1998 World Junior Championships in Athletics – Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
Appearance
The men's 4x400 metres relay event at the 1998 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Annecy, France, at Parc des Sports on 1 and 2 August.[1][2]
Medalists
[edit]Results
[edit]Final
[edit]2 August
Heats
[edit]1 August
Heat 1
[edit]Rank | Nation | Competitors | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | Tony Berrian Reginald Depass Brian Swarn Andrew Pierce |
3:06.62 | Q |
2 | Australia | Daniel McFarlane Daniel Batman Bryce Barnwell Casey Vincent |
3:06.72 | Q |
3 | Germany | Arne Macher Ruwen Faller Ralf Riester Marc-Alexander Scheer |
3:07.75 | Q |
4 | Greece | Evággelos Moustakidis Anastasios Goúsis Yeóryios Doúpis Periklís Iakovákis |
3:08.54 | Q |
5 | France | Arnaud Ignesta Nicolas Colon Urel Lacroix Fabrice Zircon |
3:12.92 | |
Morocco | Hicham Mihjane Abdelkabir Louraïbi Mohamed Mouhlal Chabib El-Azouizi |
DQ | IAAF rule 170.10 | |
Russia | Kirill Sedykh Dmitriy Bogdanov Dmitriy Zhukov Yuriy Borzakovskiy |
DQ | IAAF rule 170.10 |
Heat 2
[edit]Rank | Nation | Competitors | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Poland | Przemyslaw Dunaj Maciej Ryszkowski Filip Walotka Michał Węglarski |
3:08.35 | Q |
2 | Jamaica | Collin Thomas Sanjay Ayre Omar Henry Leroy Colquhoun |
3:08.50 | Q |
3 | United Kingdom | David Naismith Adam Buckley Chris Carson Alloy Wilson |
3:08.85 | Q |
4 | Japan | Masayuki Okusako Hirofumi Nakagawa Satoshi Oshikawa Takahiko Yamamura |
3:10.22 | Q |
5 | South Africa | Tshepo Thobelangope Juan Pretorius François Coetzee Mandla Nkosi |
3:10.34 | |
6 | New Zealand | Nicholas O'Brien Michael O'Connor Khamal Ganley Dallas Roberts |
3:14.77 | |
Algeria | Ryad Cheragui Tahar Ghozali Mohamed Bezegrari Said Chabane |
DQ |
Participation
[edit]According to an unofficial count, 60 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.
- Algeria (4)
- Australia (5)
- France (4)
- Germany (4)
- Greece (4)
- Jamaica (5)
- Japan (4)
- Morocco (4)
- New Zealand (4)
- Poland (4)
- Russia (4)
- South Africa (4)
- United Kingdom (5)
- United States (5)
References
[edit]- ^ Peters, Lionel; Magnusson, Tomas, WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS WJC - 1998 Annecy FRA Jul 28-Aug 2, WORLD JUNIOR ATHLETICS HISTORY ("WJAH"), archived from the original on 3 December 2013, retrieved 13 June 2015
- ^ IAAF WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS - Eugene 2014 - FACTS & FIGURES (PDF), IAAF, retrieved 13 June 2015