The women's hammer throw competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom. The event was held at the Olympic Stadium on 8–10 August.[1] Each athlete receives three throws in the qualifying round. All who achieve the qualifying distance progress to the final. If less than twelve athletes achieve this mark, then the twelve furthest throwing athletes reach the final. Each finalist is allowed three throws in last round, with the top eight athletes after that point being given three further attempts.[2]
Women's hammer throw at the Games of the XXX Olympiad | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Olympic Stadium | ||||||||||||
Date | 8–10 August | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 37 from 25 nations | ||||||||||||
Winning distance | |||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Summary
editEight entrants achieve the auto qualifier, five on their first attempt. It took 70.48 to make the final. Sophie Hitchon improved her own National record in the process.
In the first round of the final, reigning world champion Tatyana Lysenko was out to continue that success, tossing a new Olympic record 77.56. In the second round Zhang Wenxiu moved into second place. Kathrin Klaas made her best throw in the third round to move into third place, while world record holder Betty Heidler barely earned her final three throws in eighth place. In the fifth round, Heidler finally put one throw together, landing about 77 metres. But after a delay, the electronic measurement system only attributed 72.34 meters as the distance (actually the measurement of the following competitor Zalina Marghieva's throw). Confused officials couldn't find a proper solution, ultimately giving the struggling Heidler another throw. The extra throw was so bad Heidler walked out of the ring, deliberately fouling. Anita Włodarczyk moved into second place only 44 cm behind Lysenko's record. As the last thrower in the round, Lysenko improved the Olympic record to 78.18, solidifying her hold on gold, which turned out to be important as Włodarczyk's final throw of 77.60 beat Lysenko's first round record by 4 cm. After the competition was over, the measurement operators found a measurement of 77.13 in the system memory and credited it to Heidler, giving her third place, knocking Zhang out of what would have been her second consecutive bronze medal.
Disqualification of Tatyana Lysenko
editOn 11 October 2016, IOC announced the disqualification of the gold medalist, Tatyana Lysenko, due to an anti-doping rule violation. Lysenko was ordered to return the medal and the IAAF was requested to modify the result of the event accordingly.[3] Anita Włodarczyk is next in line to the gold medal, promoting Betty Heidler to second place and Zhang Wenxiu to third. On 30 March 2017, Gulfiya Khanafeyeva and Mariya Bespalova were also disqualified and had their results deleted.[4]
Schedule
editEntry List by Event. IAAF (2012-07-27). Retrieved on 2012-07-29. All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Wednesday, 8 August 2012 | 10:00 | Qualifications |
Friday, 10 August 2012 | 19:35 | Finals |
Records
editPrior to the competition[update], the existing World and Olympic records were as follows.
World record | Betty Heidler (GER) | 79.42 m | Halle, Germany | 21 May 2011 |
Olympic record | Aksana Miankova (BLR) (Later disqualified for doping) |
*76.34 m* | Beijing, China | 20 August 2008 |
The following records were established during the competition:
Date | Event | Name | Nationality | Distance | Record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 August | Final | Russia | |||
10 August | Final | Anita Włodarczyk | Poland | 77.60 m | OR |
Results
editQualifying round
edit- 40 Entrants as of 27 July 2012.[5]
Qual. rule: qualification standard 73.00m (Q) or at least best 12 qualified (q).
Rank | Group | Name | Nationality | #1 | #2 | #3 | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | A | Anita Włodarczyk | Poland | 75.68 | – | – | 75.68 | Q |
2 | B | Zhang Wenxiu | China | 74.53 | – | – | 74.53 | Q |
3 | A | Betty Heidler | Germany | 72.63 | 74.44 | – | 74.44 | Q |
DSQ[3] | A | Tatyana Lysenko | Russia | 74.43 | – | – | 74.43 | Q |
