2017 World Championships in Athletics – Men's pole vault

Men's pole vault
at the 2017 World Championships
Sam Kendricks, the winner of the event.
Venue Olympic Stadium
Dates 6 August (qualification)
8 August (final)
Competitors 29 from 19 nations
Winning height 5.95
Medalists
    United States
    Poland
    France
Video on YouTube
Official Video

The men's pole vault at the 2017 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Olympic Stadium on 6 and 8 August.[1]

Summary

Of the twelve finalists, only three reached 5.75 metres without any fails: Olympic bronze medalist Sam Kendricks (USA), world record holder Renaud Lavillenie and Xue Changrui (China). Two Polish vaulters, Piotr Lisek and Paweł Wojciechowski, also cleared that height but with previous misses. Kendricks and Xue succeeded first time at 5.82 metres, while all the others passed after one failure to the next height, 5.89 metres. Kendricks and Lisek cleared that height on their first attempts, and Lavillenie on his last attempt, with Xue and Wojciechowski failing to clear that height and leaving the three medallists confirmed. All three were unsuccessful in their first two tries at 5.95 metres, and on the third try Kendrick succeeded, Lisek failed, and Lavillenie passed. Both Kendricks and Lavillenie failed at 6.01 metres, leaving Lavillenie with bronze and Kendricks with gold.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

RecordPerf.AthleteNat.DateLocation
World 6.16 Renaud Lavillenie  FRA 5 Feb 2014 Donetsk, Ukraine
Championship 6.05 Dmitri Markov  AUS 9 Aug 2001 Edmonton, Canada
World leading 6.00 Sam Kendricks  USA 24 Jun 2017 Sacramento, United States
African 6.03 Okkert Brits  RSA 18 Aug 1995 Cologne, Germany
Asian 5.92 Igor Potapovich  KAZ 19 Feb 1998 Stockholm, Sweden
NACAC 6.04 Brad Walker  USA 8 Jun 2008 Eugene, OR, United States
South American 6.03 Thiago Braz da Silva  BRA 15 Aug 2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
European 6.16 Renaud Lavillenie  FRA 15 Feb 2014 Donetsk, Ukraine
Oceanian 6.06 Steven Hooker  AUS 7 Feb 2009 Boston, MA, United States

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

RecordPerf.AthleteNat.Date
Chinese 5.82 Xue Changrui  CHN 8 Aug 2017

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 5.70 metres.[4]

Schedule

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

Date Time Round
6 August10:40Qualification
8 August19:35Final

Results

Qualification

The qualification round took place on 6 August, in two groups, both starting at 10:40. Athletes attaining a mark of 5.75 metres ( Q ) or at least the 12 best performers ( q ) qualified for the final.[6] The overall results were as follows:[7]

RankGroupNameNationality5.305.455.605.70MarkNotes
1ARenaud Lavillenie France (FRA)--oo5.70q
APiotr Lisek Poland (POL)oooo5.70q
3BSam Kendricks United States (USA)ooxxoo5.70q
4BShawnacy Barber Canada (CAN)oooxxo5.70q
5AAxel Chapelle France (FRA)xoooxxo5.70q
ARaphael Holzdeppe Germany (GER)-oxoxxo5.70q
7BPaweł Wojciechowski Poland (POL)-oxxoxxo5.70q
8AArmand Duplantis Sweden (SWE)xxoxoxoxxo5.70q
9BArnaud Art Belgium (BEL)oooxxx5.60q
10AXue Changrui China (CHN)-xooxxx5.60q
11BKurtis Marschall Australia (AUS)oxxooxxx5.60q
BYao Jie China (CHN)oxxooxxx5.60q
13BChristopher Nilsen United States (USA)ooxoxxx5.60
14BValentin Lavillenie France (FRA)-xoxoxxx5.60
15AAndrew Irwin United States (USA)xxooxoxxx5.60
16AAdrián Vallés Spain (ESP)xxoxoxoxxx5.60
17AVladyslav Malykhin Ukraine (UKR)xxooxxoxxx5.60
18AJan Kudlička Czech Republic (CZE)-oxxx5.45
BHiroki Ogita Japan (JPN)ooxxx5.45
20AGermán Chiaraviglio Argentina (ARG)xooxxx5.45
21AEmmanouil Karális Greece (GRE)xxooxxx5.45
22AIlya Mudrov Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)oxoxxx5.45
AIvan Horvat Croatia (CRO)oxoxxx5.45
BKévin Menaldo France (FRA)-xoxxx5.45
25BMichal Balner Czech Republic (CZE)xoxxoxxx5.45
26ASeito Yamamoto Japan (JPN)oxxx5.30
BDiogo Ferreira Portugal (POR)xxxNH
BIgor Bychkov Spain (ESP)xxxNH
BMenno Vloon Netherlands (NED)-x--rNH
BKonstantinos Filippidis Greece (GRE)----DNS[lower-alpha 1]

Final

The final took place on 8 August at 19:42. The results were as follows:[9]

RankNameNationality5.505.655.755.825.895.956.01MarkNotes
1st, gold medalist(s)Sam Kendricks United States (USA)oooooxxoxr5.95
2nd, silver medalist(s)Piotr Lisek Poland (POL)oxxoox-oxxx5.89
3rd, bronze medalist(s)Renaud Lavillenie France (FRA)oox-xoxx-x5.89SB
4Xue Changrui China (CHN)ooooxxx5.82NR
5Paweł Wojciechowski Poland (POL)ooxox-xx5.75
6Axel Chapelle France (FRA)ooxxx5.65
7Kurtis Marschall Australia (AUS)xooxxx5.65
8Shawnacy Barber Canada (CAN)xoxxoxxx5.65
9Armand Duplantis Sweden (SWE)oxxx5.50
Arnaud Art Belgium (BEL)xxxNH
Raphael Holzdeppe Germany (GER)xxxNH
Yao Jie China (CHN)xxxNH

References

  1. Start list
  2. "Pole Vault Men – Records". IAAF. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  3. "Records Set - Final" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  4. "Qualification System and Entry Standards" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  5. "Pole Vault Men − Timetable". IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  6. "Pole Vault Men − Qualification − Results" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 Aug 2017.
  7. "Pole Vault Men − Qualification − Summary" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 Aug 2017.
  8. "Χωρίς τον Φιλιππίδη η αποστολή για Λονδίνο". ΚΑΘΗΜΕΡΙΝΕΣ (in Greek). 2 August 2017. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  9. "Pole Vault Men − Final − Results" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 Aug 2017.

Notes

  1. Konstantinos Filippidis didn't participate due to an injury before the Qualification Round.[8]
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