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Track and field at the 2011 Military World Games

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Track and field at the 2011 Military World Games
The track at the host stadium
Dates17–23 July
Host cityRio de Janeiro, Brazil
VenueEstádio Olímpico João Havelange
Events35


The track and field competition at the 2011 Military World Games was held from 17–23 July 2011 at the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange in Rio de Janeiro. The programme contained 35 athletics events, 20 for men and 15 for women. The marathon races (held in conjunction with the annual Rio de Janeiro Marathon) took place on 17 July while the track and field events were held in the stadium from 19–23 July.

The host nation Brazil topped the medal table with eight gold medals and fourteen in total. Kenya was a close runner-up, with six golds and a total of fifteen medals after strong performances in the middle to long distance running events. Poland, Qatar and Ukraine were other countries which performed well. Twenty-six nations had a medal-winning athlete in the track and field competition.

The marathon competition returned, after a break at the 2007 edition, but the racewalk and decathlon were dropped. Despite the increased number of women's track events, only three field events were contested by female athletes.

Qatar's Femi Ogunode was the only athlete to win two individual events, taking the 100 metres and 200 metres titles in Games records. Ana Cláudia Silva of Brazil won the women's 200 m and the 4×100 metres relay, as well as the 100 m silver, while her compatriot Geisa Coutinho won the 400 m and featured in both of Brazil's winning relay teams. Keila Costa came close to a long jump/triple jump double, but was narrowly beaten by Simona La Mantia in the latter event.

A total of ten Games records were broken during the five-day competition. Chinese Olympic medallist Zhang Wenxiu won the women's hammer throw in a Games record – a feat also achieved by Poland's Paweł Wojciechowski in the men's pole vault. The men's 400 metres was won by Sajjad Hashemi in an Iranian national record time.[1]

Records

Name Event Country Record Type
Femi Seun Ogunode Men's 100 metres  Qatar 10.07 s GR
Femi Seun Ogunode Men's 200 metres  Qatar 20.46 s GR
Sajjad Hashemi Men's 400 metres  Iran 45.81 s NR
Girmay Hadgu Men's 800 metres  Eritrea 1:47.20 min NR
Mark Kiptoo Men's 5000 metres  Kenya 13:06.17 min GR
Agus Prayogo Men's 5000 metres  Indonesia 14:02.12 min NR
Mutaz Barshim Men's high jump  Qatar 2.29 m GR
Paweł Wojciechowski Men's pole vault  Poland 5.81 m GR
Ana Cláudia Silva Women's 400 metres  Brazil 23.01 s GR
Geisa Coutinho Women's 400 metres  Brazil 51.08 s GR
Alina Talay Women's 100 m hurdles  Belarus 12.95 s GR
Zhang Wenxiu Women's hammer throw  China 74.29 s GR
Geisa Coutinho
Vanda Gomes
Ana Cláudia Silva
Franciela Krasucki
Women's 4×100 m relay  Brazil 43.73 s GR
Key:0000WR — World record  • AR — Area record  • GR — Games record  • NR — National record

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres[2]  Femi Seun Ogunode (QAT) 10.07 GR  Aziz Ouhadi (MAR) 10.17 SB  Nilson André (BRA) 10.34
200 metres[3]  Femi Seun Ogunode (QAT) 20.46 GR  Aziz Ouhadi (MAR) 20.62  Yoel Tapia (DOM) 20.88 SB
400 metres[4]  Sajjad Hashemi (IRI) 45.81 NR  Mark Mutai (KEN) 45.91 SB  Arismendy Peguero (DOM) 45.95 SB
800 metres[5]  Marcin Lewandowski (POL) 1:45.77  Jackson Kivuva (KEN) 1:45.93  Geoffrey Matum (KEN) 1:45.94 SB
1500 metres[6]  Gideon Gathimba (KEN) 3:40.62  Mohamed Moustaoui (MAR) 3:41.04  Imad Touil (ALG) 3:41.24
5000 metres[7]  Mark Kiptoo (KEN) 13:06.17 GR  Vincent Kiprop (KEN) 13:06.31  Bilisuma Gelassa (BHR) 13:06.73
10,000 metres[8]  Josphat Kiprono Menjo (KEN) 28:36.92  Ali Hasan Mahboob (BHR) 28:37.08  Kiplimo Kimutai (KEN) 28:45.27
Marathon[9]  Patrick Tambwe Ngoie (FRA) 2:18:17  Rachid Ghanmouni (FRA) 2:18:43  Paul Kosgei (KEN) 2:20:43
110 metres hurdles[10]  Dominik Bochenek (POL) 13.74  Ji Wei (CHN) 13.81  Mariusz Kubaszewski (POL) 13.87
400 metres hurdles[11]  Raphael Fernandes (BRA) 50.50 SB  Víctor Solarte (VEN) 50.60 SB  Leonardo Capotosti (ITA) 50.86
3000 metres steeplechase[12]  Simon Ayeko (UGA) 8:29.39  Abdelkader Hachlaf (MAR) 8:29.43  Abubaker Ali Kamal (QAT) 8:30.71
High jump[13]  Mutaz Barshim (QAT) 2.29 GR  Yuriy Krymarenko (UKR) 2.23  Dmytro Dem'yanyuk (UKR) 2.20
Pole vault[14]  Paweł Wojciechowski (POL) 5.81 GR  Łukasz Michalski (POL) 5.65  Fábio Gomes da Silva (BRA) 5.60
Long jump[15]  Yu Zhenwei (CHN) 8.05 SB  Zhang Xiaoyi (CHN) 7.90  Víctor Castillo (VEN) 7.81 SB
Triple jump[16]  Jefferson Sabino (BRA) 16.89 SB  Issam Nima (ALG) 16.49  Dzmitry Dziatsuk (BLR) 16.38
Shot put[17]  Andriy Semenov (UKR) 20.02  Candy Arnd Bauer (GER) 19.14  Andrei Siniakou (BLR) 18.10
Discus throw[18]  Mahmoud Samimi (IRI) 61.36  Rashid Al-Dosari (QAT) 61.21  Musab Momani (JOR) 60.97
Javelin throw[19]  Ari Mannio (FIN) 82.48  Spyridon Lempessis (GRE) 76.35  Matija Kranjc (SLO) 74.71
4×100 metres relay[20]  Brazil
Vicente de Lima
Ailson Feitosa
Basílio de Moraes
Nilson André
39.53  Poland
Grzegorz Zimniewicz
Kamil Masztak
Robert Kubaczyk
Marcin Marciniszyn
39.63  Sri Lanka
Shareef Safran
Ranil Jayawaradena
Gihan Chamara
Shehan Ambepitiya
40.02
4×400 metres relay[21]  Poland
Piotr Klimczak
Daniel Dąbrowski
Kacper Kozłowski
Marcin Marciniszyn
3:04.55  Kenya
Kipkemboi Soi
Jonathan Kibet
Geoffrey Matum
Mark Mutai
3:07.87  India
Riju Kallammarukunnal
Premanand Jayakumar
Mortaja Shake
Kunhu Puthenpurakkal
3:08.31

