词条 | Nicolas Macrozonaris | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| name = Nicolas Macrozonaris | image = | imagesize = | caption = | nationality = Canadian | sport = Running, Track and Field | event = Sprints | club = | team = Reebok[1] | birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1980|08|22|mf=y}} | birth_place = Laval, Quebec, Canada | residence = Montreal, Quebec, Canada | death_date = | death_place = | height = | weight = | pb = 50m: 5.69s (Saskatoon 2002) | medaltemplates ={{MedalSport|Men's athletics}}{{MedalCountry|{{CAN}}}}{{Medal|Competition|Canadian Track and Field Championships}}{{Medal|Silver|2001 Edmonton |100 m}}{{Medal|Gold|2002 Edmonton|100 m}}{{Medal|Gold|2003 Victoria|100 m}}{{Medal|Gold|2003 Victoria|200 m}}{{Medal|Silver|2004 Victoria|100 m}}{{Medal|Bronze|2005 Winnipeg|100 m}}{{Medal|Gold|2006 Ottawa|100 m}}{{Medal|Gold|2007 Windsor|100 m}}{{Medal|Competition|2000 NACAC Under-25 Championships in Athletics}}{{Medal|Silver|2000 Monterrey, Mexico |100 m}} }} Nicolas Macrozonaris (born August 22, 1980) is a Canadian Olympic track & field athlete who has won the 100 meter national title four times and once in the 200 meter. CareerHe was inspired to run track and field after watching Donovan Bailey win the 100 meters at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. After watching that race, it motivated him to take the sport seriously. A few years later, as a junior, he tied Ben Johnson's Canadian national record in the 50 meter sprint, running a time of 5.83. The following year, after 4 years of intensive training, he qualified for the 2000 Sydney Olympics' 100 meter event at the age of 19. At the Olympics,he ran a time of 10.45 to finish 42nd overall out of 95, being eliminated in the heats. His culminating moment as a sprinter came in 2003 when he ran a time of 10.03 and beat the then world record holder, American Tim Montgomery in Mexico City. As of 2014, his time of 10.03 is still ranked the third fastest Canadian 100m time, behind Bruny Surin and Donovan Bailey who both share the national record with a 9.84 clocking. In 2004, he qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and finished 28th out of 80 in the 100 meter event, thus improving his position from his previous Olympic Games in Sydney where he finished 42nd. Nicolas has represented Canada in many international competitions and has qualified for six World Championships, three Francophone Games, two Olympic Games, two Commonwealth games, one World Cup, and one Pan American Championship. In 2017, he ran for the Action Laval party in the 2017 Laval municipal election, but finished third in the Sainte-Dorothée District. StatisticsPersonal bests
References1. ^{{cite news |title=Nicolas Macrozonaris court en Reebok|url=http://www.infopresse.com/archive/index/7241 |publisher= Infopresse | date= July 18, 2003}} External links
13 : 1980 births|Living people|Canadian male sprinters|Athletes (track and field) at the 2000 Summer Olympics|Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics|Olympic track and field athletes of Canada|Athletes (track and field) at the 2002 Commonwealth Games|Commonwealth Games competitors for Canada|World Championships in Athletics athletes for Canada|Canadian people of Greek descent|Sportspeople from Laval, Quebec|Anglophone Quebec people|Canadian sportsperson-politicians |
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