2017 IAAF World Relays – Men's 4 × 400 metres relay

The men's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2017 IAAF World Relays was held at the Thomas Robinson Stadium on 22–23 April.

Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
at the 2017 IAAF World Relays
VenueThomas Robinson Stadium
Dates22 April (heats) & 23 April (final)
Competitors76 from 17 nations
Winning time3:02.13
Medalists
    United States
    Botswana
    Jamaica

In the final, American David Verburg took an immediate lead, opening up a gap on French, Brazilian and Cuban teams to his inside, and making up the three turn stagger on Botswana's Isaac Makwala (the #7 400 meter runner of all time) to his outside while still in the second turn. USA had a clear lead at the handoff with Tony McQuay breaking several metres ahead of Demish Gaye for Jamaica on the far outside. Down the backstretch Trinidad and Tobago's Jereem Richards, Botswana's Baboloki Thebe and Britain's Delano Williams lined up, breaking away from the other teams. Through the turn Thebe moved onto Richards' shoulder. Richards responded and moved up to Gaye, the three teams virtually even until Thebe fell back before the handoff. Trinidad gained position on the handoff to Jarrin Solomon, who found himself only two metres back of American Kyle Clemons. Down the backstretch, Jamaica's Martin Manley ran around Solomon and pulled to within a metre of Clemons coming off the final turn. As Manley tied up, Solomon came back to his shoulder with Botswana's Onkabetse Nkobolo making a big rush on the outside to make it a 3 way battle behind the Americans. At the handoff, American LaShawn Merritt started slowly and took a secure handoff. Meanwhile, Botswana's handoff to Karabo Sibanda was almost as efficient as a 4x100 handoff, Botswana gaining the advantage and moving right behind Merritt. Behind, Jamaica's Steven Gayle pushed down the backstretch, passing Sibanda and even, for a moment, Merritt on the inside. Merritt fought back and held off Gayle going into the final turn but Sibanda used that moment to sprint around the outside, gaining a microscopic lead on Merritt. Merritt successfully held Sibanda to the outside, making him run the extra distance through the turn. Coming off the turn, Merritt had gained a slight advantage but Sibanda was not done, making one more charge at Merritt down the final straightaway. Merritt held Sibanda off again, USA taking a 1-metre win.

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:

World record  United States
(Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Harry Reynolds, Michael Johnson)
2:54.29 Stuttgart, Germany 22 August 1993
Championship record  United States
(David Verburg, Tony McQuay, Christian Taylor, LaShawn Merritt
2:57.25 Nassau, Bahamas 25 May 2014
World Leading Empire Athletics
(Machel Cedenio  Trinidad and Tobago, Tony McQuay  United States, Kyle Clemons  United States, Jehue Gordon  Trinidad and Tobago
3:00.92 Gainesville, United States 1 April 2017
African Record  Nigeria
(Clement Chukwu, Jude Monye, Sunday Bada, Enefiok Udo-Obong)
2:58.68 Sydney, Australia 30 September 2000
Asian Record  Japan
(Shunji Karube, Koji Ito, Jun Osakada, Shigekazu Omori)
3:00.76 Atlanta, United States 3 August 1996
North, Central American and Caribbean record  United States
(Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Harry Reynolds, Michael Johnson)
2:54.29 Stuttgart, Germany 22 August 1993
South American Record  Brazil
(Eronilde de Araújo, Cleverson da Silva, Claudinei da Silva, Sanderlei Parrela)
2:58.56 Winnipeg, Canada 30 July 1999
European Record  Great Britain
(Iwan Thomas, Jamie Baulch, Mark Richardson, Roger Black)
2:56.60 Atlanta, United States 3 August 1996
Oceanian record  Australia
(Bruce Frayne, Gary Minihan, Rick Mitchell, Darren Clark)
2:59.70 Los Angeles, United States 11 August 1984

Schedule

Date Time Round
22 April 201721:12Heats
23 April 201720:22Final B
23 April 201721:55Final

All times are local times (UTC-4)

Results

KEY: QQualified qFastest non-qualifiers NRNational record PBPersonal best SBSeasonal best *WC2017 World Championships qualification

Heats

Qualification: First 2 of each heat (Q) plus the 2 fastest times (q) advanced to the final. The next 8 fastest times qualified for the final B.[1][2]

