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Ivorian sprinter (born 1996)
Arthur Cissé
Arthur Cissé at the 2021 Islamic Solidarity Games
Full name Arthur Gue Cissé Nationality Ivorian Born (1996-12-29 ) 29 December 1996 (age 27)
Man, Ivory Coast Sport
Athletics Event
Sprints Club EFS Reims Athlétisme
[1] Coached by Anthony Koffi
[1] Personal bests 60 m : 6.53
NR (2019, 2021)
[2] 100 m : 9.93
NR (2019)
[3]
[4] 150 m : 15.15
NR (2020)200 m : 20.23
NR (2020)
Arthur Gue Cissé (born 29 December 1996) is an
Ivorian professional sprinter specializing in the sprints.
[5] He owns the
Ivorian national records in the 60 m, 100 m, 150 m, and 200 m distances, including a sub-10 second time of 9.93 s in the 100 m.
[3]
[4]
[2] He has won several medals at the international level including a gold medal in the 2015 African Games
4 × 100 m relay and a silver medal in the 2018 African Championships 100 m.
[6]
He became the 131st man to break the
10-second barrier in the 100 m on 16 June 2018, setting a national record of 9.94 s.
[7]
[8] He is coached by Anthony Koffi, the coach of fellow Ivorian sprinters and Olympians
Ben Youssef Meïté and
Marie-Josée Ta Lou .
[1]
Statistics
Information from World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.
[5]
Personal bests
International championship results
Year
Competition
Venue
Position
Event
Time
Wind (m/s)
Notes
Representing the
Ivory Coast
2014
African Championships
Marrakech , Morocco
23rd
100 m
10.86
−0.2
2015
African Junior Championships
Addis Ababa , Ethiopia
2nd
100 m
10.63
−1.1
PB
5th
200 m
21.92
−2.3
4th
4×100 m relay
41.46
—
PB
African Games
Brazzaville , Republic of the Congo
18th
100 m
10.55
+0.3
1st
4×100 m relay
38.93
—
PB
2016
African Championships
Durban , South Africa
16th
100 m
10.49
w
+2.1
Wind-assisted
2nd
4×100 m relay
38.98
—
2017
Islamic Solidarity Games
Baku , Azerbaijan
5th
100 m
10.43
+0.6
3rd
4×100 m relay
39.82
—
Jeux de la Francophonie
Abidjan , Ivory Coast
2nd
100 m
10.34
+0.1
2nd
200 m
20.93
−1.0
1st
4×100 m relay
39.39
—
2018
World Indoor Championships
Birmingham , England
9th
60 m
6.59
—
African Championships
Asaba , Nigeria
2nd
100 m
10.33
−2.1
[6]
3rd
4×100 m relay
38.92
—
[6]
Continental Cup
Ostrava , Czech Republic
5th
100 m
10.231
0.0
2019
African Games
Rabat , Morocco
2nd
100 m
9.97
+1.6
3rd (semi 2)
4×100 m relay
39.97
—
Q
[note 1]
World Championships
Doha ,
Qatar
24th
100 m
10.34
+0.8
2021
Olympic Games
Tokyo, Japan
21st (sf)
100 m
10.18
+0.9
2022
World Indoor Championships
Belgrade, Serbia
8th
60 m
6.69
—
African Championships
Port Louis, Mauritius
13th (sf)
100 m
10.30
+1.1
World Championships
Eugene, United States
15th (sf)
100 m
10.16
+0.3
Islamic Solidarity Games
Konya, Turkey
1st
100 m
9.89
IRM
2023
Jeux de la Francophonie
Kinshasa, DR Congo
3rd
100 m
10.24
+0.9
1st
4×100 m relay
39.32
—
World Championships
Budapest, Hungary
55th (h)
100 m
11.58
0.0
2024
African Games
Accra, Ghana
3rd
4×100 m relay
DNF
—
African Championships
Douala, Cameroon
3rd
4×100 m relay
39.77
—
1 Representing Africa
Circuit wins
100 m seasonal bests
Notes
^ The Ivory Coast qualified for the final, but Cissé did not run with the team in the final. The team placed 8th in the final.
References
^
a
b
c
"Arthur Gue Cissé, la nouvelle pépite ivoirienne" . ivoirematin.com . Ivoire Matin. 31 July 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2019 .
^
a
b
"Great Performances From Sam Kendricks, Reece Prescod, Mihambo Mihambo And Nadine Müller Highlight ISTAF Berlin" . letsrun.com . LetsRun.com. 3 February 2019. Retrieved 4 February 2019 .
^
a
b Serge, Liman (25 July 2019).
"Arthur Gué devance Asafa Powell et bat le record de Côte-d'Ivoire (100 m) au Bayer Classics Leverkusen" . newsafricanow.com . News Africa Now. Archived from
the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 3 August 2019 .
^
a
b
"Athlétisme: l'Ivoirien Arthur Cissé vainqueur du meeting de Leverkusen" . journaldutchad.com . Journal du Tchad. 26 July 2019. Archived from
the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 3 August 2019 .
^
a
b
"ATHLETE PROFILE Arthur CISSÉ" . worldathletics.org .
World Athletics . Retrieved 24 February 2021 .
^
a
b
c
d
"African championships, Asaba (Nigeria)" . africathle.com . Africathle. 5 August 2018. Retrieved 3 February 2019 .
^ Breakfast, Siviwe (28 June 2018).
"IAAF Diamond League: Simbine faces tough field in 100m" . thesouthafrican.com . The South African. Retrieved 2 February 2019 .
^ Koken, Harold (16 June 2018).
"Gina Lückenkemper rennt 11,16, Arthur Cissé 9,94 Sekunden" . leichtathletik.de . Leichtathletik. Retrieved 2 February 2019 .
External links
1965:
Senegal (
N'Diaye ,
Doumbia ,
Diop ,
Mané )
1973:
Nigeria
1978:
Ghana (
Obeng ,
Lomotey ,
Enchill ,
Karikari )
1987:
Nigeria
1991:
Nigeria (
Omagbemi ,
Asonze ,
Kayode ,
Ezinwa )
1995:
Ghana (
Hassan ,
Ali ,
Tuffour ,
Nkansah )
1999:
Nigeria (
Aliu ,
Effiong ,
Oriala ,
Asonze )
2003:
Ghana (
Nsiah ,
Nkansah ,
Zakari ,
Myles-Mills )
2007:
Nigeria (
Uche ,
Metu ,
Oriala ,
Fasuba )
2011:
Nigeria (
Emelieze ,
Metu ,
Adukwu ,
Egwero )
2015:
Ivory Coast (
Naliali ,
Koffi Hua ,
Cissé ,
Meïté )
2019:
Ghana (
Safo-Antwi ,
Kwaku Azamati ,
Owusu-Antwi ,
Amoah )
2023:
Nigeria (
Sunday ,
Ekanem ,
Akintola ,
Itsekiri )