Qatari track and field athlete
Rashid Al-Mannai
Rashid Al-Mannai in 2008
Born 18 June 1988 (1988-06-18 ) (age 36) Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)[ 1] Weight 72 kg (159 lb) (2014) Sport Athletics Event(s) High jump , triple jump Personal best HJ – 2.28 m (2010)[ 2]
Rashid Ahmed Al-Mannai (Arabic : أحمد راشد المناعي; born 18 June 1988) is a Qatari track and field athlete who specialises in the high jump and triple jump .
Biography
Born in Doha , he started competing internationally in 2005 and finished eleventh at the 2005 World Youth Championships in Athletics and set a personal best of 2.10 metres for 14th at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships . He competed at the 2006 World Junior Championships in Athletics in Beijing the following year, but did not get past the qualification round.[ 3] He finished twelfth at the 2006 Asian Games later that year, jumping 2.10 metres.
He enjoyed his first regional successes in 2007 – he set a Qatari record of 2.24 metres to take the gold medal at the 2007 Asian Indoor Games (a mark which was also a Games record ).[ 4] He represented Qatar at the 2007 Pan Arab Games in November and won a silver medal behind Salem Al-Anezi , with a jump of 2.17 m.[ 5] A few months later, he returned to action with an appearance at the 2008 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships in his hometown. The high jump gold went to Sergey Zasimovich but Al-Mannai still reached the podium, taking the bronze medal.[ 6]
He set an outdoor national record in Doha in April 2008, clearing 2.20 m for the win and an outdoor best.[ 3] After a year out from competition, Al-Mannai returned by setting a personal best of 2.27 m in Malmö , which earned him an appearance at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup . Representing the Asia-Pacific team, he cleared both 2.21 m and 2.25 m on his second attempts, but he cleared the bar first time at 2.28 m – a new personal best and closer to Mutaz Essa Barshim 's new Qatari record. It was a surprise win over 2007 World Champion Donald Thomas and marked the first high jump medal and victory by an Asian at the competition.[ 7]
Competition record
Year
Competition
Venue
Position
Event
Notes
Representing Qatar
2005
World Youth Championships
Marrakech, Morocco
11th
High jump
2.08 m
Asian Championships
Incheon, South Korea
14th
High jump
2.10 m
West Asian Games
Doha, Qatar
5th
High jump
2.10 m
2006
World Junior Championships
Beijing, China
17th (q)
High jump
2.10 m
Asian Games
Doha, Qatar
12th
High jump
2.10 m
2007
Arab Championships
Amman, Jordan
8th
High jump
2.11 m
Asian Championships
Amman, Jordan
15th
High jump
2.10 m
Asian Indoor Games
Macau
1st
High jump
2.24 m
Pan Arab Games
Cairo, Egypt
2nd
High jump
2.17 m
2008
Asian Indoor Championships
Doha, Qatar
3rd
High jump
2.18 m
2010
Asian Indoor Championships
Tehran, Iran
4th
High jump
2.17 m
West Asian Championships
Aleppo, Syria
1st
High jump
2.25 m
Asian Games
Guangzhou, China
3rd
High jump
2.19 m
2011
Asian Championships
Seville, Spain
8th
High jump
2.10 m
Pan Arab Games
Doha, Qatar
3rd
High jump
2.21 m
2013
Arab Championships
Doha, Qatar
2nd
Triple jump
16.40 m
Asian Championships
Pune, India
5th
Triple jump
15.98 m
Jeux de la Francophonie
Nice, France
6th
Triple jump
16.30 m
2014
Asian Games
Incheon, South Korea
–
Triple jump
NM
2015
Arab Championships
Isa Town , Bahrain
2nd
Triple jump
15.97 m (w)
Asian Championships
Wuhan, China
7th
Triple jump
16.06 m
Military World Games
Mungyeong, South Korea
4th
Triple jump
16.27 m
2016
Asian Indoor Championships
Doha, Qatar
3rd
Triple jump
15.97 m
2017
Islamic Solidarity Games
Baku, Azerbaijan
10th
Triple jump
15.31 m
Arab Championships
Radès, Tunisia
4th
Triple jump
15.85 m
Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan
3rd
Triple jump
15.99 m
2018
Asian Games
Jakarta, Indonesia
11th
Triple jump
15.92 m
External links
References