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Decathlon's former logo. Founded by Michel Leclercq in 1976, Decathlon started with a store in Lille, France. [9] Its holding company was formerly known as Oxylane. [10]The company expanded abroad to Germany in 1986, [11] Spain in 1992, [11] [12] Italy in 1993, [11] Belgium in 1997, [13] Portugal, the United Kingdom in 1999, Brazil in 2001, mainland China in 2003, India and Romania in 2009 ...
This is a list of supermarket chains in the Czech Republic. Supermarkets. Active. Name Stores Type of stores Parent; Albert: 327: supermarket and hypermarket: Ahold:
8 Czech Republic. 9 Denmark. 10 Estonia. 11 Finland. 12 France. 13 ... Below a list of all national champions in the Men's Decathlon event in track and field from ...
Quechua has partnerships with groups such as mountain guides, national team of young mountaineers and the Ifremmont Institute of Mountain Medical Research.It works with advisers in hiking (Hélène Rochas, Grégory Vollet, Vincent Delebarre, Dachhiri Sherpa), climbing (David Caude), and adventure racing (Quechua Team).
The first world record in the decathlon was recognized by the International Association of Athletics Federations in 1922. [1] As of 23 June 2012, 36 men's world records have been ratified by the IAAF in the event. [1] The current world record holder is French national Kevin Mayer with 9126 points. Over the years, athletes have become bigger ...
He is the only decathlete who finished 40 decathlon competitions with the score over 8,000 points and 20 competitions with the score over 8,500 points (as of October 2007). [13] Šebrle was also voted the Best Czech Athlete of the Year five times in a row (2002–2006), [ 14 ] and in 2004 he received the title of the Czech Sportsman of the Year ...
3 Suisses - clothing, electronics, appliances, toys, general household merchandise; Auchan - hypermarket; Brico Depot - DIY; Bricomarché - Groupe Intermarché; DIY ...
He is a three-time decathlon world champion (1997, 1999, 2001) and a former world record holder (8,994 points scored in Prague, 1999 [1]), which is still the fifth best performance of all-time. This record was broken by Dvořák's compatriot Roman Šebrle in 2001.