2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's 60 metres hurdles

Men's 60 metres hurdles
at the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
From L to R: Osaghae, Martinot-Lagarde, Darien and Pozzi in the final.
Venue Ergo Arena
Dates 8 March (heats)
9 March (semifinals and final)
Competitors 31 from 25 nations
Winning time 7.45 WL
Medalists
    United States
    France
    France

The men's 60 metres hurdles at the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships took place on 8–9 March 2014.

Records

Standing records prior to the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
World record  Colin Jackson (GBR) 7.30 Sindelfingen, Germany 6 March 1994
Championship record  Dayron Robles (CUB) 7.34 Doha, Qatar 14 March 2010
World leading Orlando ORTEGA, (CUB) 7.45 Lodz, Poland 17 February 2015
African record  Shaun Bownes (RSA) 7.52 Ghent, Belgium 23 February 2001
Asian record  Liu Xiang (CHN) 7.41 Birmingham, Great Britain 18 February 2012
European record  Colin Jackson (GBR) 7.30 Sindelfingen, Germany 6 March 1994
North and Central American
and Caribbean record
 Dayron Robles (CUB) 7.33 Düsseldorf, Germany 8 February 2008
Oceanian record  Kyle Vander Kuyp (AUS) 7.73 Barcelona, Spain 11 March 1995
12 March 1995
Paris, France 8 March 1997
South American record  Márcio de Souza (BRA) 7.60 Karlsruhe, Germany 15 February 2004
Records broken during the 2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships
World leading  Omo Osaghae (USA) 7.45 Sopot, Poland 9 March 2014

Qualification standards

Indoor Outdoor
7.74 13.50 (110 mH)

Schedule

Date Time Round
8 March 201410:10Heats
9 March 201415:45Semifinals
9 March 201418:20Final

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinal.[1]

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
=114Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.56Q
41Andrew Pozzi Great Britain7.56Q, PB
45Garfield Darien France7.56Q
435William Sharman Great Britain7.59Q, PB
=537Omo Osaghae United States7.61Q
22Dominic Berger United States7.61Q
725Sergey Shubenkov Russia7.62Q
847Balázs Baji Hungary7.63Q, SB
913Erik Balnuweit Germany7.64Q
1044Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece7.65q
1123Andrew Riley Jamaica7.66Q
1238Dominik Bochenek Poland7.68Q
1334Konstantin Shabanov Russia7.71q
1446Gregor Traber Germany7.73q
=1518Xie Wenjun China7.74Q
=1536Jhoanis Portilla Cuba7.74q,[2] PB
=1517Abdulaziz Al-Mandeel Kuwait7.74[3]NR
1826Yordan O'Farrill Cuba7.75SB
1916Paolo Dal Molin Italy7.76
2024Jackson Quiñónez Spain7.78
2133Aliaksandr Linnik Belarus7.79
2228Koen Smet Netherlands7.80
2321Martin Mazáč Czech Republic7.90
2443Philip Nossmy Sweden7.92
2532Héctor Cotto Puerto Rico7.94
2612Amir Shaker Iraq7.96NR
2742Iong Kim Fai Macau8.34NR
2831Nelson Camilo Acebey Bolivia8.48PB
2927Eslam Abdelatif Egypt8.69PB
48Michael Herreros GuamDQR168.7(a) [4]
15Rasul Dabó PortugalDNF

Semifinals

Qualification: First 4 in each heat (Q) qualified for the final.[5]

RankHeatLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
115Omo Osaghae United States7.49Q, PB
216Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.50Q
326Garfield Darien France7.52Q, PB
413William Sharman Great Britain7.53Q, PB
514Erik Balnuweit Germany7.54Q, PB
624Andrew Pozzi Great Britain7.56Q, PB
721Gregor Traber Germany7.58Q, PB
828Andrew Riley Jamaica7.59Q, SB
911Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece7.62
1018Balázs Baji Hungary7.63SB
1123Dominic Berger United States7.64
1227Dominik Bochenek Poland7.66
1325Sergey Shubenkov Russia7.66
1412Konstantin Shabanov Russia7.67
1517Xie Wenjun China7.71
1622Jhoanis Portilla Cuba8.03

Final

[6]

RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)6Omo Osaghae United States7.45WL
2nd, silver medalist(s)5Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.46
3rd, bronze medalist(s)4Garfield Darien France7.47PB
43Andrew Pozzi Great Britain7.53PB
58Gregor Traber Germany7.56PB
61Erik Balnuweit Germany7.56
77William Sharman Great Britain7.60
2Andrew Riley JamaicaDNS

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.