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Singapore [23] 5.10 m Low Jun Yu: 19 April 2024 84th Singapore Open Championships Kallang, Singapore [24] 5.10 m Low Jun Yu: 8 June 2024 Busan, Singapore [25] 5.34 m Low Jun Yu: 5 July 2024 ASEAN University Games: Surabaya, Indonesia Long jump: 7.62 m Matthew Goh Yujie: 15 December 2009 Southeast Asian Games: Vientiane, Laos Triple jump: 16.04 ...
Soh has been acknowledged for various acts of sportsmanship by his competitors in which he had offered help to them during the race at various events throughout his career. Soh is also a 4-time Standard Chartered Singapore Marathon national champion, having won every edition of the Singapore national marathon championships since it began in ...
Veronica Shanti Pereira (born 20 September 1996) [3] is a Singaporean track and field athlete who specialises in the 100 m, 200 m, 4 x 100 m, and 4 x 400 m.She holds the 100 m national record (11.20s), [4] 200 m national record (22.57s), [5] 400 m national record (53.67s), [6] 200 m SEA Games record (22.69s), [7] and the 200 m Asian Athletics Championships games record (22.70s). [8]
Sergio Perez claimed victory on the streets of Singapore in a race that did not reach the scheduled 61-lap distance due to pre-race rain pushing back the start and a noise curfew.
Carlos Sainz holds on for thrilling victory in Singapore as Red Bull winning run ends. Toto Wolff: 15:46, Kieran Jackson “Lewis had a brilliant race, it’s a shame for George because he worked ...
Singapore Grand Prix circuit, lap count, tire compounds. Circuit: Marina Bay Circuit (3.07-mile, 19-turn temporary street course) in Singapore Race length: 62 laps for 190.34 miles Lap record: N/A ...
The virtual race format, titled "Standard Chartered Singapore Marathon (SCSM) Virtual Racing Series" is part of the SCSM Virtual Club initiative. Two new virtual races are made available each week for participation by runners all over the world. [9] In 2021, Singapore Marathon returned to in-person participation, with 4000 runners joining the ...
Singapore participated at the 2005 Southeast Asian Games in the Philippines under the IOC country code SIN. Sending a delegation of 658 athletes and 291 officials, the third largest it had ever sent to the games, the Singapore team set its target at 35 gold medals, five more than the haul won at the 2003 Southeast Asian Games held in Vietnam.