Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Women's 800 metres explained

Event:Women's 800 metres
Games:2012 Summer
Venue:Olympic Stadium
Date:8–11 August
Competitors:45
Nations:35
Gold:Caster Semenya[1]
Goldnoc:RSA
Silver:Ekaterina Guliyev
Silvernoc:RUS
Bronze:Pamela Jelimo
Bronzenoc:KEN
Win Value:1:56.19
Prev:2008
Next:2016

The Women's 800 metres competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom. The event was held at the Olympic Stadium on 8–11 August.[2] The race was won by Mariya Savinova, but she has since been stripped of the gold medal for doping.

Doping

In 2013, Russian Elena Arzhakova (who ran sixth) was found to have violations in her biological passport and was suspended backdated to July 2011, disqualifying her from the race.

On November 9, 2015, the Independent Commission Investigation of the World Anti-Doping Agency asked for a lifetime ban for doping for the Russians Mariya Savinova (who won gold) and Ekaterina Guliyev (who won bronze).[3] In February 2017, it was announced that Savinova was stripped of her gold medal.[4] Guliyev was suspended in 2017 for 2 years, backdated to October 2014, but her London result was not affected.[5] In April 2024, Guliyev was banned by the Russian Athletics Federation for infractions in 2012 and 2013, voiding her results including the 2012 Olympic final.[6] The official decision to revoke medals rests with the International Olympic Committee. It is likely Guliyev's medal will be revoked, upgrading Pamela Jelimo to the silver and Alysia Montano to the bronze.

Records

, the existing world record, Olympic record, and world leading time were as follows:

World record1:53.28Munich, West Germany26 July 1983
Olympic record1:53.43Moscow, Soviet Union27 July 1980
World leading1:56.76Heusden-Zolder, Belgium7 July 2012

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

DateTimeRound
Wednesday, 8 August 2012 11:35Round 1
Thursday, 9 August 2012 19:30 Semifinals
style=background:lemonchiffonSaturday, 11 August 2012 style=background:lemonchiffon20:00style=background:lemonchiffonFinals

Competition format

The Women's 800m competition consisted of heats (Round 1), semifinals and a final.[7] Twenty-four athletes advanced from the heats to the semifinal round. The top three competitors from each of the six heats qualified for the semifinals along with the six fastest losers. A total of eight competitors qualified for the Final from the semifinals. In the three semifinal races, the first two from each semifinal advanced to the final along with the two fastest losers.

Race description

While heat 3 and heat 5 of the qualifying round allowed some athletes to run as slow as 2:07s or 2:08s and qualify, the semifinals were decidedly quicker. In heat 1, Pamela Jelimo and Ekaterina Guliyev managed to qualify virtually together in mid 1:59s, those were the slowest times. In heat two, 2009 World Champion Caster Semenya challenged the field, leading Elena Arzhakova, Janeth Jepkosgei Busienei and Alysia Johnson Montaño into the finals. Halima Hachlaf ran 1:58.84 and didn't make the final. In the third heat, virtual newcomer Francine Niyonsaba finished with 1:58.67 on the clock, a new national record for Burundi.

In the final, Montaño went to the front, with Jelimo and Jepkosgei Busienei on her shoulder, while Savinova and Semenya went to the back. The front-running Montaño hit the halfway mark in 56.31. Those positions held through 500 metres, when Jelimo charged out to a big lead down the back stretch, Montaño started to slow while Savinova started to move forward. At the 600 metre line, there was a confluence of runners moving forward meeting those moving backward. Savinova on the outside found herself in second place, though Jelimo had a 4-metre lead. Semenya was behind the wall of runners. In the next 100 metres, Savinova caught Jelimo, passing into the lead at the head of the straightaway and on to victory. Semenya was a full 10 metres back, but on the outside of traffic. As she went by, Montaño had slipped back to join a forward-moving Arzhakova. As Semenya went by, Montaño accelerated enough to separate herself from Arzhakova and held that until the finish in what would ordinarily be an also-ran position of fifth place. In the last 100, Semenya ran past the rest of the field, taking second place, but was too far behind to have a chance to catch Savinova; Guliyev edged a dying Jelimo for the bronze medal.[8]

Result

Round 1

Qual. rule: first 3 of each heat (Q) plus the 6 fastest times (q) qualified.

