2013 World Championships in Athletics – Women's 4 × 100 metres relay explained

Event:Women's 4 × 100 metres relay
Competition:2013 World Championships
Venue:Luzhniki Stadium
Dates:18 August (heats & final)
Competitors:76
Nations:19
Win Value:41.29
Gold:Carrie Russell
Kerron Stewart
Schillonie Calvert
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
Sheri-Ann Brooks
Silver:Jeneba Tarmoh
Alexandria Anderson
English Gardner
Octavious Freeman
Bronze:Dina Asher-Smith
Ashleigh Nelson
Annabelle Lewis
Hayley Jones
Prev:2011
Next:2015

The women's 4 × 100 metres relay at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Luzhniki Stadium on 18 August.[1] The winning margin was 1.46 seconds, which as of 2024 is the only time this women's relay race has been won by more than one second at these championships.

In the final, Jamaica and the United States were out early, Jamaica passing first. The British team seemed to be keeping up with the leaders, passing efficiently. At the second handoff, English Gardner seemed to leave even with Schillonie Calvert, while Alexandria Anderson had not arrived with the baton yet. Gardner had to come to a complete stop at the end of the zone to wait for the baton, finally resuming with a legal handoff in dead last place. Inside of USA, France was having similar difficulties with the baton. By the final handoff, Jamaica had an 8-meter lead on the second place Russian team, Gold medalist Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce on the anchor pulling away and victory assured. Jamaica dominated the race finishing with a championship record 41.29. Coming down the straight, Britain's Hayley Jones was swallowed up by France's Stella Akakpo, Germany's Verena Sailer and American Octavious Freeman speeding from the back trying to make up lost ground. Freeman was able to pass three teams in the last few steps but France beat USA to the line. The French relay team members were duly presented their silver medals during the medal ceremony. After the medal ceremony, the British team filed a protest against the French team, claiming that the latter had an out-of-zone baton handover between Ayodelé Ikuesan and Myriam Soumaré. More than two hours after the race, the French relay team was officially disqualified. The French delegation appealed against their disqualification, but it was in vain. Consequently, the American team was upgraded to the silver medal and the British team received the bronze medal. Bernard Amsalem, the president of the Fédération française d'athlétisme, called the French team's disqualification "an outrage". He explained that normally the decision to disqualify a team had to be made before the medal ceremony and teams had to file protests within thirty minutes from the end of the race.[2] With this 4 × 100 m victory, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce became the first woman to win the sprint triple (100, 200, 4 × 100) at the World Athletics Championships

Records

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

World recordUnited States
(Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight, Carmelita Jeter)
40.82London, United Kingdom10 August 2012
Championship recordUnited States
(Chryste Gaines, Marion Jones, Inger Miller, Gail Devers)
41.47Athens, Greece9 August 1997
World leadingUnited States Red
(English Gardner, Octavious Freeman, Allyson Felix, Carmelita Jeter)
41.75Monaco19 July 2013
African recordNigeria
(Beatrice Utondu, Faith Idehen, Christy Opara-Thompson, Mary Onyali-Omagbemi)
42.39Barcelona, Spain7 August 1992
Asian recordPeople's Republic of China
(Xiao Lin, Li Yali, Liu Xiaomei, Li Xuemei)
42.23Shanghai, People's Republic of China23 October 1997
North, Central American and Caribbean recordUnited States
(Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight, Carmelita Jeter)
40.82London, United Kingdom10 August 2012
South American recordBrazil
(Ana Claudia Silva, Franciela Krasucki, Evelyn dos Santos, Rosângela Santos)
42.55London, United Kingdom9 August 2012
European recordEast Germany
(Silke Gladisch-Möller, Sabine Rieger, Ingrid Auerswald-Lange, Marlies Göhr)
41.37Canberra, Australia6 October 1985
Oceanian recordAustralia
(Rachael Massey, Suzanne Broadrick, Jodi Lambert, Melinda Gainsford-Taylor)
42.99Pietersburg, South Africa18 March 2000

Schedule

DateTimeRound
18 August 2013 16:15 Heats
18 August 2013 18:10 Final

Results

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

Heats

Qualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final.[4]

Rank Heat Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
1 3 4 41.82 Q
2 1 4 41.87 Q, SB
3 1 3 42.25 Q
4 3 2 42.29 Q, AR
5 1 6 42.65 q, SB
6 2 5 42.75 Q
7 3 6 42.94 q, SB
8 2 7 42.99 Q, NR
9 3 3 43.01 SB
10 2 2 43.12 [5]
11 3 7 43.18 SB
12 2 3 43.21 NR
13 1 5 43.26 SB
14 1 2 43.28 NR
15 3 8 43.65 SB
16 2 4 44.05
17 3 5 44.22
1 7 R170.7[6]
2 6 R163.3(a)[7]

Final

The final was started at 18:10.[8]

Rank Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
6 41.29 CR
5 42.75
3 42.87
4 1 42.90
5 2 42.93 SB
6 7 43.28
4 R170.7
8

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-4X1-W-h----.SL2.pdf?v=-2014972202 Start list
  2. Web site: Athlétisme : cruelle issue pour Myriam Soumaré aux Mondiaux. La Gazette du Val d'Oise. 21 August 2013.
  3. Web site: Records & Lists – 5000 meters. IAAF. 8 August 2013.
  4. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-4X1-W-h----.RS6.pdf?v=662284716 Heats Results
  5. Relay member, Yelyzaveta Bryzhina, tested positive for a prohibited substance earlier at the competition. There is no official information if the result was nullified.
  6. Passing the baton outside the takeover zone
  7. Lane infringement
  8. http://dt9guucc6nuua.cloudfront.net/competitiondocuments/pdf/4873/AT-4X1-W-f----.RS6.pdf?v=1412105526 Final Results