The 2012 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held in Saransk, Russia, on 12–13 May 2012.[1] The track of the Cup runs in the central streets of the city. Detailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results was given for the IAAF.[2][3][4][5][6]
2012 IAAF World Race Walking Cup | |
---|---|
Organisers | IAAF |
Edition | 25th |
Date | 12–13 May |
Host city | Saransk, Mordovia, Russia |
Events | 5 |
Participation | 449 athletes from 61 nations |
Medallists
editEvent | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men | ||||||
Men's 20 km walk | Zhen Wang (CHN) | 1:19:13 | Andrey Krivov (RUS) | 1:19:27 | Ruslan Dmytrenko (UKR) | 1:20:17 PB |
Men's 50 km walk | Jared Tallent (AUS) | 3:40:32 SB | Si Tianfeng (CHN) | 3:43:05 | Christopher Linke (GER) | 3:47:33 |
Men's 10 km walk (junior event) |
Éider Arévalo (COL) | 41:17 SB | Alexander Ivanov (RUS) | 41:42 | Jesús Tadeo Vega (MEX) | 41:56 |
Women | ||||||
Women's 20 km walk | Elena Lashmanova (RUS) | 1:27:38 | María José Poves (ESP) | 1:29:10 | Lu Xiuzhi (CHN) | 1:29:55 |
Women's 10 km walk (junior event) |
Sandra Arenas (COL) | 45:57 | Alejandra Ortega (MEX) | 46:00 AJ | Nadezhda Leontyeva (RUS) | 46:02 |
Team (Men) | ||||||
Team Men's 20 km walk | China (CHN) | 16 | Ukraine (UKR) | 18 | Australia (AUS) | 62 |
Team Men's 50 km walk | China (CHN) | 28 | Ukraine (UKR) | 31 | Mexico (MEX) | 43 |
Team Men's 10 km walk (junior event) |
Russia (RUS) | 6 | Colombia (COL) | 10 | China (CHN) | 14 |
Team (Women) | ||||||
Team Women's 20 km walk | Spain (ESP) | 16 | Russia (RUS) | 27 | China (CHN) | 32 |
Team Women's 10 km walk (junior event) |
Russia (RUS) | 7 | China (CHN) | 15 | Ukraine (UKR) | 15 |
Results
editMen's 20 km
edit*: beyond Time Limit
IAAF Rule 230.6(a): repeated failure to comply with the definition of race walking
IAAF Rule 32.2(a): presence of a Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers in the Athlete's Sample
- The original bronze medallist Vladimir Kanaykin and ninth-placer Valeriy Borchin were both disqualified for doping
Team (Men 20 km)
editPlace | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | China | 16 pts |
2 | Ukraine | 18 pts |
3 | Australia | 62 pts |
4 | India | 68 pts |
5 | Japan | 72 pts |
6 | Mexico | 78 pts |
7 | Colombia | 83 pts |
8 | Belarus | 99 pts |
9 | Italy | 99 pts |
10 | Spain | 111 pts |
11 | Poland | 126 pts |
12 | France | 128 pts |
13 | Brazil | 143 pts |
14 | Canada | 171 pts |
15 | Ecuador | 180 pts |
16 | Finland | 183 pts |
17 | United Kingdom | 211 pts |
18 | United States | 230 pts |
19 | South Africa | 239 pts |
Men's 50 km
edit*: beyond Time Limit
IAAF Rule 230.6(a): repeated failure to comply with the definition of race walking
IAAF Rule 32.2(a): presence of a Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers in the Athlete's Sample
- Original Gold Medallist Sergey Kirdyapkin and fourth-placer Sergey Bakulin had their times and placings annulled due to doping violations.
Team (Men 50 km)
editPlace | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | China | 28 pts |
2 | Ukraine | 31 pts |
3 | Mexico | 43 pts |
4 | Spain | 71 pts |
5 | South Korea | 76 pts |
6 | Italy | 82 pts |
7 | Portugal | 112 pts |
8 | Belarus | 116 pts |
9 | India | 116 pts |
10 | Kazakhstan | 145 pts |
Men's 10 km (Junior)
editIAAF Rule 230.6(a): repeated failure to comply with the definition of race walking
Team (Men 10 km Junior)
editPlace | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Russia | 6 pts |
2 | Colombia | 10 pts |
3 | China | 14 pts |
4 | Mexico | 14 pts |
5 | Italy | 23 pts |
6 | Belarus | 31 pts |
7 | Australia | 41 pts |
8 | Ukraine | 42 pts |
9 | Spain | 48 pts |
10 | Ecuador | 57 pts |
11 | Turkey | 61 pts |
12 | Hungary | 72 pts |
13 | France | 76 pts |
14 | Algeria | 77 pts |
15 | Romania | 77 pts |
16 | Portugal | 78 pts |
17 | Latvia | 85 pts |
18 | Poland | 87 pts |
19 | United States | 95 pts |
20 | Egypt | 100 pts |
21 | Ireland | 113 pts |
22 | Czech Republic | 121 pts |
Women's 20 km
edit*: beyond Time Limit
IAAF Rule 230.6(a): repeated failure to comply with the definition of race walking
IAAF Rule 32.2(a): presence of a Prohibited Substance or its Metabolites or Markers in the Athlete's Sample
- The original silver medallist Olga Kaniskina had her performance annulled due to doping.
