2009 World Youth Championships in Athletics

The 2009 World Youth Championships in Athletics is the sixth edition of the IAAF World Youth Championships in Athletics. They were held at Brixen-Bressanone Sport Arena in Bressanone, Italy from 8–12 July 2009. Athletes had to be aged 16 or 17 on 31 December 2009 (born in 1992 or 1993) to compete.[1]

2009 World Youth Championships in Athletics
Host cityItaly Brixen, Italy
Events40
Dates8–12 July
Main venueBrixen-Bressanone Sport Arena

15-year-old Jodie Williams took the 100 m sprint title in a youth world leading time of 11.39. This was also a personal best for Williams, who had not lost a 100 m final since 2007.[2] Also winning the girls' 200 m, Williams became the first youth athlete ever to do so. A similar feat was achieved by Kirani James of Grenada, who won the boys' 200 and 400 metres.[3]

With the 100 m hurdles, 17-year-old Isabelle Pedersen became Norway's first World Youth champion. Her time of 13.20 in the semi-finals was a national record and third all-time Youth best.[4] 16-year-old Italian Alessia Trost also became the host nation's first World Youth champion.[5]

Johan Rogestedt of Sweden became the first European ever to win the 800 metres, usually dominated by East African runners.[6] In high jump, Russian-born Dmitriy Kroyter became Israel's first world youth champion.

Medal summary

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Boys

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 m
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Prezel Hardy
  United States
10.57 Aaron Brown
  Canada
10.74 Giovanni Galbieri
  Italy
10.79
200 m
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Kirani James
  Grenada
21.05 PB Alberto Gavalda
  Spain
21.33 SB Keenan Brock
  United States
21.39
400 m
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Kirani James
  Grenada
45.24 CR WL PB Joshua Mance
  United States
46.22 PB Awad El Karim Makki
  Sudan
47.15 SB
800 m Johan Rogestedt
  Sweden
1:50.92 PB Peter Langat Kiplangat
  Kenya
1:50.97 Nicholas Kiplangat Kipkoech
  Kenya
1:51.01
1500 m Gideon Kiage Mageka
  Kenya
3:37.36 WL Caleb Mwangangi Ndiku
  Kenya
3:38.42 Girma Bekele
  Ethiopia
3:39.88 PB
3000 m Isaiah Kiplangat Koech
  Kenya
7:51.51 CR David Kiprotich Bett
  Kenya
7:52.13 PB Goitom Kifle
  Eritrea
8:05.83 PB
2000 m st. Hillary Kipsang Yego
  Kenya
5:25.33 WL Peter Kibet Lagat
  Kenya
5:26.59 PB Desta Alemu
  Ethiopia
5:37.32 PB
110 m H 91.4 cm Dale Morgan
  United States
13.28 WL Jack Meredith
  Great Britain
13.33 PB Gregory MacNeil
  Canada
13.51
400 m H 84.0 cm Norge Sotomayor
  Cuba
51.30 WL Jeremiah Kipkorir Mutai
  Kenya
51.45 PB Jose Reynaldo Bencosme de Leon
  Italy
51.74
10,000 m track walk Hagen Pohle
  Germany
41:35.99 CR WL PB Dementiy Cheparev [Wikidata]
  Russia
41:53.76 PB Ihor Lyashchenko
  Ukraine
42:01.90 PB
Medley relay   United States
Colin Hepburn
Keenan Brock
Dedric Dukes
Joshua Mance
1:50.33 WYB   Brazil
Jonathas da Silva
Jean Roberto da Silva
Jackson da Silva
Leandro de Araújo
1:52.66 SB   Japan
Takumi Kuki
Ryota Yamagata
Ko Kayada
Shogo Momiki
1:52.82 SB
High jump Dmitriy Kroyter
  Israel
2.20 Janick Klausen
  Denmark
2.20 PB Django Lovett
  Canada
Daniil Tsyplakov
  Russia
2.17 PB

