2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's 400 metres

Men's 400 metres
at the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
Venue Ergo Arena
Dates 7 March (heats and semifinals)
8 March (final)
Competitors 27 from 22 nations
Winning time 45.24
Medalists
    Czech Republic
    Bahamas
    United States

The men's 400 metres at the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships took place on 7–8 March 2014.

Records

Standing records prior to the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
World record  Kerron Clement (USA) 44.57 Fayetteville, United States 12 March 2005
Championship record  Nery Brenes (CRC) 45.11 Istanbul, Turkey 10 March 2012
World leading  Lalonde Gordon (TRI) 45.17 Boston, United States 8 February 2014
African record  Sunday Bada (NGR) 45.51 Paris, France 9 March 1997
Asian record  Shunji Karube (JPN) 45.76 Paris, France 9 March 1997
European record  Thomas Schönlebe (GDR) 45.05 Sindelfingen, West Germany 5 February 1988
North and Central American
and Caribbean record
 Kerron Clement (USA) 44.57 Fayetteville, United States 12 March 2005
Oceanian record  Daniel Batman (AUS) 45.93 Birmingham, Great Britain 2 March 2003
South American record  Bayano Kamani (PAN) 46.26 Boston, United States 29 January 2005

Qualification standards

Indoor Outdoor
46.80 45.10

Schedule

Date Time Round
7 March 201410:45Heats
7 March 201421:25Semifinals
8 March 201420:30Final

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the semi-finals.[1]

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
156Chris Brown Bahamas45.84Q, SB
255Pavel Maslák Czech Republic46.01Q
315Lalonde Gordon Trinidad and Tobago46.07Q
414Edino Steele Jamaica46.38Q
546Kyle Clemons United States46.42Q
616Marek Niit Estonia46.52q
735Luguelín Santos Dominican Republic46.54Q
=825David Verburg United States46.62Q
34Nery Brenes Costa Rica46.62Q
1036Nigel Levine Great Britain46.64q
1154Nick Ekelund-Arenander Denmark46.68
1231Anderson Henriques Brazil46.82PB
1323Rafał Omelko Poland46.84Q
1444Akheem Gauntlett Jamaica46.85Q
1524Jarrin Solomon Trinidad and Tobago46.86
1642Tabarie Henry United States Virgin Islands46.87
1713Vitaliy Butrym Ukraine46.98
1853Mark Ujakpor Spain47.16
1912Erison Hurtault Dominica47.25
2026Gustavo Cuesta Dominican Republic47.43
2143Bram Peters Netherlands47.50
2233Donald Sanford Israel47.90
2322Nika Kartavtsevi Georgia48.68SB
2452Falcón Fagúndez Uruguay49.89PB
2551Jannot Bacar Comoros50.11
32Siologa Viliamu Sepa SamoaDQR163.3(a)[2]
45Richard Buck Great BritainDQR163.2[3]

Semifinals

Qualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) qualified for the finals. [4]

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
113Pavel Maslák Czech Republic45.79Q
215Kyle Clemons United States46.06Q
325Chris Brown Bahamas46.19Q
424Nery Brenes Costa Rica46.25Q, SB
516Lalonde Gordon Trinidad and Tobago46.29Q
623David Verburg United States46.33Q
726Luguelín Santos Dominican Republic46.37
811Nigel Levine Great Britain46.84
922Rafał Omelko Poland46.94
1021Akheem Gauntlett Jamaica47.13
1112Marek Niit Estonia47.67
14Edino Steele JamaicaDQR163.3(b)[5]

Final

[6]

RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)5Pavel Maslák Czech Republic45.24NR
2nd, silver medalist(s)6Chris Brown Bahamas45.58PB
3rd, bronze medalist(s)4Kyle Clemons United States45.74
41David Verburg United States46.21
52Lalonde Gordon Trinidad and Tobago46.39
63Nery Brenes Costa Rica47.32

References

  1. Heats results
  2. Lane infringement
  3. Jostling/Obstruction on the track
  4. Semifinals results
  5. Infringement of the inside border
  6. Final results
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.