Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's athletics | ||
Competitor for China | ||
Asian Championships | ||
Gold | 2011 Kobe | 100 m |
Universiade | ||
Bronze | 2011 Shenzhen | 100 m |
Asian Games | ||
Gold | 2010 Guangzhou | 4×100 m relay |
Asian Indoor Games | ||
Gold | 2009 Hanoi | 60 m |
East Asian Games | ||
Gold | 2009 Hong Kong | 100 m |
Su Bingtian, Chinese: 苏炳添, (born 29 August 1989 in Zhongshan,[1] Guangdong) is a Chinese track and field athlete who competes in the sprints. He is the reigning Asian champion over 100 metres and holds the Chinese record in that event with his best of 10.16 seconds.
He broke onto the continental scene with three straight wins in the 100 metres on the Asian Grand Prix in May 2009.[2] His first medal came in the 4×100 metres relay at the 11th Chinese Games later that year, where he helped the Guangdong team including Liang Jiahong and Wen Yongyi to the gold medal.[3]
He also began representing China internationally that year and shortly after the national games he won the gold medal over 60 metres at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games, running a personal best of 6.65 seconds.[4] He was selected for the relay at the 2009 Asian Athletics Championships and won a silver medal alongside Guo Fan, Liang Jiahong and Zhang Peimeng. He took the individual 100 m title at the East Asian Games, defeating Japanese rival Shintaro Kimura.[5]
He equalled the Chinese indoor record in the 60 m in Chengdu in 2010, running 6.58 seconds.[6] At the 2010 Asian Games he won the relay gold with a national and Games record time.[7]
In March 2011, he set a new Chinese national 60 metres indoor record in Chengdu with a time of 6.56 seconds. He went on to establish himself as his country's top male sprinter that year: he won the 100 m title at the 2011 Asian Athletics Championships in a personal best of 10.21 seconds, was the bronze medalist at the 2011 Summer Universiade, then competed at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics in Daegu (running in the heats of the relay).[8] He ended the season by breaking the Chinese record to win the 100 m at the Chinese Athletics Championships with a time of 10.16 seconds, improving upon Zhou Wei and Chen Haijian's former best mark.[9]