2.17 PB
Pole vault Jin Min-sub
  South Korea
5.15 PB Carlo Paech
  Germany
5.10 Daniel Clemens
  Germany
5.10
Long jump Supanara Sukhasvasti
  Thailand
7.65 PB Stefan Brits
  South Africa
7.57 Yannick Roggatz
  Germany
7.53 PB
Triple jump Benjamin Williams
  Great Britain
15.91 PB Supanara Sukhasvasti
  Thailand
15.70 PB Aleksandr Yurchenko
  Russia
15.66 PB
Shot put 5 kg Ryan Crouser
  United States
21.56 CR Krzysztof Brzozowski
  Poland
20.89 PB Frans Schutte
  South Africa
20.37 PB
Discus 1.500 kg Hamid Manssour
  Syria
64.20 Ryan Crouser
  United States
61.64 Traves Smikle
  Jamaica
61.22 PB
Hammer 5 kg Chen Hongqiu
  China
74.93 WL PB Suhrob Khodjaev
  Tajikistan
73.29 PB Tomáš Kružliak
  Slovakia
72.17
Javelin 700g Shih-Feng Huang
  Chinese Taipei
74.00 Killian Durechou
  France
73.54 Braian Toledo
  Argentina
73.44 PB
Octathlon Kevin Mayer
  France
6478 WL Mohd Ahmed Al-Mannai
  Qatar
6232 PB Steffen Klink
  Germany
6217 PB
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Girls

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 m Jodie Williams
  Great Britain
11.39 WL PB Allison Peter
  U.S. Virgin Islands
11.47 PB Ashton Purvis
  United States
11.48 SB
200 m Jodie Williams
  Great Britain
23.08 WL Allison Peter
  U.S. Virgin Islands
23.08 WL Ashton Purvis
  United States
23.15 PB
400 m Ebony Eutsey
  United States
52.88 Michelle Brown
  United States
53.44 Sandra Wagner
  Sweden
53.52 PB
800 m Cherono Koech
  Kenya
2:01.67 CR Ciara Mageean
  Ireland
2:03.07 PB Rowena Cole
  Great Britain
2:03.83 PB
1500 m Nelly Chebet Ngeiywo
  Kenya
4:12.76 PB Gete Dima
  Ethiopia
4:15.16 Amela Terzić
  Serbia
4:16.71 PB
3000 m Purity Cherotich Rionoripo
  Kenya
9:03.79 Jackline Chepngeno
  Kenya
9:05.93 PB Genet Yalew
  Ethiopia
9:08.95 PB
2000 m st. Korahubsh Itaa
  Ethiopia
6:11.83 WYB Lucia Kamene Muangi
  Kenya
6:11.90 PB Halima Hassen
  Ethiopia
6:16.83 PB
100 m H 76.2 cm Isabelle Pedersen
  Norway
13.23 Kori Carter
  United States
13.26 PB Bridgette Owens
  United States
13.39 PB
400 m H Vera Rudakova
  Russia
57.83 WL Danielle Dowie
  Jamaica
58.62 Déborah Rodríguez
  Uruguay
59.71 PB
5,000 m track walk Elena Lashmanova
  Russia
22:55.45 WL Yanelli Caballero
  Mexico
22:59.27 PB Svetlana Vasilyeva
  Russia
23:00.15 PB
Medley relay   United States
Jordan Clark
Ashton Purvis
Briana Nelson
Ebony Eutsey
2:04.32 WL   Hungary
Anasztázia Nguyen
Kriszta Komiszár
Dorina Vincze
Lilla Loránd
2:09.22 PB   Romania
Ana Maria Rosianu
Ana Alungoaie
Sanda Belgyan
Adelina Pastor
2:09.25 PB
High jump Alessia Trost
  Italy
1.87 Mariya Kuchina
  Russia
Amy Pejkovic
  Australia
1.85 PB
 
1.85 PB
Pole vault Angelica Bengtsson
  Sweden
4.32 WL Michaela Meijer
  Sweden
4.10 Felicia Horvath
  Hungary
Tatyana Stetsyuk
  Russia
4.00 PB

