2009 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 50 kilometres walk

The men's 50 kilometre walk at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics took place on August 21, 2009 on the streets of Berlin, Germany. The event started and finished at the Brandenburg Gate.

Prior to the competition, previous winners did not appear to be medal prospects: the defending world champion Nathan Deakes missed the competition due to injury, and the reigning Olympic champion Alex Schwazer had failed to finish his sole 50 km race of the season. Frenchman Yohann Diniz, as the European Champion, was expected to perform well. The Russian team of world record holder Denis Nizhegorodov, Yuriy Andronov and former world champion Sergey Kirdyapkin appeared to be the strongest. Norwegians Erik Tysse and Trond Nymark were possible medallists as were Jesús Ángel García and Jared Tallent. Zhao Chengliang, Li Lei, and Xu Faguang were suggested as candidates to win the Chinese team's first medal of the championships.[1]

The final began in wet conditions, but Yuki Yamazaki and Luke Adams built up a considerable early lead. Tallent and Diniz caught up with them around the 5 km mark, but a large pack of walkers containing a number of contenders remained not far off the leaders. After the first hour, a six-strong pack of Nizhegorodov and Kirdyapkin, Tallent and Adams, and Yamazaki and Diniz had broken away from the rest. At the halfway point Yamazaki, after receiving a number of warnings, was disqualified and Schwazer decided to prematurely stop his own race. The remaining five stayed in contention until the 40 km mark, where Nizhegorodov pulled out, and Diniz and Adams began to drift away from the leaders. Kirdyapkin sped ahead of Tallent and Trond Nymark had a late burst and caught up with the leaders. Kirdyapkin won, almost three minutes ahead of the rest of the competition, and Nymark took second. García, with a late charge, was not far behind and won the bronze medal.[2]

The 2005 World Champion Kirdyapkin won his second title with a world-leading 3:38:35, the second fastest time of his career after his 2005 winning walk. It marked a racewalk Championship sweep for the Russians, with all three winners being coached by Viktor Chegin.[3] Nymark won the first World Championship medal of career with a new Norwegian record, and veteran García won the fourth medal of his career, although his last came in 2001. A number of athletes set personal bests, including fourth placed Grzegorz Sudoł, but the season's fastest walkers had not performed well with Matej Tóth and Diniz finishing in tenth and twelfth, respectively.[2]

On January 15, 2015, Kirdyapkin's results were disqualified for doping violations.[4] Most of Chegin's athletes have received similar bans. Nymark received the gold medal in a ceremony during the 2016 European Athletics Championships.[5]

Medalists

GoldSilverBronze
Trond Nymark
 Norway (NOR)
Jesús Angel García
 Spain (ESP)
Grzegorz Sudoł
 Poland (POL)

Abbreviations

  • All times shown are in hours:minutes:seconds
DNSdid not start
NMno mark
WRworld record
WLworld leading
ARarea record
NRnational record
PBpersonal best
SBseason best

Records

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

World record  Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS) 3:34:14 Cheboksary, Russia 11 May 2008
Championship record  Robert Korzeniowski (POL) 3:36:03 Paris, France 27 August 2003
World leading  Yohann Diniz (FRA) 3:38:45 Dudince, Slovakia 28 March 2009
African record  Hatem Ghoula (TUN) 3:58:44 Santa Eulària des Riu, Spain 4 March 2007
Asian record  Yu Chaohong (CHN) 3:36:06 Nanjing, China 22 October 2005
North American record  Raúl González (MEX) 3:41:20 Poděbrady, Czechoslovakia 11 June 1978
South American record  Xavier Moreno (ECU) 3:52:07 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 28 July 2007
European record  Denis Nizhegorodov (RUS) 3:34:14 Cheboksary, Russia 11 May 2008
Oceanian record  Nathan Deakes (AUS) 3:35:47 Geelong, Australia 2 December 2006

No new records was set during this competition.

