José Amado García
Guatemalan long-distance runner
1.77 m (5 ft 9+1⁄2 in)
Medal record
Men's athletics | ||
---|---|---|
Representing Guatemala | ||
Pan American Games | ||
2007 Rio de Janeiro | Marathon | |
Central American and Caribbean Games | ||
2010 Mayagüez | Marathon | |
Central American Games | ||
2001 Ciudad de Guatemala | 5000 m | |
2013 San José | Marathon | |
1997 San Pedro Sula | 10,000 m | |
2001 Ciudad de Guatemala | 10,000 m | |
Central American Championships | ||
2002 San José | 10,000 m | |
2003 Ciudad de Guatemala | 5000 m | |
2003 Ciudad de Guatemala | 10,000 m | |
2005 San José | 10,000 m | |
2007 San José | 5000 m | |
2007 San José | 10,000 m | |
2009 Ciudad de Guatemala | 5000 m | |
2010 Ciudad de Guatemala | 10,000 m | |
2002 San José | 5000 m |
José Amado García Gabriel (born 13 September 1977) is a Guatemalan long-distance runner[1][2] who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics, the 2008 Summer Olympics[3] the 2012 Summer Olympics and the 2016 Summer Olympics.[4]
Personal bests
- 5000 m: 14:13.19 min – Berkeley, California, 24 April 2010
- 10,000 m: 28:50.25 min – Palo Alto, California, 1 May 2010
- Half marathon: 1:04:20 hrs – Warsaw, 18 June 2016
- Marathon: 2:14:27 hrs – Rio de Janeiro, 29 Jul 2007
Achievements
References
- ^ Biography – GARCIA Jose Amado, retrieved 13 July 2014
- ^ Listado Oficial de Atletas Participantes – Jose Amado Garcia Gabriel (in Spanish), archived from the original on 23 September 2015, retrieved 13 July 2014
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "José Amado García". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2012.,
- ^ "Jose Amado Garcia". BBC. Retrieved 3 January 2015.
- ^ "Rio 2016 marathon men". olympic.org. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
- ^ "Marathon Men − Final − Results" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
External links
- José Amado García at World Athletics
- v
- t
- e
Central American and Caribbean Games champions in men's marathon
- 1946–1966: Half marathon
- 1970–present: Marathon
- 1938: José Thompson (PAN)
- 1946: Mateo Flores (GUA)
- 1950: Luis Velásquez (GUA)
- 1954: Mateo Flores (GUA)
- 1959: Pedro Peralta (MEX)
- 1962: Hernán Barreneche (COL)
- 1966: Valentín Robles (MEX)
- 1970: Alfredo Peñaloza (MEX)
- 1974: Gilberto Serna (COL)
- 1978: Radamés Vega (PUR)
- 1982: Jorge González (PUR)
- 1986: Jesús Amariles (COL)
- 1990: Jorge González (PUR)
- 1993: Benjamín Paredes (MEX)
- 1998: Juan Camacho (MEX)
- 2002–2006: Procopio Franco (MEX)
- 2010: José Amado García (GUA)
- 2014: Richer Pérez (CUB)
- 2018: Jeison Suárez (COL)