Athletics is one of the sports at the quadrennial National Games of China. Athletics competitions have been at every edition of the competition since its formation in 1910 as the Chinese National Games.[1] The Games is the highest level athletics event for Chinese athletes, ahead of the annual Chinese Athletics Championships.
Records in 1993 and 1997
The competition has had an impact beyond national level through its record-breaking history, in particular by middle- and long-distance athletes coached by Ma Junren. Known as "Ma's Army", he exercised strict control over his group of specially-selected rural peasant girls and applied tonics of turtle's blood and caterpillar fungus (ophiocordyceps sinensis). At the 1993 National Games three world records were broken by his athletes: Qu Yunxia ran 3:50.46 minutes for the 1500 metres while Wang Junxia ran 8:06.11 minutes for the 3000 metres and 29:31.78 minutes for the 10,000 metres. All three records greatly exceeded the previous marks and all stood for over twenty years.[2][3][4][5] Qu's mark was finally beaten by Genzebe Dibaba in 2015 and Wang's 10,000 m time was beaten by Almaz Ayana in 2016.
The depth of women's distance track performances in 1993 and 1997 is easily visible in the all-time lists which includes seven of the top ten times ever in the 1500 m,[11] and eight of the top ten times in the 3000 m.[12] Wang Junxia's 10,000 m record remained twenty seconds faster than any other woman, until it was beaten in 2016. It remains the second fastest time ever.[13]
Performances by Ma's athletes have left a tainted athletic legacy – although his women athletes broke new ground in distance running they were accompanied by accusations of doping, as none reached the same standard in events with anti-doping measures or international observers. Ma's career came to an end in 2000 when six of the seven athletes he was training for the 2000 Summer Olympics were banned after testing positive for erythropoietin (a blood-boosting agent).[2] The International Association of Athletics Federations inducted world record holder Wang Junxia into its Hall of Fame in 2012, drawing condemnation from parts of the press internationally.[14][15]
^Brownell, Susan (1995-08-24). Beijing's Bid for the 2000 Olympic Games, pg. 312. Training the Body for China: Sports in the Moral Order of the People's Republic]. University of Chicago Press. ISBN978-0226076478. Retrieved on 2015-07-21.