2019 World Athletics Championships – Men's shot put

Summary

It took 20.90 to automatically qualify. Exactly 12 men made that distance, eight of them on their first attempt. There were no further place qualifiers to the final.

This was the cap to a build up of several strong athletes. Four members of the 74 foot club were here, with Darlan Romani joining in 2019 and Ryan Crouser improving his personal best to #6 all time. Behind them were four more men over 22 metres in the last two seasons.

With 22 metres the standard, the first throw of the competition was 22.36m by Crouser. Three throws later, Romani moved into second with a 21.61m. As the last thrower throughout the competition, Tomas Walsh launched a new Oceana continental record 22.90 m (75 ft 1 12 in). It was the longest throw in 29 years, making him the #4 thrower in history. On his second throw, Romani threw 22.53m, just short of 74 feet, which put him into second place. Crouser duplicated his first throw in the third. It took 21.18m just to get three more throws.

In the fourth round, Joe Kovacs threw 21.95m to move into fourth, then Crouser threw 22.71m to move into second place. In the fifth round, Walsh landed his second best throw, 22.56m.

In the final round, Kovacs stepped into the ring and tossed it 22.91 m (75 ft 1 34 in), equalling Alessandro Andrei for the #3 thrower in history. More importantly, he took the lead. A couple of throws later, Crouser stepped in to throw his best 22.90 m (75 ft 1 12 in) to tie Walsh. Walsh fouled again. With his 22.71m second best throw, compared to 22.56m for Walsh, Crouser took second. In the space of 5 minutes, Walsh went from the #4 thrower in history, to third place in the competition.

This has been called the greatest shot put competition in history.[2].

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[3]

World record  Randy Barnes (USA) 23.12 m Westwood, United States 20 May 1990
Championship record  Werner Günthör (SUI) 22.23 m Rome, Italy 29 August 1987
World Leading  Ryan Crouser (USA) 22.74 m Long Beach, United States 20 April 2019
African Record  Janus Robberts (RSA) 21.97 m Eugene, United States 2 June 2001
Asian Record  Sultan Al-Hebshi (KSA) 21.13 m Doha, Qatar 8 May 2009
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Randy Barnes (USA) 23.12 m Westwood, United States 20 May 1990
South American Record  Darlan Romani (BRA) 22.61 m Palo Alto, United States 30 June 2019
European Record  Ulf Timmermann (GDR) 23.06 m Chania, Greece 22 May 1988
Oceanian record  Tomas Walsh (NZL) 22.67 m Auckland, New Zealand 25 March 2018

The following records were established during the competition:

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
5 OctoberFinalJoe Kovacs USA22.91CR
5 OctoberFinalTom Walsh NZL22.90AR

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 20.70 m.[4]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+3), was as follows:[5]

Date Time Round
3 October19:20Qualification
5 October20:05Final

Results

Qualification

Qualification: Qualifying Performance 20.90 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advanced to the final.[6][7]

RankGroupNameNationalityRoundMarkNotes
123
1ATomas Walsh New Zealand (NZL)21.9221.92Q
2ADarlan Romani Brazil (BRA)21.6921.69Q
3BRyan Crouser United States (USA)21.6721.67Q
4AArmin Sinančević Serbia (SRB)20.4821.5121.51Q, PB
5ADarrell Hill United States (USA)21.2521.25Q
6AKonrad Bukowiecki Poland (POL)21.1621.16Q
7BJacko Gill New Zealand (NZL)21.1221.12Q
8ATomáš Staněk Czech Republic (CZE)20.4320.7321.0221.02Q
9BFilip Mihaljević Croatia (CRO)21.0021.00Q
10ATim Nedow Canada (CAN)20.5120.5320.9420.94Q
11AChukwuebuka Enekwechi Nigeria (NGR)20.1220.9420.94Q
12BJoe Kovacs United States (USA)20.9220.92Q
13ALeonardo Fabbri Italy (ITA)x20.75x20.75
14BMostafa Amr Hassan Egypt (EGY)20.2320.55x20.55
15AJakub Szyszkowski Poland (POL)20.55x19.8520.55
16BMichał Haratyk Poland (POL)20.4420.5220.1120.52
17BAndrei Gag Romania (ROM)20.5018.91x20.50
18BTejinder Pal Singh Toor India (IND)20.43x19.5520.43SB
19BWictor Petersson Sweden (SWE)20.31xx20.31
20BMesud Pezer Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH)20.17x19.5520.17
21AEldred Henry British Virgin Islands (IVB)19.31x20.1320.13
22AO'Dayne Richards Jamaica (JAM)19.7519.0220.0720.07
23BDenzel Comenentia Netherlands (NED)x20.0319.6420.03
24BOrazio Cremona South Africa (RSA)xx19.9819.98
25AMohamed Magdi Hamza Egypt (EGY)x19.91x19.91
26BBob Bertemes Luxembourg (LUX)x19.4019.8919.89
27BAsmir Kolašinac Serbia (SRB)19.78x19.8619.86
28AMaksim Afonin Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)19.7619.5519.8219.82
29BFranck Elemba Congo (CGO)19.4319.7619.5919.76SB
30AIvan Ivanov Kazakhstan (KAZ)19.5719.73x19.73
31BAleksandr Lesnoy Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA)19.4319.62x19.62
32BFrancisco Belo Portugal (POR)18.99x19.5219.52
33AKemal Mešić Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH)19.4919.1919.4419.49
34BUziel Muñoz Mexico (MEX)xx19.0619.06
AKristo Galeta Estonia (EST)DNS

Final

The final was started on 5 October at 20:05.[8]

RankNameNationalityRoundMarkNotes
123456
Joe Kovacs United States (USA)20.9021.6321.2421.9521.9422.9122.91CR
Ryan Crouser United States (USA)22.36x22.3622.71x22.9022.90PB
Tomas Walsh New Zealand (NZL)22.90xxx22.56x22.90AR
4Darlan Romani Brazil (BRA)21.6122.5322.0322.13xx22.53
5Darrell Hill United States (USA)20.5821.3821.65x21.23x21.65
6Konrad Bukowiecki Poland (POL)20.7321.46x20.36xx21.46
7Jacko Gill New Zealand (NZL)21.4121.2720.74x21.0121.4521.45
8Chukwuebuka Enekwechi Nigeria (NGR)21.18x20.9020.9820.5921.0121.18
9Tim Nedow Canada (CAN)x20.5020.8520.85
10Tomáš Staněk Czech Republic (CZE)20.6120.7920.4620.79
11Filip Mihaljević Croatia (CRO)20.3320.3820.4820.48
Armin Sinančević Serbia (SRB)xxxNM

References

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