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  1. Jan Železný ( Czech pronunciation: [jan ˈʒɛlɛzniː] ⓘ; born 16 June 1966) is a Czech former track and field athlete who competed in the javelin throw. He is a World and Olympic champion and holds the world record with a throw of 98.48 metres (323 ft 1 in).

  2. He was 3 times olympic gold medalist (1992-1996-2000) and silver medalist in 1988. Music : Heart of courage - Two steps from hell. With 98m48 Jan Železný is the best javelin thrower in history...

  3. Feb 28, 2023 · He holds the world record with a throw of 98.48 metres and won the Olympic gold medal in the event three times in a row. _____________________________________________________ 🇨🇳 #Beijing2022 ...

  4. 📲 Subscribe to @olympics: http://oly.ch/Subscribe Jan Zelezný of the Czech Republic is widely considered to be the greatest Javelin thrower of all time and...

  5. Jan Železný was the world record holder in the javelin and favourite for the gold medal at the 1988 Seoul Games. Initially, everything went to plan. He set an Olympic record in the qualifying round and led throughout the final.

  6. Jan Železný (* 16. června 1966 Mladá Boleslav) je bývalý český atlet, oštěpař. Bývá považován za nejlepšího oštěpaře moderní éry.

  7. Honours Summary. 3 x Olympic champion. 3 x World champion. 1 x Olympic Games Silver medallist. 2 x World Championships Bronze medallist. More Honours. Personal Bests. Seasons Bests. Results.

  8. Jan Železný is considered the greatest javelin thrower in track & field history. At the 1988 Olympic Games, he narrowly missed winning the gold medal, settling for silver. But he has since won the gold medal at the 1992, 1996, and 2000 Olympic Games.

  9. Jan Zelezný of the Czech Republic is widely considered the greatest Javelin thrower ever. Zelezný is the only man to have won three javelin gold medals in Olympic history. He won gold at the 1992, 1996 and 2000 summer Olympic Games and silver in Seoul in 1988.

  10. Jan Zelezny had already thrown over 90 metres in three early-season competitions before he arrived in the German city of Jena but there still little to suggest that he was going to launch the javelin well beyond 98 metres on this day 24 years ago.