2013 World Championships in Athletics – Women's 400 metres explained

Event:Women's 400 metres
Competition:2013 World Championships
Venue:Luzhniki Stadium
Dates:10 August (heats)
11 August (semifinals)
12 August (final)
Competitors:36
Nations:28
Win Value:49.41
Gold:Christine Ohuruogu
Silver:Amantle Montsho
Bronze:Stephanie McPherson
Prev:2011
Next:2015

The women's 400 metres at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Luzhniki Stadium on 10–12 August.[1]

Heats started with Christine Ohuruogu leading 6 others under 51 with an exceptionally fast 50.20. 50 seconds was the order of the semifinal day. Six finalists dipped under 50, and Kseniya Ryzhova was lucky Amantle Montsho had gapped the first semi with the leading qualifier of 49.56. Ryzhova cruised in with a 50.48 to be the second automatic qualifier. Five others ran personal bests attempting to qualify.

The fast semifinals slowed the majority of the field. Only the medalists improved their times. From the gun Natasha Hastings and defending champion Amantle Montsho took it out, Hastings in lane 3 making up the stagger on Christine Ohuruogu in 4. Francena McCorory held her own and came off the final turn with Montsho but as Montsho aimed at the finish, the others went backward. With 50 metres to go, Christine Ohuruogu had worked her way from several metres down in the turn and had pulled even, looking like a good bet for silver. But she had other ideas. A steady stretch run put both a diving Ohuruogu and Montsho on the line at the same time. And that was what was posted 49.41, the same time for both.[2] It took a look at the photo finish to determine that Ohuruogu had won by 4 thousandths of a second.[3] Running a more even pace Russian Antonina Krivoshapka came off the turn even with Ohuruogu and made a stretch run of her own, overtaking the Americans and Stephanie McPherson to get a bronze medal [4] that she later lost following a doping violation.[5]

In the process of running a personal best to win the championship, Ohuruogu also got Kathy Smallwood-Cook's 29-year-old British national record (from the 1984 Olympics) that had so far evaded her through her career, a career that had included two Olympic medals, including the gold in 2008, and a previous World Championship.[6]

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:[7]

World record47.60Canberra, Australia6 October 1985
Championship record47.99Helsinki, Finland10 August 1983
World Leading49.33Monaco19 July 2013
African Record49.10Atlanta, GA, United States29 July 1996
Asian Record49.81Beijing, China11 September 1993
North, Central American and Caribbean record48.70Athens, Greece16 September 2006
South American record49.64Barcelona, Spain5 August 1992
European Record47.60Canberra, Australia6 October 1985
Oceanian record48.63Atlanta, GA, United States29 July 1996

Schedule

DateTimeRound
10 August 2013 18:05 Heats
11 August 2013 20:05 Semifinals
12 August 2013 21:15 Final

Results

KEY:bgcolor=ccffcc align=centerQQualifiedbgcolor=ccffcc align=centerqFastest non-qualifiersNRNational recordPBPersonal bestSBSeasonal best

Heats

Qualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advanced to the semifinals.[8]

Rank Heat Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 2 6 50.20 Q
2 3 7 50.56 Q
3 2 3 50.64 Q
4 4 5 50.69 Q
5 5 5 50.75 Q
6 4 2 50.83 Q
7 3 4 50.98 Q
8 5 2 51.01 Q
9 4 3 51.17 Q, SB
10 1 3 51.27 Q
11 3 2 51.43 Q, SB
12 1 5 51.48 Q
13 4 6 51.51 Q, PB
14 1 4 51.62 Q, SB
15 3 8 51.75 Q
16 2 1 51.83 Q
17 1 6 51.98 Q
18 4 4 52.01 q, SB
19 4 8 52.14 q
20 4 7 52.17 q
21 5 6 52.20 Q
22 2 2 52.24 Q
23 1 8 52.28 q, PB
24 2 4 52.39
25 5 7 52.44 Q
26 1 7 52.45
27 5 4 52.62
28 5 8 52.63
29 2 8 53.01
30 3 5 53.26
31 1 2 53.73
32 3 6 54.03
33 2 7 54.56
34 3 3 55.45
35 2 5 56.36
5 3 163.3[9]

Semifinals

Qualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advanced to the final.[10]

Rank Heat Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1 1 5 49.56 Q
2 2 4 49.75 Q, SB
3 3 5 49.86 Q, PB
4 2 5 49.94 Q, SB
5 3 4 49.99 Q
5 3 3 49.99 q
7 2 6 50.34 q
8 2 3 50.47 SB
9 1 3 50.48 Q
10 1 6 50.84 PB
11 3 6 51.02 PB
12 2 7 51.42 PB
13 1 7 51.49 PB
14 3 7 51.54 PB
15 2 8 51.64
16 1 4 51.80
17 3 1 51.94
18 1 2 52.11
19 1 1 52.28
20 2 1 52.37
21 3 8 52.38
22 3 2 52.42
23 2 2 52.48
24 1 8 52.62

Final

The final was held at 21:15.[11]

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
4 49.41 NR
5 49.41
2 49.99
4 3 50.30
5 6 50.68
6 7 50.98
7 1 51.49
8 49.78

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-400-W-h----.SL2.pdf?v=1767968725 Start list
  2. Web site: Christine Ohuruogu wins 400m gold in epic race. 12 August 2013. ESPN. 13 August 2013 .
  3. Web site: Christine Ohuruogu wins 400m World Championship gold in stunning style. 12 August 2013. Guardian . 13 August 2013 .
  4. News: Russia outrun U.S. To take women's 4x400 relay. Reuters. 17 August 2013.
  5. Web site: 5 Russians banned for doping at Olympics, track and field world champinships. 27 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20190221190718/https://www.syracuse.com/olympics/index.ssf/2017/04/5_russians_banned_for_doping_at_olympics_track_worlds.html. 21 February 2019. dead.
  6. News: Ohuruogu relishes 'special' victory. BBC Sport.
  7. Web site: Records & Lists – 400 meters. IAAF. 8 August 2013.
  8. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-400-W-h----.RS6.pdf?v=-1709848977 Heats Results
  9. Lane infringement
  10. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-400-W-sf----.RS6.pdf?v=-579463098 Semifinals Results
  11. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-400-W-f----.RS6.pdf?v=-1119691881 Final Results