Qualification standards

Standard AStandard B
3:58:004:09:00

Schedule

Date Time Round
August 21, 200909:10Final

Results

Olympic medallist Jared Tallent fell away from the top three in the final stages.
RankAthleteNationalityTimeNotes
1Sergey Kirdyapkin Russia (RUS)3:38:35 DQ (Doping)
Trond Nymark Norway (NOR)3:41:16NR
Jesús Ángel García Spain (ESP)3:41:37SB
Grzegorz Sudoł Poland (POL)3:42:34PB
4André Höhne Germany (GER)3:43:19PB
5Luke Adams Australia (AUS)3:43:39PB
6Jared Tallent Australia (AUS)3:44:50SB
7Marco De Luca Italy (ITA)3:46:31PB
8Jarkko Kinnunen Finland (FIN)3:47:36PB
9Matej Tóth Slovakia (SVK)3:48:35
10Xu Faguang China (CHN)3:48:52PB
11Yohann Diniz France (FRA)3:49:03
12Jesús Sánchez Mexico (MEX)3:50:55PB
13Donatas Škarnulis Lithuania (LTU)3:50:56SB
14Zhao Chengliang China (CHN)3:53:06
15Oleksiy Shelest Ukraine (UKR)3:54:03PB
16Tadas Šuškevicius Lithuania (LTU)3:54:29PB
17Koichiro Morioka Japan (JPN)3:56:21
18Horacio Nava Mexico (MEX)3:56:26SB
19Herve Davaux France (FRA)3:57:10PB
20Andreas Gustafsson Sweden (SWE)3:57:53PB
21Rafał Augustyn Poland (POL)3:58:30
22Augusto Cardoso Portugal (POR)3:59:10SB
23Miloš Bátovský Slovakia (SVK)3:59:39
24Li Lei China (CHN)4:00:13
25Mikel Odriozola Spain (ESP)4:00:54
26Cedric Houssaye France (FRA)4:02:44SB
27Diego Cafagna Italy (ITA)4:08:04
28José Alejandro Cambil Spain (ESP)4:13:14
29Mesías Zapata Ecuador (ECU)4:15:28
30Luis Fernando García Guatemala (GUA)4:18:13SB
Takayuki Tanii Japan (JPN)DQ
Yuki Yamazaki Japan (JPN)DQ
Omar Zepeda Mexico (MEX)DQ
Mário dos Santos Brazil (BRA)DNF
Marco Benavides El Salvador (ESA)DNF
Konstadínos Stefanópoulos Greece (GRE)DNF
Jamie Costin Ireland (IRL)DNF
Colin Griffin Ireland (IRL)DNF
Alex Schwazer Italy (ITA)DNF
Ingus Janevics Latvia (LAT)DNF
Konstadínos Stefanópoulos Greece (GRE)DNF
Erik Tysse Norway (NOR)DNF
Rafał Fedaczyński Poland (POL)DNF
António Pereira Portugal (POR)DNF
Yuriy Andronov Russia (RUS)DNF
Denis Nizhegorodov Russia (RUS)DNF
Nenad Filipović Serbia (SRB)DNF

Key: DNF = Did not finish, DQ = Disqualified, NR = National record, PB = Personal best, SB = Seasonal best, WL = World leading (in a given season)

References

General
Specific
  1. Mulkeen, Jon (2009-08-09). Men's 50 Kilometres Race Walk - PREVIEW Archived 2009-08-14 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-25.
  2. Mulkeen, Jon (2009-08-21). Event Report - Men's 50km Race Walk - Final Archived August 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-25.
  3. Powell, David (2009-08-21). Kirdyapkin clinches three-for-three for coach Chegin Archived 2009-08-26 at the Wayback Machine. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-08-25.
  4. "Информация о дисквалификации: легкая атлетика" (in Russian). Russian Anti-Doping Agency. 20 January 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-01-20. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  5. Coldwell, Ben (8 June 2016). "Cheated athletes to receive world gold medal ceremony at European Championships". Athletics Weekly. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
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