

Venue: Olympic Stadium
Dates: Friday 3 August - Sunday 12 August
Gold medals up for grabs: 47
Athletes: 2,000 (1200 men, 800 women)
Athletics includes many different events, but all are based on the principle of simple physical competition.
The sport is the perfect expression of the Olympic motto: Citius, Altius, Fortius – Faster, Higher, Stronger. It requires athletes to run faster, throw further, jump higher and longer than everyone else.
And people have taken part in such contests since the start of recorded history. The first official Athletics competitions took place at the ancient Olympic Games, and the sport developed through public fairs and festivals around the world.
For more information on the history of the sport visit the IOC website.
In all, 46 events are held on the track or in the field. They involve running, walking, throwing or jumping.
Running and Walking races are held over distances ranging from 100m to 50km. Apart from the Marathon and Race Walk events, which take place on the road, Running events are held in the stadium, on a 400m oval track.
Most of the racing is done on the flat, but Hurdles and Steeplechase competitions require athletes to jump over barriers on the way to the finish line.
To succeed it takes speed, strength and stamina – as well as a good race strategy.
Jumping
In High Jump, you have to get over a bar that is raised each time you succeed. You get three attempts at every height, and the winner is the one who clears the bar at the greatest height.
Pole Vault follows the same rules, but athletes use a long pole to help launch themselves into the air.
In Long Jump, athletes sprint down a runway before jumping as far as they can into a sand pit.
Triple Jump looks very similar, but you have to complete a hop and skip before you make your jump. All these events require a combination of speed and smooth technique.
The throwing disciplines are Shot Put, Javelin, Discus and Hammer. Competitors get six attempts to throw the object as far as they can into a field. Speed, strength and technique are needed.
In Decathlon competitions for men and Heptathlon competitions for women, athletes take part in a range of different Running, Jumping and Throwing events – 10 for men, seven for women.
They win points according to the times they run and the distances they throw and jump. Competition takes place over two days; the winner is the one with the highest total of points at the end.
Athletics and the Olympic Games go together hand in hand. Ever since the first ancient Games were held in 776BC – with events such as the 192.27 metre race – Athletics has been a part of the programme.
When the first modern Games took place in Athens 1896, there were 10 events – all for men.
It was not until Amsterdam 1928 that women first took part. Five women’s events were held: the 100 metres, 800 metres, 4x100-metre Relay, High Jump and Discus.
Athletes’ performances have got better with every Games, thanks, in part, to developments in sports science and technology.
Great Britain is home to a huge network of Athletics clubs and leagues. Find your local track by contacting your home nation’s federation. Visit UK Athletics for more details.
The Active Places websites also allows you to search for athletics tracks in England.