5 | B | Kathrin Klaas | Germany | 74.14 | – | – | 74.14 | Q |
6 | A | Yipsi Moreno | Cuba | 73.95 | – | – | 73.95 | Q |
DSQ[4] | B | Mariya Bespalova | Russia | 72.83 | 73.56 | – | 73.56 | Q |
DSQ[6] | B | Aksana Miankova | Belarus | 69.04 | X | 73.10 | 73.10 | Q |
9 | B | Zalina Marghieva | Moldova | 71.89 | 72.19 | X | 72.19 | q |
10 | A | Sophie Hitchon | Great Britain | 67.21 | X | 71.98 | 71.98 | q, NR |
11 | B | Stéphanie Falzon | France | 70.96 | 71.67 | 69.55 | 71.67 | q |
12 | B | Joanna Fiodorow | Poland | 70.48 | 68.48 | 69.89 | 70.48 | q |
13 | A | Amber Campbell | United States | X | 69.93 | 67.30 | 69.93 | |
14 | A | Jessica Cosby | United States | 67.36 | 69.65 | 68.97 | 69.65 | |
15 | A | Kıvılcım Kaya | Turkey | 69.50 | 68.45 | 67.84 | 69.50 | |
DSQ[4] | B | Gulfiya Khanafeyeva | Russia | 68.20 | 69.43 | 69.19 | 69.43 | |
17 | B | Éva Orbán | Hungary | X | 68.64 | 63.08 | 68.64 | |
18 | A | Johana Moreno | Colombia | 68.53 | X | 68.12 | 68.53 | |
19 | A | Hanna Skydan | Ukraine | 68.50 | 66.68 | 57.69 | 68.50 | |
20 | A | Martina Hrašnová | Slovakia | 67.69 | 68.41 | 67.75 | 68.41 | |
21 | B | Berta Castells | Spain | 67.74 | 68.41 | 65.26 | 68.41 | |
22 | A | Bianca Perie | Romania | X | 68.34 | X | 68.34 | |
23 | B | Arasay Thondike | Cuba | 67.93 | 65.81 | X | 67.93 | |
24 | B | Tuğçe Şahutoğlu | Turkey | 67.58 | 64.11 | 66.56 | 67.58 | |
25 | A | Ariannis Vichy | Cuba | X | 67.48 | 64.25 | 67.48 | |
26 | A | Sultana Frizell | Canada | 66.07 | 67.45 | X | 67.45 | |
27 | A | Rosa Rodríguez | Venezuela | 66.66 | X | 67.34 | 67.34 | |
28 | B | Amanda Bingson | United States | 65.96 | 66.32 | 67.29 | 67.29 | |
29 | B | Barbara Špiler | Slovenia | 65.69 | 62.83 | 67.21 | 67.21 | |
DSQ | A | Alena Matoshka | Belarus | 66.85 | 67.03 | 65.22 | 67.03 | |
31 | B | Kateřina Šafránková | Czech Republic | 66.16 | X | 65.25 | 66.16 | |
32 | A | Amy Sène | Senegal | 65.49 | 65.43 | X | 65.49 | |
33 | B | Iryna Novozhylova | Ukraine | 65.35 | 63.98 | 64.29 | 65.35 | |
34 | B | Heather Steacy | Canada | 62.99 | 61.79 | 63.40 | 63.40 | |
35 | B | Vânia Silva | Portugal | 62.81 | 62.18 | X | 62.81 | |
36 | A | Silvia Salis | Italy | X | 10.84 | X | 10.84 | |
– | B | Jennifer Dahlgren | Argentina | X | X | X | NM |
Final
editRank | Name | Nationality | #1 | #2 | #3 | #4 | #5 | #6 | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DSQ[3] | Tatyana Lysenko | Russia | 77.56 | 75.86 | 74.39 | 77.12 | 78.18 | 77.28 | ||
Anita Włodarczyk | Poland | 75.01 | 76.02 | 75.72 | X | 77.10 | 77.60 | 77.60 | OR, SB | |
Betty Heidler | Germany | 73.90 | 71.52 | 72.77 | X | 77.13 | 72.77 | 77.13 | ||
Zhang Wenxiu | China | 72.96 | 76.34 | 73.81 | 68.20 | 75.56 | X | 76.34 | ||
4 | Kathrin Klaas | Germany | x | 72.79 | 76.05 | 74.66 | 72.88 | X | 76.05 | PB |
5 | Yipsi Moreno | Cuba | 74.60 | X | X | X | 71.97 | X | 74.60 | |
DSQ[6] | Aksana Miankova | Belarus | 69.50 | X | 74.40 | 72.06 | X | X | ||
DSQ | Zalina Marghieva | Moldova | 73.77 | 74.06 | 72.32 | 72.91 | 72.34 | 70.72 | ||
6 | Stephanie Falzon | France | 73.06 | 69.29 | 71.10 | — | — | — | 73.06 | SB |
7 | Joanna Fiodorow | Poland | 62.34 | 72.37 | X | — | — | — | 72.37 | |
DSQ[4] | Mariya Bespalova | Russia | 71.13 | X | 68.15 | — | — | — | ||
8 | Sophie Hitchon | Great Britain | 69.33 | 65.75 | X | — | — | — | 69.33 |
References
edit- ^ "Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics". Archived from the original on 2012-09-05. Retrieved 2012-05-11.
- ^ "Women's hammer throw competition format". London 2012 Organising Committee. Archived from the original on 7 August 2012. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
- ^ a b c IOC sanctions Tatiana Lysenko for failing anti-doping test at London 2012 IOC Media Relations. Retrieved 11 October 2016
- ^ a b c d "IOC disqualifies four Russians from London Olympics over doping". Thomson Reuters. 30 March 2017. Archived from the original on March 31, 2017. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
- ^ Entry List by Event. IAAF (2012-07-27). Retrieved on 2012-07-29.
- ^ a b "IOC sanctions seven athletes for failing anti-doping tests at Beijing 2008 and London2012". International Olympic Committee. 25 Nov 2016. Retrieved 2016-12-08.