2013 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 20 kilometres walk explained

Event:Men's 20 kilometres walk
Competition:2013 World Championships
Venue:Luzhniki Stadium
Dates:11 August (final)
Competitors:64
Nations:34
Win Value:1:20:58
Gold:Chen Ding
Silver:Miguel Ángel López
Bronze:João Vieira
Prev:2011
Next:2015

The men's 20 kilometres walk at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Luzhniki Stadium and Moscow streets on 11 August.[1]

The first leader was Takumi Saito who set the pace for the first 5K, opening up a gap on the pack, with his Japanese teammate Yusuke Suzuki the first to chase him down. Suzuki moved out to a 13-second lead by the 10K mark. The six chasers included all three 2012 Olympic medalists. The first to catch him was bronze medalist Wang Zhen who pulled out to the lead only to get disqualified. Even though he had received the notification, Wang continued until he was taken off the course. Behind him, Olympic gold medalist Chen Ding, Erick Barrondo silver medalist and local favorite Aleksandr Ivanov took up the front, 22 seconds ahead of the next group. But Barrondo picked up two red cards.

After 15K, Ivanov took off, with Barrondo giving chase. First Ivanov picked up a red card and slowed down. Then Barrondo picked up his third red card and was told to leave the race to his disbelief. When Chen passed him, he raised his arm to wave good bye. But Chen couldn't catch Ivanov, who took a ten-second victory in front of cheering Russian fans.[2]

One walker gave a positive test at the competition: second last finisher Ebrahim Rahimian of Iran had used erythropoietin.

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:[3]

World record1:17:16Saransk, Russia29 September 2007
Championship record1:17:21Saint-Denis, France23 August 2003
World Leading1:18:28Sochi, Russia23 February 2013
African Record1:19:02Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany10 May 1997
Asian Record1:17:36Taicang, China30 March 2012
North, Central American and Caribbean record1:17:46Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany8 May 1999
South American Record1:17:21Saint-Denis, France23 August 2003
European Record1:17:16Saransk, Russia29 September 2007
Oceanian record1:17:33Cixi, China23 April 2005

Results

KEY:NRNational recordPBPersonal bestSBSeasonal best

Final

The race was started at 17:00.[4]

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1:20:58Doping
1:21:09SB
1:21:21SB
1:22:05
1:22:06
1:22:09
1:22:14
1:22:21 SB
1:22:36 SB
1:22:50 SB
10 1:23:06
11 1:23:20
12 1:23:24
13 1:23:27 SB
14 1:23:27 SB
15 1:23:46
16 1:23:48 SB
17 1:23:50
18 1:24:01 SB
19 1:24:03
20 1:24:26
21 1:24:38
22 1:24:42 SB
23 1:24:49
24 1:25:12
25 1:25:17
26 1:25:31
27 1:25:41
28 1:25:42
29 1:26:12 SB
30 1:26:32
31 1:26:40
32 1:26:46
33 1:26:47
34 1:26:51
35 1:27:35
36 1:27:41
37 1:28:14
38 1:28:20 SB
39 1:28:26
40 1:28:34
41 1:28:49
42 1:29:13
43 1:29:26
44 1:29:38
45 1:30:02
46 1:30:45 SB
47 1:30:54
48 1:31:52
49 1:32:45
50 1:33:35
51 1:35:01
1:35:46 Doping[5]
52 1:36:35

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-20KR-M-f----.SL2.pdf?v=-531547715 Start list
  2. Web site: Ivanov lifts Russian spirits with walk title | Malay Mail. 3 August 2023 .
  3. Web site: Records & Lists – Race Walk. IAAF. 8 August 2013.
  4. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-20KR-M-f----.RS6.pdf?v=766387129 Final Results
  5. http://www.iaaf.org/news/press-release/more-than-1900-blood-samples-collected-mosc More than 1900 blood samples collected – Moscow 2013