam Ruangan IAAF 2012
- Eliud Kipchoge
- Nadzeya Ostapchuk
- Aspire Dome
- 5000 meter
- Mo Farah
- Valerie Adams
- Airinė Palšytė
- Gianmarco Tamberi
- Dwain Chambers
- 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- World Athletics Indoor Championships
- 2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 1999 IAAF World Indoor Championships
- 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's heptathlon
- 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships