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2009 World Championships in Athletics – Men's triple jump

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The men's triple jump at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Olympic Stadium on 16 and 18 August. The season had seen a number of athletes performing to a high level before the championships, with reigning World and Olympic champion Nelson Évora leading with 17.66 metres and all three athletes of the Cuban team having jumped over 17.60 m in the season. The other athlete to jump that distance was Phillips Idowu, who was keen make up for his loss to Évora in the 2008 Olympics. The Olympic medallists Évora, Idowu, and Leevan Sands, and the Cuban trio of David Giralt, Yoandris Betanzos and Alexis Copello, were judged to be the strongest competitors entering the competition.[1]

In the qualifying rounds, Évora and Idowu were the first to pass the automatic qualifying mark of 17.15 metres, recording bests of 17.44 and 17.32 m respectively. Chinese jumper Li Yanxi was the third through the qualifying mark, and Sands and Giralt soon followed. The qualifying was not of the same standard as the 2008 Olympic final, as Copello and Dmitrij Valukevic rounded out the top twelve competitors with jumps under 17 m.[2]

In the final, Olympic champion Évora set the standard with a first jump of 17.54 m, Idowu also started well with a jump of 17.51 m. Giralt and Sands moved into third and fourth with jumps around the 17.2 m mark. Évora led the competition until round three, where Idowu produced a personal best and world-leading jump of 17.73 m to take the top spot. A large jump by Alexis Copello followed, but he was given the red flag, indicating a foul. Sands' season's best jump of 17.32 m moved him into the third medal spot, but it was Copello's final jump of 17.36 m that took the bronze medal. Évora's best also came in the final round, but the 17.55-metre jump did not rival that of Idowu. It was the thirty-one-year-old Briton's first ever major title, building on his silver medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.[3]

Medalists

Gold United Kingdom Phillips Idowu
 (Great Britain)
Silver Portugal Nelson Évora
 (Portugal)
Bronze Cuba Alexis Copello
 (Cuba)

Records

Prior to the competition, the following records were as follows.

World record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR) 18.29 Gothenburg, Sweden 7 August 1995
Championship record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR) 18.29 Gothenburg, Sweden 7 August 1995
World leading  Nelson Évora (POR) 17.66 Belém, Brazil 24 May 2009
African record  Tarik Bouguetaïb (MAR) 17.37 Khemisset, Morocco 14 July 2007
Asian record  Oleg Sakirkin (KAZ) 17.35 Moscow, Russia 5 June 1994
North American record  Kenny Harrison (USA) 18.09 Atlanta, United States 27 July 1996
South American record  Jadel Gregório (BRA) 17.90 Belém, Brazil 20 May 2007
European record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR) 18.29 Gothenburg, Sweden 7 August 1995
Oceanian record  Ken Lorraway (AUS) 17.46 London, United Kingdom 7 August 1982
  • Phillips Idowu beat Évora's world leading mark in the competition, jumping 17.73 metres.

Qualification standards

A standard B standard
17.10m 16.65m

Schedule

Date Time Round
16 August 2009 19:00 Qualification
18 August 2009 18:05 Final

Results

Qualification

Qualification: Qualifying Performance 17.15 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advance to the final.

Rank Group Athlete Nationality #1 #2 #3 Result Notes
1 B Nelson Évora  Portugal (POR) 17.44 17.44 Q
2 A Phillips Idowu  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR) 17.10 17.32 17.32 Q
3 B Li Yanxi  China (CHN) 16.78 17.27 17.27 Q, SB
4 A Leevan Sands  Bahamas (BAH) 17.02 16.84 17.20 17.20 Q, SB
5 A Arnie David Giralt  Cuba (CUB) 16.92 x 17.15 17.15 Q
6 B Teddy Tamgho  France (FRA) x 17.11 x 17.11 q, SB
7 A Momchil Karailiev  Bulgaria (BUL) x 16.87 17.07 17.07 q
8 B Jadel Gregório  Brazil (BRA) 17.06 x 15.48 17.06 q
9 A Igor Spasovkhodskiy  Russia (RUS) 16.87 16.84 17.02 17.02 q
10 A Nathan Douglas  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR) 17.00 x 16.90 17.00 q
11 B Alexis Copello  Cuba (CUB) 16.99 16.78 16.98 16.99 q
12 A Dmitrij Valukevic  Slovakia (SVK) 16.96 16.69 16.85 16.96 q
13 A Onochie Achike  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR) 16.88 16.94 x 16.94
14 B Brandon Roulhac  United States (USA) 16.78 16.56 16.94 16.94
15 A Fabrizio Schembri  Italy (ITA) 16.88 16.88 x 16.88
16 B Tosin Oke  Nigeria (NGR) 16.87 16.82 x 16.87 PB
17 A Yoandris Betanzos  Cuba (CUB) x x 16.77 16.77
18 B Randy Lewis  Grenada (GRN) 16.73 13.38 16.52 16.73
19 B Mykola Savolaynen  Ukraine (UKR) 16.68 16.64 16.72 16.72
20 B Hugo Chila  Ecuador (ECU) 16.34 16.70 16.52 16.70 NR
21 B Hugo Mamba-Schlick  Cameroon (CMR) 16.21 16.06 16.63 16.63 SB
22 B Walter Davis  United States (USA) 16.27 16.62 15.87 16.62
23 A Dzmitry Dziatsuk  Belarus (BLR) 16.58 16.15 x 16.58
24 A Kim Deok-Hyeon  South Korea (KOR) x 16.02 16.58 16.58
25 B Alwyn Jones  Australia (AUS) 16.20 16.57 16.50 16.57
26 A Yevhen Semenenko  Ukraine (UKR) 16.29 16.52 16.54 16.54
27 A Julian Reid  Jamaica (JAM) 16.41 16.49 16.16 16.49
28 A Jefferson Sabino  Brazil (BRA) x 16.24 16.34 16.34
29 A Samyr Laine  Haiti (HAI) x 16.06 16.34 16.34
30 A Kenta Bell  United States (USA) x 16.32 16.18 16.32
31 B Viktor Yastrebov  Ukraine (UKR) x 16.31 16.15 16.31
32 B Evgeniy Plotnir  Russia (RUS) 16.13 16.29 15.96 16.29
33 B Dimitrios Tsiamis  Greece (GRE) 15.68 16.23 x 16.23
34 B Daniele Greco  Italy (ITA) 16.18 x x 16.18
35 B Yevgeniy Ektov  Kazakhstan (KAZ) 16.13 x 16.01 16.13
36 B Mantas Dilys  Lithuania (LTU) 16.09 16.02 15.70 16.09
37 A Mohamed Youssef Salman  Bahrain (BHR) x 16.05 15.71 16.05
38 B Lauri Leis  Estonia (EST) 15.28 15.98 15.84 15.98
39 B Leonardo Elisiario dos Santos  Brazil (BRA) 15.95 x 15.85 15.95
40 A Vladimir Letnicov  Moldova (MDA) 15.28 15.77 15.88 15.88
41 A Fabrizio Donato  Italy (ITA) 15.81 x x 15.81 SB
42 A Andrés Capellán  Spain (ESP) 15.35 15.80 15.67 15.80
43 B Nguyen Van Hung  Vietnam (VIE) x 15.03 15.56 15.56
44 B Si Kuan Wong  Macau (MAC) x 14.78 14.71 14.78
A Charles Friedek  Germany (GER) x x x NM
A Yochai Halevi  Israel (ISR) DNS

Key: NR = National record, PB = Personal best, Q = qualification by place in heat, q = qualification by overall place, SB = Seasonal best

Final

Rank Athlete Nationality #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 Result Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Phillips Idowu  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR) 17.51 17.44 17.73 x x x 17.73 WL
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Nelson Évora  Portugal (POR) 17.54 x 17.38 x 17.33 17.55 17.55
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Alexis Copello  Cuba (CUB) 17.06 17.19 14.82 x 17.04 17.36 17.36
4 Leevan Sands  Bahamas (BAH) 17.20 17.08 16.96 17.05 17.32 16.99 17.32 SB
5 Arnie David Giralt  Cuba (CUB) 17.26 17.18 x 17.19 17.01 17.06 17.26
6 Li Yanxi  China (CHN) 16.95 16.92 14.23 17.23 x 16.75 17.23
7 Igor Spasovkhodskiy  Russia (RUS) 16.73 16.91 14.66 14.75 16.37 x 16.91
8 Jadel Gregório  Brazil (BRA) x 16.89 16.84 16.70 x x 16.89
9 Momchil Karailiev  Bulgaria (BUL) 16.82 16.78 16.81 16.82
10 Nathan Douglas  Great Britain & N.I. (GBR) 16.78 15.44 16.79 16.79
11 Teddy Tamgho  France (FRA) x 16.79 x 16.79
12 Dmitrij Valukevic  Slovakia (SVK) x x 16.54 16.54

Key: SB = Seasonal best, WL = World leading (in a given season)

References

General
Specific
  1. ^ Mulkeen, Jon (2009-08-09). Men's Triple Jump - PREVIEW Archived August 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-16.
  2. ^ Mulkeen, Jon (2009-08-16). Event Report - Men's Triple Jump - Qualification Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-18.
  3. ^ Mulkeen, Jon (2009-08-18). Event Report - Men's Triple Jump - Final Archived 2009-08-21 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-19.