Athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Qualification
This article needs to be updated.(February 2024) |
For the athletics at the 2020 Summer Olympics competitions, the following qualification systems were in place. Qualification ended on 29 June 2021, but for marathon and 50 km race walking, it ended on 31 May 2021. Some 1900 athletes, from 196 countries, competed.[1] 103 countries qualified also through Universality places (initially 101, 61 men and 40 women).
Qualifying standards
[edit]A National Olympic Committee (NOC) may enter up to 3 qualified athletes in each individual event if all athletes meet the entry standard during the qualifying period. An NOC may also enter a maximum of 1 qualified relay team per event. Under the universality rule, NOCs may enter one male athlete and one female athlete, regardless of time, if they have no athletes of that gender meeting the entry standard. This makes it possible for every NOC to have a minimum of two representatives in the sports. These universality spots cannot be used in the combined events, the 10,000 metres, or the 3,000 metre steeplechase.[2][3][4]
The qualifying system for Tokyo 2020 saw fundamental changes from the previous Olympics. While the qualification from Rio 2016 and other previous editions relied on qualifying standards, Tokyo 2020 is primarily based on world ranking. World Athletics, the global sport governing body formerly known as IAAF until a name change in 2019, continues to set qualifying times, but these are "set for the sole purpose of qualifying athletes with exceptional performances unable to qualify through the World Athletics Rankings pathway." The number of entrants per event is capped, with different caps for different events varying from 24 athletes for the combined events to 80 (finally 110) athletes for the marathons.[2][3]
The World Athletics Rankings are based on the average of the best five results for the athlete over the qualifying period. The results are weighted by the importance of the meet.[5]
The qualifying standards may be obtained in various meets during the given period approved by the World Athletics. The qualifying period for the marathon and the 50 km race walk occurs from 1 January 2019 to 5 April 2020 and from 1 December 2020 to 31 May 2021 and the qualifying for the 10,000 m, 20 km race walk and combined events occurs from 1 January 2019 to 5 April 2020 and from 1 December 2020 to 29 June 2021, with the rest of the track and field events happening from 1 May 2019 to 5 April 2020 and from 1 December 2020 to 29 June 2021. The most recent Area Championships may be counted in the ranking, even if not during the qualifying period.[3] On 6 April 2020, the World Athletics announced that the qualification period for the Games was suspended until 30 November 2020, in response to the coronavirus pandemic.[6] In July 2020, World Athletics announced that the suspension period would be lifted for the road events (marathons and race walks) on 1 September 2020.[7]
For the relays, a maximum of sixteen qualified NOCs shall be entitled to each event. The top eight teams in each event at the 2019 World Championships in Athletics (held in Doha from 28 September to 6 October 2019) guarantee a spot on their respective NOCs for the Olympics. The remaining half in each event are selected at the 2021 World Athletics Relays and according to World Athletics Top List as of 29 June 2021.[3]
NOCs with more than three qualified athletes in an individual event may select, using their own rules, athletes from among those qualified. For example, the United States selects athletes based on the result of the 2020 United States Olympic Trials meet, but has a policy of entering every athlete qualified. Sweden only enters athletes good enough to reach at least the eighth position, based on an assessment by the Swedish NOC.
A tracking system of qualification is published by World Athletics: Road to 2020 Olympic Games. This Road to Tokyo tool shows which athletes – subject to being officially selected by their NOC – have qualified to compete. This tool identifies the first 3 qualifiers per country (in bold) but any athlete who has qualified, by Standard or Ranking, can be selected within the limit of 3 per nation. As this is a qualification monitoring tool, not an entry monitoring tool, it won't highlight which athletes have been officially selected by their NOC, but team announcements of many of the leading nations will be later published by World Athletics.
Some 1900 athletes, from more than 190 countries, will compete at the Olympic Games when the athletics will begin on 30 July.
The qualification period for all stadium events finished on 29 June and the qualification system has now been finalised, showing that about 70% of the athletes in individual events have qualified by entry standard and 30% by world ranking position, while 101 universality places have been awarded.
As already reported when the qualification closed for the longer road events, the men's and women's marathon exceeded their event quotas. This is also the case in the men's and women's 10,000m and the women's triple jump. No ranking place was necessary to complete the field in the men's shot put. But in those cases, regardless of the events’ quotas, any athlete with a qualification standard will still be eligible for selection to compete in Tokyo.
Sebastian Coe, president of World Athletics, said: "Olympic qualification processes are always a bit fraught because there's so much on the line for the athletes, but it's exciting to see the Olympic fields take shape as the Tokyo Games approach, and it's pleasing to see that the extended qualifying process we put in place when the Games were postponed last year ultimately allowed more athletes to reach the entry standards". "With Tokyo 2020 less than a month away, and this last milestone complete, anticipation is growing rapidly for what shapes as an extraordinary competition ahead, based on some of the performances we have seen this year. I'm delighted to see that more than 190 countries will be represented in athletics in Tokyo, reflecting the unmatched universality of our sport, and I look forward to seeing all those athletes competing at the Games from 30 July."[8]
Athletes must have been born before 1 January 2006 (that, be at least 16 years old at the end of 2021) to compete. Youth athletes (born in 2004 or 2005, age 16 or 17 at the end of 2021) cannot compete in the throwing events, combined events, marathons, race walks, or 10,000 metre events. Junior athletes (born in 2002 or 2003, age 18 or 19 at the end of 2021) may compete in any event but cannot compete in the marathons or the 50 kilometre race walk.[3]
The World Athletics Qualifying Standards are as follows:[9][3]
Men's and mixed events | Women's events | ||
---|---|---|---|
Event | Entry mark | Event | Entry mark |
100 m | 10.05 | 100 m | 11.15 |
200 m | 20.24 | 200 m | 22.80 |
400 m | 44.90 | 400 m | 51.35 |
800 m | 1:45.20 | 800 m | 1:59.50 |
1500 m | 3:35.00 | 1500 m | 4:04.20 |
5000 m | 13:13.50 | 5000 m | 15:10.00 |
10,000 m | 27:28.00 | 10,000 m | 31:25.00 |
110 m hurdles | 13.32 | 100 m hurdles | 12.84 |
400 m hurdles | 48.90 | 400 m hurdles | 55.40 |
3000 m steeplechase | 8:22.00 | 3000 m steeplechase | 9:30.00 |
Marathon | 2:11:30 | Marathon | 2:29:30 |
20 km walk | 1:21:00 | 20 km walk | 1:31:00 |
50 km walk | 3:50:00 | — | — |
Long jump | 8.22 | Long jump | 6.82 |
Triple jump | 17.14 | Triple jump | 14.32 |
High jump | 2.33 | High jump | 1.96 |
Pole vault | 5.80 | Pole vault | 4.70 |
Shot put | 21.10 | Shot put | 18.50 |
Discus throw | 66.00 | Discus throw | 63.50 |
Hammer throw | 77.50 | Hammer throw | 72.50 |
Javelin throw | 85.00 | Javelin throw | 64.00 |
Decathlon | 8350 | Heptathlon | 6420 |
4 × 100 m relay | Top 8 at WAC + Any unqualified nation that reaches the final of the 2021 World Athletics Relays + Next best from top lists up to maximum field of 16 teams |
4 × 100 m relay | Top 8 at WAC + Any unqualified nation that reaches the final of the 2021 World Athletics Relays + Next best from top lists up to maximum field of 16 teams |
4 × 400 m relay | 4 × 400 m relay |
Track events
[edit]Men's track events
[edit]Men's 100 m
[edit]Does not include indoor achievements or races with wind above 2.0 m/s. Entry number: 56 (17 from ranking) + 28 Universality and 1 Invitational. Some sprinters, like Aaron Brown, have been withdrawn (see note #11).
Men's 200 m
[edit]Entry number: 56. Withdrawn after qualification by standard or ranking: Miguel Francis, Benjamin Azamati-Kwaku, Zharnel Hughes, Christophe Lemaitre, Mouhamadou Fall, Paulo André de Oliveira, Felipe Bardi dos Santos, Méba-Mickaël Zeze, Jeffrey John.
Men's 400 m
[edit]Entry number: 48.
Men's 800 m
[edit]Entry number: 48. No qualified by ranking.
Men's 1500 m
[edit]Entry number: 45.
Men's 5000 m
[edit]Entry number: 42.
Men's 10,000 m
[edit]Entry number: initial target of 27. 28 runners, one more, originally qualified by entry standard. However, two athletes withdrew, reducing the field to 26 athletes.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 27:28.00 | 3 | Ethiopia | Berihu Aregawi Selemon Barega Yomif Kejelcha |
3 | Kenya | Rhonex Kipruto Rodgers Kwemoi Weldon Langat | |
3 | Uganda | Joshua Cheptegei Jacob Kiplimo Stephen Kissa | |
3 | United States | Grant Fisher Woody Kincaid Joe Klecker | |
1 | Australia | Patrick Tiernan | |
1 | Belgium | Isaac Kimeli | |
2 | Great Britain | Sam Atkin Marc Scott | |
2 | Japan | Akira Aizawa Tatsuhiko Ito | |
0 | Bahrain | ||
1 | Canada | Mohammed Ahmed | |
1 | Eritrea | Aron Kifle | |
1 | France | Morhad Amdouni | |
1 | Italy | Yemaneberhan Crippa | |
0 | Morocco | ||
0 | Norway | ||
1 | Spain | Carlos Mayo | |
1 | Switzerland | Julien Wanders | |
1 | Thailand | Kieran Tuntivate | |
World ranking | 0 | ||
Total | 25 |
Men's 110 m hurdles
[edit]Do not include indoor achievements. Entry number: 40.
Men's 400 m hurdles
[edit]Entry number: 40.
Men's 3000 m steeplechase
[edit]Entry number: 45.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 8:22.00 | 3 | Ethiopia | Lamecha Girma Bikila Tadese Takele Getnet Wale |
3 | France | Djilali Bedrani Louis Gilavert Alexis Phelut | |
3 | Italy | Ahmed Abdelwahed Ala Zoghlami Osama Zoghlami | |
3 | Japan | Ryoma Aoki Ryuji Miura Kosei Yamaguchi | |
3 | Kenya | Leonard Bett Abraham Kibiwot Benjamin Kigen | |
3 | Morocco | Abdelkarim Ben Zahra Soufiane El Bakkali Mohamed Tindouft | |
3 | Spain | Daniel Arce Fernando Carro Sebastián Martos | |
3 | Sweden | Emil Blomberg Vidar Johansson Simon Sundström | |
3 | United States | Hillary Bor Mason Ferlic Benard Keter | |
1 | Algeria | Hicham Bouchicha | |
2 | Canada | John Gay Matthew Hughes | |
2 | Great Britain | Phil Norman Zak Seddon | |
1 | Australia | Edward Trippas | |
1 | Bahrain | John Kibet Koech | |
1 | Denmark | Ole Hesselbjerg | |
1 | Eritrea | Yemane Haileselassie | |
1 | Finland | Topi Raitanen | |
1 | India | Avinash Sable | |
1 | Uganda | Albert Chemutai | |
World ranking | 2 | Australia | Ben Buckingham Matthew Clarke |
1 | Brazil | Altobeli da Silva | |
1 | Colombia | Carlos San Martín | |
1 | Germany | Karl Bebendorf | |
Total | 44 |
Women's track events
[edit]Women's 100 m
[edit]Does not include indoor achievements.
Women's 200 m
[edit]Women's 400 m
[edit]Women's 800 m
[edit]Women's 1500 m
[edit]Women's 5000 m
[edit]Women's 10,000 m
[edit]The initial target for Entry standard (27) has been exceeded.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 31:25.00 | 3 | Ethiopia | Tsigie Gebreselama Tsehay Gemechu Letesenbet Gidey |
3 | Japan | Yuka Ando Ririka Hironaka Hitomi Niiya | |
3 | Kenya | Sheila Chelangat Irene Chepet Cheptai Hellen Obiri | |
3 | United States | Alicia Monson Karissa Schweizer Emily Sisson | |
2 | Great Britain | Jessica Judd Eilish McColgan | |
1 | Israel | Selamawit Teferi | |
2 | Netherlands | Sifan Hassan Susan Krumins | |
2 | Sweden | Meraf Bahta Sarah Lahti | |
1 | Bahrain | Kalkidan Gezahegne | |
1 | Burundi | Francine Niyonsaba | |
1 | Canada | Andrea Seccafien | |
1 | Eritrea | Dolshi Tesfu | |
1 | Germany | Konstanze Klosterhalfen | |
1 | New Zealand | Camille Buscomb | |
1 | Norway | Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal | |
1 | South Africa | Dominique Scott | |
1 | Turkey | Yasemin Can | |
1 | Uganda | Mercyline Chelangat | |
World ranking | 0 | ||
Total | 29 |
Women's 100 m hurdles
[edit]Does not include indoor achievements
Women's 400 m hurdles
[edit]Women's 3000 m steeplechase
[edit]Road events
[edit]Men's road events
[edit]Men's marathon
[edit]Qualification ended on 31 May 2021. Both marathons had a target number of 80 athletes, but a larger number of athletes fulfilled the qualifying criteria and competed in Sapporo, the venue of the Olympic road events. In the men's field, 106 athletes qualified (maximum three per nation).
Men's 20 km walk
[edit]Entry number: 60.
Men's 50 km walk
[edit]The qualification period ended on 31 May 2021. The entry standard was 3:50:00. The target number was 60 athletes (with a maximum of three per nation) and 38 athletes met the entry standard, leaving 22 places for athletes qualifying by world ranking.
Women's road events
[edit]Women's marathon
[edit]Qualification ended on 31 May 2021. Both marathons had a target number of 80 athletes, but a larger number of athletes fulfilled the qualifying criteria and competed in Sapporo, the venue of the Olympic road events. In the women's field 91 athletes qualified (maximum three per nation):
- By Entry Standard: 89
- By Finishing Position at Designated Competitions: 1
- By World Rankings Position, to complete the required entry number of 80: 0
- By Universality Places: 1
Women's 20 km walk
[edit]Field events
[edit]Men's field events
[edit]Men's high jump
[edit]Entry number: 33.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 2.33 | 3 | United States | JuVaughn Harrison Shelby McEwen Darryl Sullivan |
2 | Italy | Stefano Sottile Gianmarco Tamberi | |
2 | ROC[Note RUS] | Mikhail Akimenko Ilya Ivanyuk | |
1 | Australia | Brandon Starc | |
1 | Bahamas | Jamal Wilson | |
1 | Belarus | Maksim Nedasekau | |
1 | Canada | Django Lovett | |
1 | Cuba | Luis Zayas | |
1 | Great Britain | Tom Gale | |
1 | Qatar | Mutaz Essa Barshim | |
1 | Switzerland | Loïc Gasch | |
1 | Ukraine | Andriy Protsenko | |
World ranking | 2 | Brazil | Fernando Ferreira Thiago Moura |
2 | Japan | Takashi Eto Naoto Tobe | |
1 | Bahamas | Donald Thomas | |
1 | Belarus | Dzmitry Nabokau[30] | |
1 | Bulgaria | Tihomir Ivanov | |
1 | Canada | Michael Mason | |
1 | China | Wang Yu | |
1 | Germany | Mateusz Przybylko | |
1 | Kenya | Mathew Sawe | |
1 | Lithuania | Adrijus Glebauskas | |
1 | Malaysia | Lee Hup Wei | |
1 | Mexico | Edgar Rivera | |
1 | New Zealand | Hamish Kerr | |
1 | South Korea | Woo Sang-hyeok | |
1 | Syria | Majd Eddin Ghazal | |
Total | 33 |
Men's pole vault
[edit]Entry number: 33.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 5.80 | |||
3 | France | Ethan Cormont Renaud Lavillenie Valentin Lavillenie | |
3 | Germany | Torben Blech Bo Kanda Lita Baehre Oleg Zernikel | |
3 | United States | KC Lightfoot Matt Ludwig Chris Nilsen | |
2 | Brazil | Thiago Braz Augusto Dutra | |
2 | Poland | Piotr Lisek Paweł Wojciechowski | |
1 | Australia | Kurtis Marschall | |
1 | Belgium | Ben Broeders | |
1 | Great Britain | Harry Coppell | |
1 | Netherlands | Menno Vloon | |
1 | Norway | Sondre Guttormsen | |
1 | Philippines | Ernest John Obiena | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | South Korea | Jin Min-sub | |
1 | Sweden | Armand Duplantis | |
1 | Turkey | Ersu Şaşma | |
World ranking | 2 | Greece | Konstantinos Filippidis Emmanouil Karalis |
2 | Japan | Masaki Ejima Seito Yamamoto | |
0 | Argentina | ||
1 | China | Huang Bokai | |
1 | Italy | Claudio Stecchi | |
0 | Netherlands | ||
1 | Poland | Robert Sobera | |
0 | Sweden | ||
Total | 30 |
Men's long jump
[edit]Entry number: 32.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 8.22 | 3 | Cuba | Juan Miguel Echevarría Lester Lescay Maykel Massó |
3 | Japan | Yuki Hashioka Shotaro Shiroyama Hibiki Tsuha | |
2 | South Africa | Cheswill Johnson Ruswahl Samaai | |
3 | United States | Marquis Dendy JuVaughn Harrison Steffin McCarter | |
2 | China | Gao Xinglong Huang Changzhou | |
2 | Jamaica | Tajay Gayle Carey McLeod | |
1 | Brazil | Samory Fraga | |
0 | Canada | ||
1 | Finland | Kristian Pulli | |
1 | Georgia | Bachana Khorava | |
1 | Greece | Miltiadis Tentoglou | |
1 | India | M. Sreeshankar | |
1 | Sweden | Thobias Montler | |
1 | Trinidad and Tobago | Andwuelle Wright | |
World ranking | 1 | Australia | Henry Frayne |
1 | Brazil | Alexsandro Melo | |
1 | China | Wang Jianan | |
1 | France | Augustin Bey | |
1 | Germany | Fabian Heinle | |
1 | Italy | Filippo Randazzo | |
1 | Spain | Eusebio Cáceres | |
1 | Ukraine | Vladyslav Mazur | |
Universality Places | 1 | Albania | Izmir Smajlaj |
1 | Uruguay | Emiliano Lasa | |
Total | 32 |
Men's triple jump
[edit]Entry number: 32.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 17.14 | 3 | China | Fang Yaoqing Wu Ruiting Zhu Yaming |
2 | Cuba | Andy Díaz Cristian Nápoles | |
3 | Italy | Tobia Bocchi Andrea Dallavalle Emmanuel Ihemeje | |
3 | United States | Chris Benard Will Claye Donald Scott | |
2 | Brazil | Almir dos Santos Alexsandro Melo | |
2 | France | Jean-Marc Pontvianne Melvin Raffin | |
1 | Algeria | Yasser Triki | |
1 | Armenia | Levon Aghasyan | |
1 | Azerbaijan | Nazim Babayev | |
1 | Burkina Faso | Hugues Fabrice Zango | |
1 | Georgia | Lasha Gulelauri | |
1 | Great Britain | Ben Williams | |
1 | Jamaica | Carey McLeod | |
1 | Portugal | Pedro Pichardo | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | Spain | Pablo Torrijos | |
1 | Turkey | Necati Er | |
World ranking | 2 | Portugal | Nelson Évora Tiago Pereira |
1 | Brazil | Mateus de Sá | |
1 | France | Benjamin Compaoré | |
1 | Germany | Max Heß | |
1 | Greece | Dimitrios Tsiamis | |
1 | Uzbekistan | Ruslan Kurbanov | |
Total | 32 |
Men's shot put
[edit]Entry number: 32. No ranking necessary to complete the field.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 21.10 | 3 | Italy | Leonardo Fabbri Nick Ponzio Zane Weir |
3 | United States | Ryan Crouser Joe Kovacs Payton Otterdahl | |
2 | Egypt | Mostafa Amr Hassan Mohamed Magdi Hamza | |
1 | Georgia | Giorgi Mujaridze | |
2 | New Zealand | Jacko Gill Tom Walsh | |
2 | Poland | Konrad Bukowiecki Michał Haratyk | |
2 | Serbia | Asmir Kolašinac Armin Sinančević | |
2 | South Africa | Kyle Blignaut Jason van Rooyen | |
1 | Bahrain | Abdelrahman Mahmoud | |
1 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Mesud Pezer | |
1 | Brazil | Darlan Romani | |
0 | British Virgin Islands | ||
1 | Canada | Tim Nedow | |
1 | Croatia | Filip Mihaljević | |
1 | Czech Republic | Tomáš Staněk | |
1 | Great Britain | Scott Lincoln | |
1 | India | Tajinderpal Singh Toor | |
1 | Luxembourg | Bob Bertemes | |
1 | Nigeria | Chukwuebuka Enekwechi | |
1 | Portugal | Francisco Belo | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | Romania | Andrei Rares Toader | |
1 | Sweden | Wictor Petersson | |
1 | Ukraine | Ihor Musiyenko | |
World ranking | 0 | ||
Total | 31 |
Men's discus throw
[edit]Entry number: 32.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 66.00 | 3 | Germany | Daniel Jasinski Clemens Prüfer David Wrobel[34] |
3 | Jamaica | Fedrick Dacres Traves Smikle Chad Wright | |
3 | United States | Mason Finley Reggie Jagers Sam Mattis | |
2 | Sweden | Simon Pettersson Daniel Ståhl | |
1 | Australia | Matthew Denny | |
1 | Austria | Lukas Weißhaidinger | |
1 | Belarus | Yauheni Bahutski | |
1 | Colombia | Mauricio Ortega | |
1 | Cyprus | Apostolos Parellis | |
1 | Ecuador | Juan Caicedo | |
1 | France | Lolassonn Djouhan | |
1 | Great Britain | Lawrence Okoye | |
1 | Iran | Ehsan Haddadi | |
1 | Italy | Giovanni Faloci | |
1 | Lithuania | Andrius Gudžius | |
1 | Norway | Ola Stunes Isene | |
1 | Poland | Piotr Małachowski | |
1 | Romania | Alin Firfirică | |
1 | Samoa | Alex Rose | |
1 | Slovenia | Kristjan Čeh | |
1 | Spain | Lois Maikel Martínez | |
1 | Ukraine | Mykyta Nesterenko | |
World ranking | 1 | Montenegro | Danijel Furtula |
1 | Poland | Bartłomiej Stój | |
Universality places | 1 | Iceland | Guðni Valur Guðnason |
Total | 32 |
Men's hammer throw
[edit]Entry number: 32.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 77.50 | 3 | Belarus | Hleb Dudarau Ivan Tsikhan Yury Vasilchanka |
1 | ROC[Note RUS] | Valeriy Pronkin | |
2 | Ukraine | Mykhaylo Kokhan Hlib Piskunov | |
3 | United States | Daniel Haugh Rudy Winkler Alex Young | |
2 | Chile | Gabriel Kehr Humberto Mansilla | |
2 | Great Britain | Taylor Campbell Nick Miller | |
2 | Poland | Paweł Fajdek Wojciech Nowicki | |
2 | Turkey | Eşref Apak Özkan Baltacı | |
1 | France | Quentin Bigot | |
1 | Hungary | Bence Halász | |
1 | Mexico | Diego del Real | |
1 | Moldova | Serghei Marghiev | |
1 | Norway | Eivind Henriksen | |
1 | Slovakia | Marcel Lomnický | |
1 | Spain | Javier Cienfuegos | |
1 | Uzbekistan | Suhrob Khodjaev | |
World ranking | 2 | Greece | Michail Anastasakis Christos Frantzeskakis |
1 | Egypt | Mostafa El Gamel | |
1 | Germany | Tristan Schwandke | |
1 | Qatar | Ashraf Amgad El-Seify | |
Universality Places | 1 | Turkmenistan | Mergen Mämmedow |
Total | 31 |
Men's javelin throw
[edit]Entry number: 32.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 85.00 | 3 | Germany | Bernhard Seifert Johannes Vetter Julian Weber[35] |
2 | Belarus | Aliaksei Katkavets Pavel Mialeshka | |
2 | Chinese Taipei | Cheng Chao-tsun Huang Shih-feng | |
2 | Finland | Oliver Helander Toni Kuusela | |
2 | India | Neeraj Chopra Shivpal Singh | |
1 | Czech Republic | Jakub Vadlejch | |
0 | Estonia | ||
1 | Grenada | Anderson Peters | |
1 | Kenya | Julius Yego | |
1 | Latvia | Gatis Čakšs | |
1 | Lithuania | Edis Matusevičius | |
1 | Moldova | Andrian Mardare | |
1 | Pakistan | Arshad Nadeem | |
1 | Poland | Marcin Krukowski | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | South Africa | Rocco van Rooyen | |
1 | Sweden | Kim Amb | |
1 | Trinidad and Tobago | Keshorn Walcott | |
World ranking | 2 | United States | Michael Shuey Curtis Thompson |
1 | Czech Republic | Vítězslav Veselý | |
1 | Egypt | Ihab Abdelrahman | |
1 | Finland | Lassi Etelätalo | |
1 | Hungary | Norbert Rivasz-Tóth | |
1 | Japan | Takuto Kominami | |
1 | Poland | Cyprian Mrzygłód | |
1 | Romania | Alexandru Novac | |
1 | Spain | Odei Jainaga | |
Total | 32 |
Women's field events
[edit]Women's high jump
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 1.96 | 3 | Ukraine | Iryna Herashchenko Yuliya Levchenko Yaroslava Mahuchikh |
2 | Australia | Nicola McDermott Eleanor Patterson | |
1 | Belarus | Karyna Demidik | |
2 | Germany | Marie-Laurence Jungfleisch Imke Onnen | |
2 | Kazakhstan | Nadezhda Dubovitskaya Kristina Ovchinnikova | |
2 | Sweden | Erika Kinsey Maja Nilsson | |
2 | United States | Vashti Cunningham Rachel McCoy | |
2 | Uzbekistan | Svetlana Radzivil Safina Sadullayeva | |
1 | Bulgaria | Mirela Demireva | |
1 | Finland | Ella Junnila | |
1 | Great Britain | Morgan Lake | |
1 | Italy | Elena Vallortigara | |
1 | Montenegro | Marija Vuković | |
1 | Poland | Kamila Lićwinko | |
1 | ROC[Note RUS] | Mariya Lasitskene | |
1 | Romania | Daniela Stanciu | |
1 | Switzerland | Salome Lang[36] | |
World ranking | 1 | Croatia | Ana Šimić |
1 | Great Britain | Emily Borthwick | |
1 | Italy | Alessia Trost | |
1 | Lithuania | Airinė Palšytė | |
1 | Saint Lucia | Levern Spencer | |
1 | United States | Tynita Butts | |
Total | 31 |
Women's pole vault
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 4.70 | 3 | Greece | Nikoleta Kyriakopoulou Eleni-Klaoudia Polak Katerina Stefanidi |
3 | United States | Morgann LeLeux Sandi Morris Katie Nageotte | |
2 | Canada | Anicka Newell Alysha Newman | |
2 | China | Li Ling Xu Huiqin | |
2 | Sweden | Angelica Bengtsson Michaela Meijer | |
1 | Australia | Nina Kennedy | |
1 | Belarus | Iryna Zhuk | |
1 | Cuba | Yarisley Silva | |
1 | Great Britain | Holly Bradshaw | |
1 | Italy | Roberta Bruni | |
1 | ROC[Note RUS] | Anzhelika Sidorova | |
1 | Slovenia | Tina Šutej | |
1 | Switzerland | Angelica Moser | |
1 | Ukraine | Maryna Kylypko | |
1 | Venezuela | Robeilys Peinado | |
World ranking | 2 | Finland | Elina Lampela Wilma Murto |
1 | Australia | Liz Parnov | |
1 | Belgium | Fanny Smets | |
1 | Czech Republic | Romana Maláčová | |
0 | Germany | ||
1 | Italy | Elisa Molinarolo | |
1 | Norway | Lene Retzius | |
1 | Switzerland | Andrina Hodel | |
1 | Ukraine | Yana Hladiychuk | |
Total | 31 |
Women's long jump
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 6.82 | 3 | Great Britain | Abigail Irozuru Jazmin Sawyers Lorraine Ugen |
3 | United States | Quanesha Burks Tara Davis Brittney Reese | |
1 | Nigeria | Ese Brume | |
2 | Romania | Florentina Iusco Alina Rotaru | |
1 | Australia | Brooke Stratton | |
1 | British Virgin Islands | Chantel Malone | |
0 | Colombia | ||
1 | France | Yanis David | |
1 | Germany | Malaika Mihambo | |
0 | Italy | ||
1 | Jamaica | Tissanna Hickling | |
1 | ROC[Note RUS] | Darya Klishina | |
1 | Serbia | Ivana Španović | |
1 | Spain | Fátima Diame | |
1 | Sweden | Khaddi Sagnia | |
1 | Trinidad and Tobago | Tyra Gittens | |
1 | Ukraine | Maryna Bekh-Romanchuk | |
1 | Uzbekistan | Darya Reznichenko | |
World ranking | 1 | Belarus | Nastassia Mironchyk-Ivanova |
1 | Brazil | Eliane Martins | |
1 | Canada | Christabel Nettey | |
1 | Germany | Maryse Luzolo | |
1 | Hungary | Anasztázia Nguyen | |
1 | Jamaica | Chanice Porter | |
1 | Panama | Nathalee Aranda | |
Universality places | 1 | Estonia | Ksenija Balta |
1 | Papua New Guinea | Rellie Kaputin | |
Total | 30 |
Women's triple jump
[edit]No athlete qualified by world ranking.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 14.32 | |||
3 | Cuba | Leyanis Pérez Liadagmis Povea Davisleydi Velazco | |
3 | Kazakhstan | Irina Ektova Mariya Ovchinnikova Olga Rypakova | |
3 | United States | Tori Franklin Jasmine Moore Keturah Orji | |
2 | Colombia | Caterine Ibargüen Yosiris Urrutia | |
2 | Finland | Kristiina Mäkelä Senni Salminen | |
1 | France | Rouguy Diallo | |
2 | Germany | Neele Eckhardt Kristin Gierisch | |
2 | Jamaica | Shanieka Ricketts Kimberly Williams | |
2 | Portugal | Patrícia Mamona Evelise Veiga | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | Darya Nidbaykina | |
1 | Belarus | Viyaleta Skvartsova | |
1 | Brazil | Núbia Soares | |
1 | Bulgaria | Gabriela Petrova | |
1 | Dominica | Thea LaFond | |
1 | Dominican Republic | Ana José Tima | |
1 | Ghana | Nadia Eke | |
1 | Greece | Paraskevi Papachristou | |
1 | Israel | Hanna Knyazyeva-Minenko | |
1 | Italy | Dariya Derkach | |
1 | Lithuania | Diana Zagainova | |
0 | Nigeria | ||
1 | Spain | Ana Peleteiro | |
1 | Ukraine | Olha Saladukha | |
1 | Uzbekistan | Roksana Khudoyarova | |
1 | Venezuela | Yulimar Rojas | |
World ranking | 0 | ||
Total | 34 |
Women's shot put
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 18.50 | 3 | China | Gao Yang Gong Lijiao Song Jiayuan |
3 | Germany | Sara Gambetta Katharina Maisch Christina Schwanitz | |
3 | United States | Adelaide Aquilla Jessica Ramsey Raven Saunders | |
2 | Canada | Brittany Crew Sarah Mitton | |
2 | Poland | Paulina Guba Klaudia Kardasz | |
1 | Belarus | Aliona Dubitskaya | |
1 | Georgia | Sopo Shatirishvili | |
1 | Great Britain | Sophie McKinna | |
1 | Hungary | Anita Márton | |
1 | Jamaica | Danniel Thomas-Dodd | |
1 | Moldova | Dimitriana Surdu | |
1 | Netherlands | Jessica Schilder | |
1 | New Zealand | Valerie Adams | |
1 | Portugal | Auriol Dongmo | |
1 | Spain | María Belén Toimil | |
1 | Sweden | Fanny Roos | |
1 | Turkey | Emel Dereli | |
1 | Ukraine | Ol'ha Holodna | |
World ranking | 1 | Brazil | Geisa Arcanjo |
1 | Czech Republic | Markéta Červenková | |
1 | Jamaica | Lloydricia Cameron | |
1 | New Zealand | Maddison-Lee Wesche | |
1 | Trinidad and Tobago | Portious Warren | |
1 | Venezuela | Ahymará Espinoza | |
Total | 32 |
Women's discus throw
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 63.50 | 3 | China | Chen Yang Feng Bin Su Xinyue |
3 | Germany | Kristin Pudenz Marike Steinacker Claudine Vita | |
2 | Brazil | Fernanda Martins Andressa de Morais | |
2 | Cuba | Denia Caballero Yaimé Pérez | |
2 | India | Kamalpreet Kaur Seema Punia | |
2 | United States | Valarie Allman Rachel Dincoff[37] | |
1 | Australia | Dani Stevens | |
1 | Croatia | Sandra Perković | |
1 | France | Mélina Robert-Michon | |
1 | Jamaica | Shadae Lawrence | |
1 | Moldova | Alexandra Emilianov | |
1 | Netherlands | Jorinde van Klinken | |
1 | Portugal | Liliana Cá | |
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | Ukraine | Natalia Semenova | |
World ranking | 1 | Brazil | Izabela da Silva |
1 | Croatia | Marija Tolj | |
1 | Greece | Chrysoula Anagnostopoulou | |
1 | Italy | Daisy Osakue | |
0 | Nigeria | ||
1 | Portugal | Irina Rodrigues | |
1 | Serbia | Dragana Tomašević | |
1 | Thailand | Subenrat Insaeng | |
1 | United States | Kelsey Card | |
Universality places | 1 | Chile | Karen Gallardo |
Total | 31 |
Women's hammer throw
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 72.50 | 2 | Belarus | Hanna Malyshchyk Nastassia Maslava |
3 | Poland | Joanna Fiodorow Malwina Kopron Anita Włodarczyk | |
3 | United States | Brooke Andersen Gwen Berry DeAnna Price | |
2 | China | Luo Na Wang Zheng | |
2 | New Zealand | Lauren Bruce Julia Ratcliffe | |
2 | Ukraine | Iryna Klymets Iryna Novozhylova | |
1 | Azerbaijan | Hanna Skydan | |
1 | Canada | Camryn Rogers | |
1 | Finland | Silja Kosonen | |
1 | France | Alexandra Tavernier | |
1 | Hungary | Réka Gyurátz | |
1 | Latvia | Laura Igaune | |
1 | Moldova | Zalina Petrivskaya | |
0 | Nigeria | ||
0 | ROC[Note RUS] | ||
1 | Turkey | Tuğçe Şahutoğlu | |
1 | Venezuela | Rosa Rodríguez | |
World ranking | 1 | Canada | Jillian Weir |
1 | Finland | Krista Tervo | |
1 | Germany | Samantha Borutta | |
1 | Greece | Stamatia Scarvelis | |
1 | Italy | Sara Fantini | |
1 | Romania | Bianca Ghelber | |
1 | Slovakia | Martina Hrašnová | |
1 | Spain | Laura Redondo | |
Total | 31 |
Women's javelin throw
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 64.00 | 3 | China | Liu Shiying Lü Huihui |
2 | United States | Maggie Malone Kara Winger | |
1 | Australia | Kelsey-Lee Barber | |
1 | Austria | Victoria Hudson | |
1 | Belarus | Tatsiana Khaladovich | |
1 | Croatia | Sara Kolak | |
1 | Czech Republic | Nikola Ogrodníková | |
1 | Germany | Christin Hussong | |
1 | Japan | Haruka Kitaguchi | |
1 | Latvia | Līna Mūze | |
1 | Poland | Maria Andrejczyk | |
1 | Turkey | Eda Tuğsuz | |
World ranking | 2 | Australia | Mackenzie Little Kathryn Mitchell |
2 | Brazil | Laila Ferrer e Silva Jucilene de Lima | |
2 | Czech Republic | Irena Gillarová Barbora Špotáková | |
2 | Latvia | Anete Kociņa Madara Palameika | |
1 | Canada | Elizabeth Gleadle | |
1 | Colombia | María Lucelly Murillo | |
1 | Hungary | Réka Szilágyi | |
1 | India | Annu Rani | |
1 | Lithuania | Liveta Jasiūnaitė | |
1 | Serbia | Marija Vučenović | |
1 | Slovenia | Martina Ratej | |
1 | South Africa | Jo-Ane van Dyk | |
1 | United States | Ariana Ince | |
Total | 32 |
Combined events
[edit]Men's decathlon
[edit]Entry number: 24.
Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 8350 | |||
3 | Estonia | Johannes Erm Karel Tilga Maicel Uibo | |
3 | United States | Steve Bastien Garrett Scantling Zach Ziemek | |
2 | Australia | Cedric Dubler Ashley Moloney | |
2 | Canada | Pierce Lepage Damian Warner | |
2 | Germany | Niklas Kaul Kai Kazmirek | |
1 | Belgium | Thomas Van der Plaetsen | |
1 | Brazil | Felipe dos Santos | |
1 | France | Kevin Mayer | |
1 | Grenada | Lindon Victor | |
1 | ROC[Note RUS] | Ilya Shkurenyov | |
World ranking | 2 | Czech Republic | Adam Sebastian Helcelet Jiří Sýkora |
1 | Belarus | Vital Zhuk | |
0 | Netherlands | ||
1 | Norway | Martin Roe | |
1 | Poland | Paweł Wiesiołek | |
1 | Spain | Jorge Ureña | |
Total | 23 |
Women's heptathlon
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of athletes | NOC | Nominated athletes |
---|---|---|---|
Entry standard – 6420 | 3 | United States | Erica Bougard Annie Kunz Kendell Williams |
2 | Austria | Ivona Dadic Verena Preiner | |
1 | Belgium | Nafissatou Thiam | |
1 | Cuba | Yorgelis Rodríguez | |
1 | Germany | Carolin Schäfer | |
1 | Great Britain | Katarina Johnson-Thompson | |
1 | Hungary | Xénia Krizsán | |
0 | Latvia | ||
1 | Netherlands | Anouk Vetter | |
World ranking | 2 | Netherlands | Nadine Broersen Emma Oosterwegel |
1 | Belgium | Noor Vidts | |
1 | Benin | Odile Ahouanwanou | |
1 | Burkina Faso | Marthe Koala | |
1 | Canada | Georgia Ellenwood | |
1 | China | Zheng Ninali | |
1 | Colombia | Evelis Aguilar | |
1 | Finland | Maria Huntington | |
1 | Germany | Vanessa Grimm | |
1 | Poland | Adrianna Sułek | |
1 | Spain | María Vicente | |
1 | Uzbekistan | Ekaterina Voronina | |
Total | 24 |
Relay events
[edit]Each relay team will be composed of 5 athletes (4 athletes for the mixed teams, 2 men and 2 women). Athletes already qualified for the 100 m and 400 m events are automatically included in their respective relay teams.
Men's 4 × 100 m relay
[edit]Entry number: 16 teams of 5 athletes each (80). By Finishing Position at Designated Competitions: 12 By Top List: 4 (all marks made in 2019).
Qualification standard | No. of teams | Qualified teams | |
---|---|---|---|
2019 World Championships in Athletics Finalists |
8 | Brazil China France Great Britain Japan Netherlands South Africa United States | |
2021 World Athletics Relays Finalists |
4 | Denmark Germany Ghana Italy | |
World Athletics Top List (as of 29 June 2021) |
4 | Canada Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago Turkey | |
Total | 16 |
Men's 4 × 400 m relay
[edit]Entry number: 16 teams of 5 athletes each (80).
Qualification standard | No. of teams | Qualified teams | |
---|---|---|---|
2019 World Championships in Athletics Finalists |
8 | Belgium Colombia France Great Britain Italy Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago United States | |
2021 World Athletics Relays Finalists |
4 | Botswana Japan Netherlands South Africa | |
World Athletics Top List (as of June 29, 2021) |
4 | Czech Republic Germany India Poland | |
Total | 16 |
Women's 4 × 100 m relay
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of teams | Qualified teams | |
---|---|---|---|
2019 World Championships in Athletics Finalists |
8 | China Germany Great Britain Italy Jamaica Switzerland Trinidad and Tobago United States | |
2021 World Athletics Relays Finalists |
6 | Denmark Ecuador France Japan Netherlands Poland | |
World Athletics Top List (as of June 29, 2021) |
2 | Brazil Nigeria | |
Total | 16 |
Women's 4 × 400 m relay
[edit]Qualification standard | No. of teams | Qualified teams | |
---|---|---|---|
2019 World Championships in Athletics Finalists |
8 | Belgium Canada Great Britain Jamaica Netherlands Poland Ukraine United States | |
2021 World Athletics Relays Finalists |
4 | Cuba France Germany Italy | |
World Athletics Top List (as of June 29, 2021) |
4 | Australia Bahamas Belarus Switzerland | |
Total | 16 |
Mixed 4 × 400 m relay
[edit]Entry number: 16 teams of 4 athletes each, 2 men and 2 women (64).
Qualification standard | No. of teams | Qualified teams | |
---|---|---|---|
2019 World Championships in Athletics Finalists |
7 | Belgium Brazil Great Britain India Jamaica Poland United States | |
2021 World Athletics Relays Finalists |
5 | Dominican Republic Ireland Italy Netherlands Spain | |
World Athletics Top List (as of June 29, 2021) |
3 | Germany Nigeria Ukraine | |
Total | 15 |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a: These NOCs have qualified more than 3 athletes for the corresponding individual event. It is the NOC's responsibility to choose up to 3 athletes among those who qualified for the same event.
- ^ Note RUS: As World Athletics, due to the Russian doping scandal, continues to ban Russian athletes to compete under the Russian flag, it is not clear which flag they compete under and whether it would be lifted until the 2020 Olympics or not. On 30 April 2021, WA announced that the status of Authorised Neutral Athletes (ANA) will be granted to some Russian athletes (4 athletes initially), but in any case no more than 10 ANA athletes will be entered at the Olympic Games.[38] [39][40] On 22 May 2021, 23 more athletes were granted ANA status,[41] followed by another 35 on 7 June.[42][43]
References
[edit]- ^ "The XXXII Olympic Games (Athletics) | World Athletics".
- ^ a b "Qualification system for Tokyo 2020 Olympics published by the world governing body, IAAF". Inside the Games. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f "Qualification System – Games of the XXXI Olympiad – Athletics" (PDF). IAAF. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
- ^ "IAAF Council approves Olympic qualification system and entry standards". IAAF. 10 March 2019. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
- ^ "IAAF to follow other sports with world ranking system for athletes". BBC Sport. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
- ^ "Olympic qualification period suspended until 1 December 2020". World Athletics. 6 April 2020. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
- ^ "Olympic qualifying system to recommence for road athletes from September 2020". 28 July 2020. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- ^ "Olympic qualification period ends". World Athletics. 2 July 2021.
- ^ "QUALIFICATION SYSTEM – GAMES OF THE XXXII OLYMPIAD – TOKYO 2020 WORLD ATHLETICS" (PDF). NOC*NSF. 28 May 2020. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
- ^ The results of the 2021 Japanese championships were the following: 1. Shuhei Tada 10.15, 2. Bruno Dede 10.19, 3. Ryota Yamagata 10.27, 4. Yuki Koike (sprinter) 10.27, 5. Yoshihide Kiryu 10.28.
- ^ The French sprinter will only run in the 4 × 100 m relay. The Road to Tokyo tool of World Athletics indicates two more sprinters who would have qualified by ranking as "withdrawn": Edward Osei-Nketia (NZL) and Kevin Kranz (GER). Aaron Brown (CAN) is also "withdrawn" but had qualified by entry standard.
- ^ Includes 28 athletes qualified by universality place entering at the preliminary round.
- ^ "Sha'Carri Richardson positive au cannabis, sa présence à Tokyo compromise". Lequipe.fr.
- ^ a b "Sveriges agerande stoppar utländska friidrottare från OS". Svt.se. 12 July 2021.
- ^ "Canada names 57-strong team for Tokyo". World Athletics. 3 July 2021. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
- ^ Ayomide Folorunso with standard will not be competing in the 400 metres hurdles.
- ^ "Irene Sánchez-Escribano sufre una lesión y se queda sin Olimpiadas a tan solo unos días del comienzo de los JJOO" (in Spanish). Público. 19 July 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
- ^ a b "Athletes named to Canada's Tokyo Olympic team". CBC. 4 June 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
- ^ a b "Zhang, Peng clinch Olympic slots with victories at Xuzhou Marathon". People's Daily. 12 April 2021. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "Les qualifiés et sélectionnés français pour Tokyo 2020". Olympics. 27 May 2021. Archived from the original on 2 June 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- ^ "Türkiye'nin Tokyo 2020 maraton kadrosu kesinleşti". TRT Spor. 25 May 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- ^ "OLYMPICS: Kiprotich picked for Uganda marathon team". The Independent (Uganda). 3 May 2021. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ a b "Nakamura and Maeda win Japan's Marathon Grand Championship". IAAF. 15 September 2019. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
- ^ a b "Athletics: Ichiyama, Osako clinch Japan's last Olympic marathon spots". Kyodo News. 8 March 2020. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
- ^ "Definen a los marchistas mexicanos que irán a los Tokio 2021".
- ^ Alternate Athlete: Hagen Pohle, SC Potsdam, qualified by Ranking.
- ^ "CRITERIOS DE PRESELECCIÓN PARA LOS JUEGOS OLÍMPICOS 2021 : Del 30 de julio al 8 de agosto de 2021 en Tokio (Japón)" (PDF). RRfea.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 April 2021. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ "Atletiekbond wijst Choukoud en Van Nunen aan voor olympische marathon". NOS. 2 June 2021. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- ^ "Geriausia Lietuvos lengvaatletė Živilė Vaiciukevičiūtė baigė karjerą". Lengvoji.lt. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ Added to the entry list post qualification period after being granted amnesty from a doping ban in May 2021 and subsequently entering the World Rankings quota. [1] [2] Archived 2021-07-19 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Tested positive COVID-19 in Tokyo.
- ^ "Polsstokhoogspringer Koppelaar mist mogelijk Spelen na positieve coronatest". Nu.nl. 19 July 2021. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ "Uno de los mejores atletas cubanos, el triplista Jordan Díaz Fortún, se queda en España". 14ymedio.com. July 2021.
- ^ Alternate Athlete: Christoph Harting, SCC Berlin.
- ^ Alternate Athlete: Andreas Hofmann
- ^ "Highlight im Hochsprung – Salome Lang glänzt mit Schweizer Rekord und Olympia-Limite". Srf.ch. 20 June 2021. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ "2021 Team USA List". FloTrack. 20 June 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
- ^ "First Authorised Neutral Athletes approved for 2021 | PRESS-RELEASES". Worldathletics.org.
- ^ "Russia doping scandal: IAAF upholds ban on Russian athletes until further notice". BBC Sport. 11 March 2019.
- ^ "Putin issues order to Russian Olympic Committee to get IAAF ban lifted in time for Tokyo 2020". Inside The Games. 4 May 2019.
- ^ "World Athletics approves the application of 23 Russians to compete internationally as neutral athletes | PRESS-RELEASES". Worldathletics.org.
- ^ "World Athletics approves the application of 35 Russians to compete internationally as neutral athletes | PRESS-RELEASES". Worldathletics.org.
- ^ "Russian Olympic Committee to send 335-member team to Tokyo 2020 Olympics". Insidethegames.biz. 3 July 2021.