An Analytical Study of the Records in the Olympic Games between the 110m and 400m Hurdles Events Men
Main Article Content
Abstract
Athletics must occupy the ancient and modern Olympic Games a great place of prominent and tangible interest by all specialists, officials and spectators together, and it is noted through the events in the modern Olympics in particular that the majority of the world's countries participate in the Games. One contestant when he gets a medal for one country is equal to a whole team of organized (team) games such as foot, basket, volleyball, hand and others, so the importance of research was in the ability to analyze the results of the hurdles activities (110m-400m hurdles for athletics men over a period of more than a hundred years so that the community can From touching the critical importance and value in public life, as well as physical and skill development, and technical, psychological, mental and social preparation, which leads to the creation of an integrated, fit citizen in society as a participant in the Olympics. The Arab level from the global level through the recent Olympic courses until the historic role of Rio. As for the research method used by the researcher, the survey method was to suit the nature of the problem to be studied on a sample that included a sample of Olympic champions during the modern Olympic courses for the period from 1896-2020 AD in the activities of running hurdles 110 -400m. The following was concluded: Achievement presents the characteristic of the slow development of the mentioned activities, and the achievement presents the characteristic of the gradual development of the mentioned activities, as the greatest progress occurred in the 400m hurdles competition among the competitions analyzed in this competition. The slowest progress was in the 110m competition, while the progression took place in the 400m hurdles, among the two activities analyzed in this study for the mentioned period.
Downloads
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.