Heat 1

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:00.47 Q
2 2:00.71 Q
3 2:00.99 Q
4 2:01.19 q
5 2:05.45 PB
6 2:06.94
Noura Elsayed DNS

Heat 2

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:01.56 Q
2 2:01.65 Q
3 2:01.75 Q
4 2:01.78 q
5 2:05.59
6 2:14.90 SB
7 3:24.35

Heat 3

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:07.57 Q
2 2:07.75 Q
3 2:07.77 Q
4 2:09.78
5 2:18.53 NR
DNS
DNS
DNS

Heat 4

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:00.54 Q
2 2:01.41 Q
3 Eleni Filandra 2:02.29 Q
4 2:03.85 q
5 2:10.95 PB
6 2:17.39
DNF

Heat 5

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:08.35 Q
2 Elena Arzhakova 2:08.39 DSQ
2 2:08.43 Q
3 2:08.45
4 2:08.68
5 2:09.33
6 2:27.97 NR
7 2:29.16 PB

Heat 6

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2:01.04 Q
2 2:01.08 Q
3 2:01.30 Q
4 2:01.65 q
5 2:02.12 q
6 2:03.23 q
7 2:12.56
8 2:44.95 NR

Semifinals

Qual. rule: first 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) qualified.

Heat 1

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 1:59.42 Q
2 1:59.45 Q
3 2:00.16 SB
4 2:01.63
5 2:01.63
6 2:01.70
7 2:01.78
8 Eleni Filandra 2:04.42

Heat 2

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 1:57.67 Q
2 Elena Arzhakova 1:58.13 DSQ
2 1:58.26 q
3 1:58.42 q
4 1:58.84 SB
5 1:59.69 SB
6 2:00.46
7 2:00.68 SB

Heat 3

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 1:58.57 Q
2 1:58.67 Q, NR
3 1:59.20 PB
4 2:00.32
5 2:00.53 SB
6 2:01.76
7 2:01.90
8 2:05.76

Final

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
7 1:57.23 SB
2 1:57.53 PB
6 1:57.59
4 4 1:57.93
5 3 1:59.63
6 8 2:00.19
5 1:56.19 DQ (doping)[9]
9 1:59.21 DQ (doping)[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2008-12 OLYMPIC DOPING RE-TEST – AN UPDATE-UPDATE . 26 Sep 2017. Bill. Mallon. 2017-10-16.
  2. Web site: Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics . 2012-05-11 . 2012-09-05 . https://archive.today/20120905092430/http://www.london2012.com/athletics/about/ . dead .
  3. News: La Wada chiede la squalifica a vita per 5 atleti: i primi nomi. atleticalive.it. 9 November 2015.
  4. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-doping-russia-savinova-idUSKBN15P1EO Savinova stripped of London Games 800m gold for doping
  5. http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/04/08/russian-athletes-and-coaches-banned-cas Russian athletes and coaches banned by CAS
  6. https://www.reuters.com/sports/athletics/poistogova-guliyev-set-lose-london-olympics-silver-after-russia-ban-2024-04-08/ Poistogova-Guliyev set to lose London Olympics silver after Russia ban
  7. Web site: Women's 800m. London 2012 Organising Committee. 13 June 2012. 12 June 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120612122407/http://www.london2012.com/athletics/event/women-800m/index.html. dead.
  8. Web site: World Athletics.
  9. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/38931007 Mariya Savinova: Russian London 2012 gold medallist stripped of title
  10. http://www.iaaf.org/results/olympic-games/2012/the-xxx-olympic-games-4871/women/800-metres/final/result Arzhakova was later disqualified due to a doping violation