2017 World Championships in Athletics – Women's high jump

Summary

In the final, three were perfect to 1.95 metres, 2017 number one Mariya Lasitskene, competing as an Authorised Neutral Athlete, Yuliya Levchenko (UKR) and Marie-Laurence Jungfleisch (GER). Three others made it over 1.95 metres to stay in the competition. At 1.97 metres, both Lasitskene and Levchenko remained perfect. On her final attempt Kamila Lićwinko (POL) made it to define the medalists. Lićwinko mixed up the order by jumping 1.99 metres on her first attempt. Levchenko remained perfect to hold the lead, but when Lasitskene missed her first attempt, she dropped to third. Strategically passing to 2.01 metres, Lasitskene cleared it on her first attempt after Lićwinko had missed, to move into silver medal position. That turned into gold after Levchenko missed her first attempt. Lićwinko missed her second attempt and dropped to bronze when Levchenko made hers. Lićwinko passed for one heroic jump at 2.03 metres for the win. She missed, Lasitskene made it, then Levchenko missed three in a row to end the competition. Lasitskene took three shots at 2.08 metres.

Lasitskene was the first Authorised Neutral Athlete to win a gold medal. For the medal ceremony, the IAAF anthem was played as a substitute.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

RecordPerf.AthleteNat.DateLocation
World 2.09 Stefka Kostadinova  BUL 30 Aug 1987 Rome, Italy
Championship 2.09 Stefka Kostadinova  BUL 30 Aug 1987 Rome, Italy
World leading 2.06 Maria Lasitskene  RUS 6 Jul 2017 Lausanne, Switzerland
African 2.06 Hestrie Cloete  RSA 31 Aug 2003 Paris, France
Asian 1.99 Marina Aitova  KAZ 13 Jul 2009 Athens, Greece
NACAC 2.05 Chaunté Howard Lowe  USA 26 Jun 2010 Des Moines, United States
South American 1.96 Solange Witteveen  ARG 8 Sep 1997 Oristano, Italy
European 2.09 Stefka Kostadinova  BUL 30 Aug 1987 Rome, Italy
Oceanian 1.98 Vanessa Browne-Ward  AUS 12 Feb 1989 Perth, Australia
Alison Inverarity  AUS 17 Jul 1994 Ingolstadt, Germany

No records were set at the competition.[3]

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 1.94 metres.[4]

Schedule

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

Date Time Round
10 August19:10Qualification
12 August19:05Final

Results

Qualification

The qualification round took place on 10 August, in two groups, both starting at 19:10.[6] Athletes attaining a mark of 1.94 metres ( Q ) or at least the 12 best performers ( q ) qualified for the final. The overall results were as follows:[7]

RankGroupNameNationality1.801.851.891.92MarkNotes
1BMariya Lasitskene Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)ooo1.92q
BYuliya Levchenko Ukraine (UKR)ooooq
BKamila Lićwinko Poland (POL)oooq
4AKatarina Johnson-Thompson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)ooxooq
AInika McPherson United States (USA)oxooq
6AVashti Cunningham United States (USA)oooxoq
BMirela Demireva Bulgaria (BUL)oooxoq, SB
BMorgan Lake Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)oooxoq
AAirinė Palšytė Lithuania (LTU)oooxoq
10BMichaela Hrubá Czech Republic (CZE)ooxoxoq
11BRuth Beitia Spain (ESP)oooxxoq
AMarie-Laurence Jungfleisch Germany (GER)oooxxoq
13BMaruša Černjul Slovenia (SLO)oooxxx1.89
BIryna Herashchenko Ukraine (UKR)oooxxx
ALevern Spencer Saint Lucia (LCA)oooxxx
16AIrina Gordeeva Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)oxooxxx
17AKimberly Williamson Jamaica (JAM)oxxooxxx
18BSofie Skoog Sweden (SWE)ooxoxxx
19BAlessia Trost Italy (ITA)ooxxoxxx
20AOksana Okuneva Ukraine (UKR)oxxoxxoxxx
21BNadiya Dusanova Uzbekistan (UZB)ooxxx1.85
AErika Kinsey Sweden (SWE)ooxxx
BAlyxandria Treasure Canada (CAN)ooxxx
AMarija Vuković Montenegro (MNE)ooxxx
25AAna Šimić Croatia (CRO)oxoxxx
26ATatiana Gousin Greece (GRE)xoxxoxxx
27BElizabeth Patterson United States (USA)oxxx1.80
28AErika Furlani Italy (ITA)xoxxx
29BLinda Sandblom Finland (FIN)xxoxxx
ANicola McDermott Australia (AUS)xxxNH

Final

The final took place on 12 August at 19:05. The results were as follows:[8]

RankNameNationality1.841.881.921.951.971.992.012.032.08MarkNotes
Mariya Lasitskene Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)ooooox-ooxxx2.03
Yuliya Levchenko Ukraine (UKR)ooooooxoxxx2.01PB
Kamila Lićwinko Poland (POL)ooxoxoxxooxx-x1.99SB
4Marie-Laurence Jungfleisch Germany (GER)ooooxxx1.95
5Katarina Johnson-Thompson Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)ooxooxxxSB
6Morgan Lake Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)oooxoxxx
7Airinė Palšytė Lithuania (LTU)oooxxx1.92
Mirela Demireva Bulgaria (BUL)oooxxxSB
9Inika McPherson United States (USA)-xooxxx
10Vashti Cunningham United States (USA)ooxxoxxx
11Michaela Hrubá Czech Republic (CZE)oxoxxoxxx
12Ruth Beitia Spain (ESP)ooxxx1.88

References

  1. Start list
  2. "High Jump Women – 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. "High Jump Women − Timetable". IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  6. "High Jump Women − Qualification − Results" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  7. "High Jump Women − Qualification − Summary" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
  8. "High Jump Women − Final − Results" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.