Team (Women 20 km)
editPlace | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Spain | 16 pts |
2 | Russia | 27 pts |
3 | China | 32 pts |
4 | Portugal | 33 pts |
5 | Italy | 39 pts |
6 | Ukraine | 62 pts |
7 | Romania | 96 pts |
8 | Colombia | 98 pts |
9 | Lithuania | 118 pts |
10 | Poland | 120 pts |
11 | Belarus | 128 pts |
12 | Ecuador | 155 pts |
13 | France | 164 pts |
14 | United States | 179 pts |
15 | Hungary | 212 pts |
Women's 10 km (Junior)
editTeam (Women 10 km Junior)
editPlace | Country | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Russia | 7 pts |
2 | China | 15 pts |
3 | Ukraine | 15 pts |
4 | Mexico | 17 pts |
5 | Colombia | 18 pts |
6 | Spain | 35 pts |
7 | Italy | 36 pts |
8 | Belarus | 37 pts |
9 | Australia | 51 pts |
10 | Ireland | 51 pts |
11 | Czech Republic | 59 pts |
12 | Hungary | 62 pts |
13 | Turkey | 62 pts |
14 | Poland | 64 pts |
15 | France | 66 pts |
16 | Portugal | 79 pts |
17 | United States | 95 pts |
Medal table
edit* Host nation (Russia)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Russia* | 3 | 3 | 1 | 7 |
2 | China | 3 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
3 | Colombia | 2 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
4 | Spain | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
5 | Australia | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
6 | Ukraine | 0 | 2 | 2 | 4 |
7 | Mexico | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
8 | Germany | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (8 entries) | 10 | 10 | 10 | 30 |
- Note: Totals include both individual and team medals, with medals in the team competition counting as one medal.
Participation
editThe participation of 475 athletes from 62 countries was officially announced.[12][13] An unofficial count yields the participation of only 449 athletes from 61 countries. The announced athlete from Nigeria did not appear in the result lists.
- Algeria (3)
- Argentina (2)
- Australia (16)
- Belarus (20)
- Bolivia (2)
- Brazil (8)
- Bulgaria (2)
- Canada (7)
- Chile (2)
- China (20)
- Colombia (14)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo (1)
- Costa Rica (2)
- Czech Republic (7)
- Ecuador (16)
- Egypt (4)
- El Salvador (1)
- Estonia (3)
- Finland (7)
- France (16)
- Germany (9)
- Guatemala (7)
- Hong Kong (1)
- Hungary (11)
- India (10)
- Iran (2)
- Ireland (11)
- Italy (18)
- Japan (6)
- Kazakhstan (8)
- Latvia (6)
- Lebanon (1)
- Lithuania (6)
- Malaysia (1)
- Mauritius (1)
- Mexico (16)
- Moldova (2)
- Netherlands (1)
- Norway (2)
- Palestine (1)
- Peru (2)
- Poland (21)
- Portugal (16)
- Romania (7)
- Russia (21)
- Serbia (3)
- Singapore (1)
- Slovakia (2)
- Slovenia (1)
- South Africa (6)
- South Korea (5)
- Spain (20)
- Sweden (3)
- Switzerland (3)
- Tajikistan (2)
- Tunisia (4)
- Turkey (10)
- Ukraine (21)
- United Kingdom (10)
- United States (17)
- Venezuela (1)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Council agrees new hosts for IAAF World Championship events – IAAF Council Meeting, second day. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-01-17
- ^ Warburton, Paul (May 12, 2012), Wang upsets home favourites in Saransk – Men's 20km Report, IAAF, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ Warburton, Paul (May 13, 2012), Kirdyapkin strikes first individual gold for Russia in Saransk – Men's 50km Report, IAAF, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ Warburton, Paul (May 13, 2012), Lashmanova upsets Kaniskina and completes Russian sweep of Team titles in Saransk – Women's 20km Report, IAAF, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ Warburton, Paul (May 11, 2012), Arevalo defends World Cup title in Saransk – Men's 10km Report, IAAF, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ Warburton, Paul (May 12, 2012), Arenas completes Colombian Junior double in Saransk – Women's 10km Report, IAAF, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ RESULTS – 20 Kilometres Race Walk Men – REVISED (PDF), IAAF, May 12, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ RESULTS – 50 Kilometres Race Walk Men (PDF), IAAF, May 13, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ RESULTS – 20 Kilometres Race Walk Women – REVISED (PDF), IAAF, May 13, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ RESULTS – 10 Kilometres Race Walk Men (PDF), IAAF, May 12, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ RESULTS – 10 Kilometres Race Walk Women (PDF), IAAF, May 12, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ ATHLETES by EVENT and COUNTRY, IAAF, May 10, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013
- ^ Saransk 2012 – Official Start Lists and Athletes' Biographies now available, IAAF, May 11, 2012, retrieved August 26, 2013