Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: Alex Schwazer, Andres Chocho, Arne Borjesson, Benamar Kachkouche, Bob Gardiner (athlete), Bruno Fait, Chris Erickson, Craig Barrett (athlete), Dawid Tomala, Diego Cafagna, Dion Russell, Domingo Colin, Don Keane, Duane Cousins, Eder Sanchez, Eladio Campos, Emerson Esnal Hernandez, Emile Maggi, Erick Barrondo, Fedosei Ciumacenco, Frank Clark (athlete), Gabriel Reymond, George Coleman (athlete), Godfried Dejonckheere, Hassanine Sebei, Horacio Nava, Irfan Kolothum Thodi, Ivano Brugnetti, Ivan Yarmysh, James Rendon, Jamie Costin, Jefferson Perez, Joel Sanchez (athlete), Juan Manuel Molina, Kaare Hammer, Lars Hindmar, Lawrence Allen, Louis Chevalier (athlete), Luke Adams, Mario dos Santos, Marius i kas, Matej Toth, Miguel Angel Prieto, Mohamed Ameur, Omar Zepeda, P teris Zelti, Peter Hanlin, Price King, Quentin Rew, Rafa Augustyn (athlete), Rafa Sikora, Ragnar Olsen, Ragnvald Thunestvedt, Recep Celik, Roland Hardy, Roman Bilek, Ronald Crawford (athlete), Sergey Morozov (athlete), Shemsu Hassan, Siarhei Charnou, Sixto Ibanez, Telemaco Arcangeli, Tim Berrett, Uwe Dunkel, Valeriy Borchin, Vladimir Ukhov, Wang Zhen (athlete), Xavier Moreno, Yohann Diniz, Yuki Yamazaki, Zhao Chengliang, Zhu Yafei, ukasz Nowak. Excerpt: Jefferson Leonardo Perez Quezada (born July 1, 1974 in Cuenca) is a retired Ecuadorian race walker. He specializes in the 20 km event, in which he has won the only two medals his country has ever achieved in the Olympic Games. He won the gold medal at the 1996 Olympics, becoming the youngest-ever gold medal winner in the 20 km walk event. Following his win he embarked on a 459 km pilgrimage, walking, jogging and running from Quito's Franciscan cathedral to his hometown of Cuenca. In the 2008 Olympics he won the silver medal in the same competition at 34 years of age, before...