2015 World Championships in Athletics – Women's 4 × 400 metres relay explained

Event:Women's 4 × 400 metres relay
Competition:2015 World Championships
Venue:Beijing National Stadium
Dates:29 August (heats)
30 August (final)
Competitors:74
Nations:16
Win Value:3:19.13
Gold:Christine Day
Shericka Jackson
Stephenie Ann McPherson
Novlene Williams-Mills
Anastasia Le-Roy
Goldnoc:JAM
Silver:Sanya Richards-Ross
Natasha Hastings
Allyson Felix
Francena McCorory
Phyllis Francis
Silvernoc:USA
Bronze:Christine Ohuruogu
Anyika Onuora
Eilidh Child
Seren Bundy-Davies
Kirsten McAslan
Bronzenoc:GBR
Prev:2013
Next:2017

The women's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Beijing National Stadium on 29 and 30 August.[1] [2]

Summary

The Jamaican team announced their intention to win this race early in the championships by placing all four of their relay team members in the top six of the final of the 400 metres. The American squad had two women in that same race, one of them the winner Allyson Felix. Their ace in the hole was having the top two in the world, prior to the American championships, fail to make the individual event but were available for the relay. Both Olympic Champion Sanya Richards-Ross and World Indoor Champion Francena McCorory demonstrated their occasional ability to run excellent 350 meter races in that meet, their flailing last 50 metres is why they didn't qualify for the individual race. All the other teams ran their season best just to make the finals, Bahamas and Japan set National Records and still failed to qualify.

In the final, it was a reminder of 2008 on this same track as Richards-Ross was out aggressively, making up the stagger on Christine Ohuruogu and when she hit the home stretch, she was out of gas. Meanwhile, to their outside, Christine Day was running smoothly to give Jamaica a big lead, Shericka Jackson. Natasha Hastings ran a quick turn to barely hold off Anyika Onuora at the break. Jackson started her leg conservatively, so the gap looked manageable, until she started cranking and the lead gap started growing. Jamaica had an almost two second lead when Jackson handed off to Stephenie Ann McPherson, Hastings helped the USA hold off the British team before handing off to the American's star, Felix. The gap looked impossible at the beginning but Felix closed it down. It took Felix 350 metres to catch McPherson, but it was a steady race throughout and when Felix got there she just continued on by, handing off to world #3 Francena McCorory with the lead. Jamaica had Novlene Williams-Mills on the anchor leg, starting 2 metres down. Down the backstretch and into the final turn, McCorory held the same gap on Williams-Mills, then through the turn the gap started to widen. Onto the home stretch, Williams-Mills moved out to lane 2 to look for running room. 70 metres before the finish, McCorory's arm movement got bigger but her legs got noticeably slower. Williams-Mills cruised on by a helpless McCorory with powerful sprint form across the line for gold. Well behind the leaders, the British team was challenged by Nigeria until Patience Okon George met with a similar collapse. While Seren Bundy-Davies carried the British home for bronze, George was overtaken at the line by Russia's Kseniya Aksyonova.[3]

Felix's leg was timed at 47.72 seconds, the fastest of her career and the third fastest women's relay leg ever measured, just .02 seconds off the fastest measured electronically.

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:[4]

World record
(Tatyana Ledovskaya, Olga Nazarova, Mariya Kulchunova, Olga Bryzgina)
3:15.17Seoul, South Korea1 October 1988
Championship record
(Gwen Torrence, Maicel Malone-Wallace, Natasha Kaiser-Brown, Jearl Miles Clark)
3:16.71Stuttgart, Germany22 August 1993
World leading
(Phyllis Francis, Natasha Hastings, Sanya Richards-Ross, Francena McCorory
3:19.39Nassau, Bahamas3 May 2015
African record Nigeria
(Olabisi Afolabi, Fatima Yusuf, Charity Opara, Falilat Ogunkoya)
3:21.04Atlanta, United States3 August 1996
Asian record Hebei province
(An Xiaohong, Bai Xiaoyun, Cao Chunying, Ma Yuqin)
3:24.28Beijing, China13 September 1993
North, Central American and Caribbean record
(Denean Howard-Hill, Diane Dixon, Valerie Brisco-Hooks, Florence Griffith Joyner)
3:15.51Seoul, South Korea1 October 1988
South American record Brazil BM&F Bovespa
(Geisa Aparecida Coutinho, Bárbara de Oliveira, Joelma Sousa, Jailma de Lima)
3:26.68São Paulo, Brazil7 August 2011
European record
(Tatyana Ledovskaya, Olga Nazarova, Mariya Kulchunova, Olga Bryzgina)
3:15.17Seoul, South Korea1 October 1988
Oceanian record
(Nova Peris, Tamsyn Manou, Melinda Gainsford-Taylor, Cathy Freeman)
3:23.81Sydney, Australia30 September 2000
The following records were established during the competition:
World Leading Jamaica
(Christine Day, Shericka Jackson, Stephenie Ann McPherson, Novlene Williams-Mills)
3:19.13Beijing, China30 August 2015

Schedule

DateTimeRound
29 August 2015 10:15 Heats
30 August 2015 20:05 Final

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advance to the final.[5]

Rank Heat Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
1 2 4 3:23.05
2 1 8 3:23.27 ,
3 1 4 3:23.62
4 1 2 3:23.75 ,
5 2 9 3:23.90 ,
6 2 3 3:24.86 ,
7 2 2 3:26.01 ,
8 1 3 3:26.14 ,
9 2 7 3:27.07
10 2 8 3:28.46
11 1 7 3:28.60
12 1 6 3:28.61
13 2 6 3:28.91
14 2 5 3:29.08
15 1 9 3:32.83
16 1 5 3:34.98

Final

The final was held at 20:05[6]

Rank Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
6 3:19.13
4 3:19.44
5 3:23.62
4 8 3:24.84
5 7 3:25.11
6 2 3:25.94
7 9 3:26.45
8 3 3:27.69

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Beijing 2015: Timetable . https://web.archive.org/web/20141201205133/http://www.iaafbeijing2015.com/special/iaaf_sch_en/ . dead . 1 December 2014 . 11 August 2015 . 10 August 2015 . Beijing 2015 .
  2. http://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/4875/AT-4X4-W-h----.SL2.pdf Start list
  3. Web site: REPORT: WOMEN’S 4X400M FINAL – IAAF WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS, BEIJING 2015. 30 August 2015. iaaf.org. 2 September 2015.
  4. Web site: Records & Lists – 4x400 metres relay. IAAF. 18 August 2015.
  5. http://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/4875/AT-4X4-W-h----.RS4.pdf Heats results
  6. http://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/4875/AT-4X4-W-f----.RS6.pdf Final results