Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's 4 × 100 metres relay explained

Event:Men's 4 × 100 metres relay
Games:2020 Summer
Venue:Olympic Stadium
Dates:5 August 2021 (round 1)
6 August 2021 (final)
Competitors:64
Nations:16
Win Value:37.50
Gold:Lorenzo Patta
Marcell Jacobs
Fausto Desalu
Filippo Tortu
Goldnoc:ITA
Silver:Aaron Brown
Jerome Blake
Brendon Rodney
Andre De Grasse
Silvernoc:CAN
Bronze:Tang Xingqiang
Xie Zhenye
Su Bingtian
Wu Zhiqiang
Bronzenoc:CHN
Prev:2016
Next:2024

The men's 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place on 5 and 6 August 2021 at the Olympic Stadium.[1] There were 16 competing relay teams, with each team having 5 members from which 4 were selected in each round.[2]

Summary

During the final, Chijindu Ujah gave Great Britain the lead out of the blocks, Japan's Shuhei Tada and Canada's Aaron Brown also gaining relative to the stagger. At the first handoff, Ujah passed efficiently to Zharnel Hughes, pulling away from Jamaica to their inside. On the outside, Ryota Yamagata left too early for Tada to catch him inside the zone, Japan unable to make the handoff and ending their race. Down the backstretch, 100 metres champion Marcell Jacobs received the baton from Lorenzo Patta and opened up space on Xie Zhenye to his inside, pulling Italy into contention, with Canada's pass from Jerome Blake to Brendon Rodney keeping them in the mix. China loaded up their third leg with ace Su Bingtian pulling back some ground on GBR's Richard Kilty, while Jamaica had Yohan Blake, the second fastest man in history, running the bend. Kilty passed efficiently to Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake, while Wu Zhiqiang had to slow down and look back to find Su with the baton, costing China the chance to battle for gold. Italy passed from Fausto Desalu to Filippo Tortu about metre down from team GB. Behind China, Jamaica and Germany, Rodney passed to Canada's star Andre De Grasse almost 5 metres behind. From there De Grasse took off, passing three teams to move into third place, while over the final 50 metres Tortu produced a burst of speed combined with a perfectly executed final dip to take gold on the line. Italy had set a new national record with a time of 37.50, the 19th fastest performance ever and the 2021 world lead. China equalled their national record with 37.79, while Ghana was disqualified from 7th place because of a faulty baton pass.

During the Olympics, British athlete CJ Ujah tested positive for anabolic agent ostarine and steroid-like S-23 (drug), and was provisionally suspended, confirmed on 14 September by B-sample.[3] [4] On 18 February 2022, the British team was disqualified and officially stripped of the silver medal.[5] [6] [7] The International Olympic Committee requested all members of Great Britain's relay team to return their medals. Canada's relay team was upgraded to silver, and China's relay team was upgraded to bronze.[8] This was also the first ever medal for Team China in an Olympic athletics relay event. The medal reallocation ceremony of the bronze medal was held at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Stadium on 4 October 2023 after all the events of the Asian Games ended on that day, along with the medal reallocation ceremony of women's 20 km walk of London 2012.

Background

This was the 25th 4 x 100 relay; it has been run every Olympics since 1912.

Qualification

See main article: Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification.

National Olympic Committees (NOCs) could qualify one relay team in one of three following ways:[2] [9]

A total of five athletes may be entered for a relay team. Should a NOC have also entered individual athletes in the corresponding individual event (100 m), the entered individual athletes must be included in the total of five (5) athletes entered for the relay event. In addition of five, NOCs can nominate a maximum of one alternate athlete for each team.

The qualifying period was originally from 1 May 2019 to 29 June 2020. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the period was suspended from 6 April 2020 to 30 November 2020, with the end date extended to 29 June 2021. The qualifying time standards could be obtained in various meets during the given period that have the approval of the IAAF. Both indoor and outdoor meets are eligible. The most recent Area Championships may be counted in the ranking, even if not during the qualifying period.[2] [10]

Qualified teams

A total of 16 NOCs qualified.Entry number: 16 teams of 5 athletes each (80), plus alternates.

Qualification standardNo. of teamsQualified teams
2019 World Championships in Athletics
Finalists
8






2021 World Athletics Relays
Further finalists
4


World Athletics Top List
(as of 29 June 2021)
4[11]
[12]
[13]
[14]

Top list before competition

Source: 4x100 Metres Relay - men - senior - outdoor - 2021

  1. 38.27, 1st in Gateshead (GBR), on 13 July 2021
  2. 38.29 , 1st in Shenzhen (CHN), on 20 March 2021
  3. 38.29, 2nd in Gateshead, on 13 July 2021
  4. 38.32 , 1st at Sportanlage am Weinweg, Regensburg (GER) 20 June 2021
  5. 38.33 , 1st at GC Foster College, Spanish Town (JAM) 8 May 2021
  6. 38.45 , 1h2 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL) 1 May 2021
  7. 38.45 , 1h3 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL) 1 May 2021
  8. 38.49 , 2h3 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL) 1 May 2021 (DQ)
  9. 38.53 , 1st at Yabatech Sport Complex, Lagos (NGR) 27 June 2021, first non-qualifier
  10. 38.56 , 1st at Centre sportif du Bout-du-Monde, Genève (SUI) 12 June 2021
  11. 38.60 Florida State Seminoles, 3rd at Hayward Field, Eugene (USA) 11 June 2021