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres[22]  Mariya Ryemyen (UKR) 11.34  Ana Cláudia Silva (BRA) 11.37  Olesya Povh (UKR) 11.49
200 metres[23]  Ana Cláudia Silva (BRA) 23.01 GR  Mariya Ryemyen (UKR) 23.27  Olesya Povh (UKR) 23.40
400 metres[24]  Geisa Coutinho (BRA) 51.08 GR  Olga Tereshkova (KAZ) 51.27  Jailma de Lima (BRA) 51.77 SB
800 metres[25]  Maryna Arzamasava (BLR) 2:01.39  Margarita Matsko (KAZ) 2:01.83 SB  Helen Obiri (KEN) 2:01.86
1500 metres[26]  Nancy Langat (KEN) 4:15.42  Denise Krebs (GER) 4:15.87  Geneb Regasa (BHR) 4:16.31
5000 metres[27]  Shitaye Habtegebrel (BHR) 15:52.84  Tejitu Chalchissa (BHR) 15:54.51  Rebecca Cheptegei (UGA) 16:00.26
10,000 metres[28]  Doris Changeywo (KEN) 33:38.93  Lineth Chepkurui (KEN) 33:39.13  Kareema Saleh Jasim (BHR) 33:45.34
Marathon[29]  Kim Kum-Ok (PRK) 2:35:22  Wei Yanan (CHN) 2:36:19  Helalia Johannes (NAM) 2:37:15
100 metres hurdles[30]  Alina Talay (BLR) 12.95 GR  Veronica Borsi (ITA) 13.08 PB  Ekaterina Poplavskaya (BLR) 13.12 SB
3000 metres steeplechase[31]  Mercy Njoroge (KEN) 9:36.92  Irini Kokkinariou (GRE) 9:39.53 SB  Salima El Ouali Alami (MAR) 9:42.51 PB
Long jump[32]  Keila Costa (BRA) 6.41 SB  Vanessa Seles (BRA) 6.28 SB  Ruslana Tsykhotska (UKR) 6.23
Triple jump[33]  Simona La Mantia (ITA) 14.19  Keila Costa (BRA) 14.11 SB  Ruslana Tsykhotska (UKR) 14.05
Hammer throw[34]  Zhang Wenxiu (CHN) 74.29 GR  Nataliya Zolotukhina (UKR) 67.93  Rosa Rodríguez (VEN) 67.16
4×100 metres relay[35]  Brazil
Geisa Coutinho
Vanda Gomes
Ana Cláudia Silva
Franciela Krasucki
43.73 GR  Poland
Marika Popowicz
Daria Korczyńska
Marta Jeschke
Ewelina Ptak
44.35  Ukraine
Yevgeniya Snihur
Olena Chebanu
Mariya Ryemyen
Olesya Povh
45.00
4×400 metres relay[36]  Brazil
Vanda Gomes
Christiane dos Santos
Geisa Coutinho
Jailma de Lima
3:32.42  Dominican Republic
Raysa Sánchez
Margarita Manzueta
Marleny Mejía
Yolanda Osana
3:38.75  Sri Lanka
Menaka Wickramasinghe
Champika Dilrukshi
Sva Kusumawathi
Chandrika Subashini
3:44.32

Medal table

Keila Costa won medals in the long jump and triple jump for Brazil.
Josphat Kiprono Menjo was one of many Kenyan long-distance medallists.
Key
  The host country is highlighted in lavender blue
1  Brazil 8 3 3 14
2  Kenya 6 5 4 15
3  Poland 4 3 1 8
4  Qatar 3 1 1 5
5  Ukraine 2 3 6 11
6  China 2 3 0 5
7  Belarus 2 0 3 5
8  Iran 2 0 0 2
9  Bahrain 1 2 3 6
10  Italy 1 1 1 3
11  France 1 1 0 2
12  Uganda 1 0 1 2
13  Finland 1 0 0 1
 North Korea 1 0 0 1
15  Morocco 0 4 1 5
16  Germany 0 2 0 2
 Greece 0 2 0 2
 Kazakhstan 0 2 0 2
19  Dominican Republic 0 1 2 3
 Venezuela 0 1 2 3
21  Algeria 0 1 1 2
22  Sri Lanka 0 0 2 2
23  India 0 0 1 1
 Jordan 0 0 1 1
 Namibia 0 0 1 1
 Slovenia 0 0 1 1
Total 35 35 35 105

References

Results