4.00 PB
Long jump Lu Minjia
  China
6.22 Alina Rotaru
  Romania
6.09 Jennifer Clayton
  United States
6.05
Triple jump Yana Borodina
  Russia
13.63 WL Deng Lina
  China
13.57 PB Valeriya Kanatova
  Uzbekistan
13.45
Shot put Lena Urbaniak
  Germany
15.28 Margaret Satupai
  Samoa
14.96 SB Dong Yangzi
  China
14.65 PB
Discus Li Shanshan
  China
51.65 Alex Collatz
  United States
50.09 Shanice Craft
  Germany
49.15
Hammer Barbara Spiler
  Slovenia
59.33 Kivilcim Kaya
  Turkey
57.91 SB Bianca Lazar Fazecas
  Romania
56.41 PB
Javelin Anastasiya Svechnikova
  Uzbekistan
53.25 SB Wu You
  China
52.04 PB Laura Henkel
  Germany
51.47 PB
Heptathlon Katarina Thompson
  Great Britain
5750 WL Laura Ikauniece
  Latvia
5647 PB Kira Biesenbach
  Germany
5423 PB
WR world record | AR area record | CR championship record | GR games record | NR national record | OR Olympic record | PB personal best | SB season best | WL world leading (in a given season)

Medals table

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Kirani James of Grenada won a 200/400 m sprint double.
 
Angelica Bengtsson took the pole vault title for Sweden.
 
Jodie Williams won a 100/200 m sprint double for Great Britain.
 
Kévin Mayer of France won the decathlon.
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Kenya (KEN)67114
2  United States (USA)65516
3  Great Britain (GBR)4116
4  Russia (RUS)3249
5  China (CHN)3216
6  Germany (GER)2169
7  Sweden (SWE)2114
8  Grenada (GRN)2002
9  Ethiopia (ETH)1146
10  France (FRA)1102
  Thailand (THA)1102
12  Italy (ITA)1023
13  Uzbekistan (UZB)1012
14  Chinese Taipei (TPE)1001
  Cuba (CUB)1001
  Israel (ISR)1001
  Norway (NOR)1001
  Slovenia (SLO)1001
  South Korea (KOR)1001
  Syria (SYR)1001
21  U.S. Virgin Islands (ISV)0202
22  Canada (CAN)0123
  Romania (ROU)0123
24  Hungary (HUN)0112
  Jamaica (JAM)0112
  South Africa (RSA)0112
27  Australia (AUS)0101
  Brazil (BRA)0101
  Denmark (DEN)0101
  Ireland (IRL)0101
  Latvia (LAT)0101
  Mexico (MEX)0101
  Poland (POL)0101
  Qatar (QAT)0101
  Samoa (SAM)0101
  Spain (ESP)0101
  Tajikistan (TJK)0101
  Turkey (TUR)0101
39  Argentina (ARG)0011
  Eritrea (ERI)0011
  Japan (JPN)0011
  Serbia (SRB)0011
  Slovakia (SVK)0011
  Sudan (SUD)0011
  Ukraine (UKR)0011
  Uruguay (URU)0011
Totals (46 entries)404141122

All Information taken from IAAF's website.[7]

Mascot

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The mascot is a crow named Hugo, who is also the mascot of Brixia Meeting.[8]

References

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  1. ^ IAAF, May 5, 2009: More than 170 nations to compete in Sϋdtirol – 2009 World Youth Champs. Accessed 2009-07-11. Archived 2009-09-08.
  2. ^ "15-year-old Jodie Williams takes sprint titles". IAAF. 2009-07-09. Archived from the original on 2009-08-13. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  3. ^ Williams and James achieve unprecedented doubles as Kenya steals the show in middle distance
  4. ^ "World Youth gold is more than a dream come true for Pedersen". IAAF. 2009-07-09. Archived from the original on 2009-08-13. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
  5. ^ "Golden jump for Italy's Alessia Trost". IAAF. 2009-07-10. Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2009-07-11.
  6. ^ A Swede steals Kenya's thunder at the World Youth Championships
  7. ^ 2009 World Youth medal table [1] . Accessed 2009-07-11. Archived 2009-09-08.
  8. ^ "Hugo the mascot of iaaf wyc sudtirol 2009 by UnivesiadeMascots54 on DeviantArt". 22 February 2024.
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