2017 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 4 × 400 metres relay explained

Event:Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
Competition:2017 World Championships
Venue:Olympic Stadium
Dates:12 August (heats)
13 August (final)
Competitors:69
Nations:16
Win Value:2:58.12
Gold:Jarrin Solomon
Jereem Richards
Machel Cedenio
Lalonde Gordon
Renny Quow*
Goldnoc:TTO
Silver:Wilbert London III
Gil Roberts
Michael Cherry
Fred Kerley
Tony McQuay
Silvernoc:USA
Bronze:Matthew Hudson-Smith
Rabah Yousif
Dwayne Cowan
Martyn Rooney
Jack Green
Bronzenoc:GBR
Prev:2015
Next:2019

The men's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics was held at the London Olympic Stadium on 12 August.[1]

Summary

The final race of the World Championships started fairly even, with USA's Wilbert London III and Britain's Matthew Hudson-Smith gaining slightly on the stagger on the inside, while Spain's Óscar Husillos was gaining on Trinidad and Tobago's Jarrin Solomon further toward the outside. Belgium's Robin Vanderbemden also looked to be having a strong leg all alone in lane 9. Coming down the homestretch, London sped up to have the USA the handoff first to Gil Roberts. Roberts came around the turn to take a 3-metre lead at the break, followed by GBR's Rabah Yousif and Spain's Lucas Búa, TTO's Jereem Richards was on the outside passing people. Into the far turn, he had beaten Yousif and kept going making up the gap on Roberts getting to within a metre. Down the homestretch, Roberts again opened up the gap, handing off to Michael Cherry three metres ahead of Trinidad and Tobago's handoff to Machel Cedenio. Great Britain's handoff to Dwayne Cowan was just a metre back as the top three teams had separated from the rest of the contenders. Through most of the lap, Cherry held a five-metre lead while Cowan was challenging Cedenio. Cedenio held off Cowan then on the homestretch he separated, making a run at Cherry. USA passed to Fred Kerley barely a metre ahead of TTO's pass to Lalonde Gordon. Kerley was the anchor runner of the fastest 4x400 relay of the year prior to the championships, running for Texas A&M at the end of the college season more than two months earlier. Kerley held that one-metre lead down the backstretch, then widened it slightly through the final turn. Behind Gordon, GBR's Martyn Rooney was closing down the gap to bring his team to within a metre coming off the turn. Kerley straightened up and ran tight for the finish while Gordon went to the outside for running room and ran past him, pulling away to a decisive 3-metre victory. Kerley maintained his distance from Rooney to get silver for USA. GBR's Rooney finished 8 metres ahead of the Belgian team, which included three Borlée brothers.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Team Date Location
World2:54.29
Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Butch Reynolds, Michael Duane Johnson
22 Aug 1993Stuttgart, Germany
Championship
World leading2:59.95Texas A&M University
Richard Rose, My'Lik Kerley, Robert Grant, Fred Kerley
7 Jun 2017Eugene, United States
African2:58.68 Nigeria
Clement Chukwu, Jude Monye, Sunday Bada, Enefiok Udo-Obong
Sydney, Australia
Asian3:00.76 Japan
Shunji Karube, Koji Ito, Jun Osakada, Shigekazu Omori
3 Aug 1996Atlanta, United States
NACAC2:54.29 United States
Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Harry Reynolds, Michael Johnson
22 Aug 1993Stuttgart, Germany
South American2:58.56 Brazil
Eronilde de Araújo, Cleverson da Silva, Claudinei da Silva, Sanderlei Parrela
30 Jul 1999Winnipeg, Canada
European2:56.60
Iwan Thomas, Mark Richardson, Jamie Baulch, Roger Black
3 Aug 1996Atlanta, United States
Oceanian2:59.70 Australia
Bruce Frayne, Gary Minihan, Rick Mitchell, Darren Clark
11 Aug 1984Los Angeles, United States

The following records were set at the competition:[3]

Record Team Date
World leading2:58.12
Jarrin Solomon, Jereem Richards, Machel Cedenio, Lalonde Gordon
13 Aug 2017
Trinidad and Tobago
World leading2:59.23
Wilbert London III, Bryshon Nellum, Michael Cherry, Tony McQuay
12 Aug 2017
Spanish3:00.65
Óscar Husillos, Lucas Búa, Darwin Echeverry, Samuel García
13 Aug 2017

Qualification criteria

The first eight placed teams at the 2017 IAAF World Relays and the host country qualify automatically for entry with remaining places being filled by teams with the fastest performances during the qualification period.[4]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+1), is as follows:[5]

DateTimeRound
12 August 11:50 Heats
13 August 21:15 Final

Results

Heats

The first round took place on 12 August in two heats as follows:[6]

Heat 1 2
Start time11:50 12:00
Photo finishlinklink

The first three in each heat ( 

Q ) and the next two fastest ( q ) qualified for the final. The overall results were as follows:[7]
Rank Heat Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
1 2 9 2:59.23 ,
2 2 8 2:59.35 ,
3 2 3 2:59.47 ,
4 2 6 3:00.10 ,
5 2 4 3:00.93 ,
6 1 9 3:01.72 ,
7 1 7 3:01.78 ,
8 1 5 3:01.88 ,
9 1 8 3:01.98
10 1 3 3:02.80
11 1 4 3:03.04
12 1 2 3:03.68
13 2 5 3:04.02
14 2 7 3:06.50
15 2 2 3:07.29
16 1 6 3:15.45

Final

The final took place on 13 August at 22:20. The results were as follows (photo finish):[8]

Rank Lane Nation Athletes Time Notes
7 2:58.12 ,
4 2:58.61
3 2:59.00
4 9 3:00.04
5 6 3:00.65
6 8 3:01.10
7 5 3:01.59
DSQ 2 3:01.79 [9]

Notes and References

  1. https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/5151/AT-4X4-M-h----.SL2.pdf Start list
  2. Web site: 4x400 Metres Relay Men – Records . IAAF. 31 July 2017.
  3. Web site: Records Set - Final. IAAF. 14 August 2017.
  4. Web site: Qualification System and Entry Standards. IAAF. 9 August 2017.
  5. Web site: 4x400 Metres Relay Men − Timetable. IAAF. 9 August 2017.
  6. Web site: 4x400 Metres Relay Men − Heats − Results. IAAF. 14 August 2017.
  7. Web site: 4x400 Metres Relay Men − Heats − Summary. IAAF. 14 August 2017.
  8. Web site: 4x400 Metres Relay Men − Final− Results. IAAF. 14 August 2017.
  9. Web site: Athletics - World 2017 (H): The relay 4х- $ m disqualified, Atin-Venel calls.