Season's bests for the other qualified teams:

  1. 38.79 , 2h1 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL), on 1 May 2021
  2. 38.94 , 2f1 in Cluj-Napoca (ROU), on 19 June 2021
  3. 38.98 , 3h2 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL), on 1 May 2021
  4. 39.06 , 4h2 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL), on 1 May 2021
  5. 39.08 , 3h3 at Stadion Śląski, Chorzów (POL), on 1 May 2021
  6. 39.63 , 2nd at The Bahamas National Stadium, Nassau (BAH) 28 June 2021

Competition format

The event continued to use the two-round format introduced in 2012.[15]

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Olympic, and area records were as follows.

AreaTime (s)AthleteNation
37.65
37.43
37.36
36.84
38.17
37.72

The following national records were established during the competition:

Country Athlete Round Time Notes
Heats 37.95
Final 37.50
align=left align=left Heats 38.08
align=left align=left Heats 38.16
align=left align=left Final 37.79 =NR

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

The men's 4 × 100 metres relay took place over two consecutive days.[1]

DateTimeRound
Thursday, 5 August 2021 11:30 Heats
Friday, 6 August 2021 22:50Final

Results

Results are from World Athletics:[16]

Heats

Qualification Rules: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the Final

Heat 1

RankLaneNationCompetitorsReaction TimeNotes
1 5 align=left align=left .146 37.82 ,
2 4 align=left align=left .147 38.16 ,
3 9 align=left align=left .156 38.18
4 2 align=left align=left .140 38.34
5 8 align=left align=left .150 38.63
6 align=left align=left .146
7 align=left align=left .150
3 align=left align=left .152 (38.02)

Heat 2

RankLaneNationCompetitorsReaction TimeNotes
1 4 align=left align=left .152 37.92 (37.916) ,
2 9 align=left align=left .177 37.92 (37.918) ,
3 5 align=left align=left .170 37.95 ,
4 6 align=left align=left .134 38.06 ,
5 8 align=left align=left Sean Safo-Antwi, Benjamin Azamati-Kwaku, Emmanuel Yeboah, Joseph Amoah.137 38.08 ,
6 3 align=left align=left .148 38.10
7 7 align=left align=left .143 38.16
2 align=left align=left .146

Final

RankLaneNationCompetitorsReaction TimeNotes
8 align=left align=left 0.154 37.50 ,
4 align=left align=left 0.148 37.70
7 align=left align=left 0.153 37.79 =
4 5 align=left align=left 0.158 37.84
5 3 align=left align=left 0.136 38.12
9 align=left align=left 0.139
2 align=left align=left 0.160
DQ 6 align=left align=left 0.141 (37.51)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Athletics Competition Schedule . Tokyo 2020 . 22 June 2021 . 9 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210709200259/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/en/schedule/athletics-schedule . dead .
  2. News: Qualification System – Games of the XXXI Olympiad – Athletics. IAAF. 31 March 2019.
  3. Web site: Olympic silver medalist Chijindu Ujah provisionally suspended for doping violation.
  4. News: GB's Ujah suspended after positive test. BBC Sport.
  5. Web site: Media Release. Decision rendered by the Anti-Doping Division of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS ADD). Chijindu Ujah - Athletics.. TAS / CAS. 18 February 2022. 18 February 2022.
  6. News: 2022-02-18. Britain stripped of Tokyo Olympics 4x100m silver as CAS upholds Ujah doping violation. en. Reuters. 2022-02-19.
  7. Web site: Great Britain lose Tokyo Olympics relay medal after doping violation. BBC Sport. 18 February 2022. 18 February 2022.
  8. https://olympics.com/ioc/news/events-from-sochi-2014-and-tokyo-2020-to-have-medals-and-diplomas-reallocated Events from Sochi 2014 and Tokyo 2020 to have medals and diplomas reallocated
  9. News: IAAF to follow other sports with world ranking system for athletes. BBC Sport. 7 March 2018 . 2 August 2018.
  10. News: Olympic qualification period suspended until 1 December 2020. World Athletics. 6 April 2020. 9 April 2020.
  11. 37.91 at Khalifa International Stadium, Doha (QAT) - 04 OCT 2019
  12. 38.15 at Khalifa International Stadium, Doha (QAT) - 04 OCT 2019
  13. 38.46 in Lima (PER) - 09 AUG 2019
  14. 38.47 at International, Yokohama (JPN) - 11 MAY 2019
  15. News: Athletics Explanatory Guide . Tokyo 2020 . August 2019 .
  16. Web site: World Athletics. www.worldathletics.org. 21 March 2022.