RankHeatNationAthletesTimeNotes
12 Trinidad and TobagoRenny Quow, Jereem Richards, Deon Lendore, Lalonde Gordon3:02.51Q, SB
22 United StatesKyle Clemons, Najee Glass, Tony McQuay, David Verburg3:02.62Q
33 BotswanaIsaac Makwala, Karabo Sibanda, Onkabetse Nkobolo, Baboloki Thebe3:03.09Q, SB
43 JamaicaJavere Bell, Javon Francis, Peter Matthews, Demish Gaye3:03.52Q, SB
51 FranceMamadou Kassé Hanne, Teddy Atine-Venel, Mamoudou-Elimane Hanne, Thomas Jordier3:04.74Q, SB
62 CubaWilliams Collazo, Adrián Chacón, Osmaidel Pellicier, Yoandys Lescay3:04.97q, SB
73 BrazilAnderson Henriques, Alexander Russo, Lucas Carvalho, Hugo de Sousa3:05.05q, SB
81 Great BritainMatthew Hudson-Smith, Delano Williams, Jarryd Dunn, Theo Campbell3:05.19Q, SB
91 BahamasMichael Mathieu, Demetrius Pinder, Andretti Bain, Steven Gardiner3:05.37SB
101 BelgiumDylan Borlée, Julien Watrin, Michaël Rossaert, Kévin Borlée3:05.45SB
113 KenyaCollins Gichana, Boniface Mweresa, Geoffrey Kiprotich, Alphas Kishoyian3:05.93SB
121 Czech RepublicMichal Desenský, Patrik Šorm, Jan Tesař, Vít Müller3:07.58SB
131 GermanyAlexander Gladitz, Alexander Juretzko, Johannes Trefz, Thomas Schneider3:07.80SB
141 CanadaDaniel Harper, Graeme Thompson, Benjamin Ayesu-Attah, Rayshaun Franklin3:08.05
152 PolandKacper Kozłowski, Łukasz Krawczuk, Przemysław Waściński, Rafał Omelko3:08.42
2 Dominican RepublicLuis Charles, Gustavo Cuesta, Franklin Luis, Máximo MercedesDQR170.6(c)[3]
2 JapanJulian Jrummi Walsh, Tomoya Tamura, Naoki Kobayashi, Kosuke HoriiDNF[4]
3 VenezuelaDNS

Final B

[5]

RankLaneNationAthletesTimeNotes
16 KenyaAlphas Kishoyian, Collins Gichana, Geoffrey Kiprotich, Boniface Mweresa3:06.36
25 BelgiumDylan Borlée, Julien Watrin, Michaël Rossaert, Kévin Borlée3:07.14
32 PolandKacper Kozłowski, Łukasz Krawczuk, Bartłomiej Chojnowski, Rafał Omelko3:07.89
47 Czech RepublicPatrik Šorm, Vít Müller, Michal Desenský, Jan Tesař3:08.17
54 BahamasAndretti Bain, Demetrius Pinder, Elroy McBride, Andre Colebrook3:08.29
68 GermanyAlexander Juretzko, Johannes Trefz, Fabian Dammermann, Thomas Schneider3:09.53
73 CanadaDaniel Harper, Graeme Thompson, Rayshaun Franklin, Benjamin Ayesu-Attah3:12.52

Final

[6]

RankLaneNationAthletesTimeNotesPoints
4 United StatesDavid Verburg, Tony McQuay, Kyle Clemons, LaShawn Merritt3:02.13*WC8
5 BotswanaIsaac Makwala, Baboloki Thebe, Onkabetse Nkobolo, Karabo Sibanda3:02.28*WC7
8 JamaicaPeter Matthews, Demish Gaye, Martin Manley, Steven Gayle3:02.84*WC6
46 Trinidad and TobagoRenny Quow, Jereem Richards, Jarrin Solomon, Lalonde Gordon3:03.17*WC5
51 CubaWilliams Collazo, Adrián Chacón, Osmaidel Pellicier, Yoandys Lescay3:03.60*WC4
67 Great BritainMatthew Hudson-Smith, Delano Williams, Jarryd Dunn, Theo Campbell3:03.84*WC3
72 BrazilAnderson Henriques, Alexander Russo, Hugo de Sousa, Lucas Carvalho3:05.96*WC2
83 FranceMamadou Kasse Hann, Teddy Atine-Venel, Mamoudou Eliman Hanne, Thomas Jordier3:06.33*WC1

References

  1. Heats Results
  2. Heats Summary
  3. Fault at recovering a dropped baton
  4. The lead-off runner got injured on the first bend and failed to finish
  5. Final B Results
  6. Final Results
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