Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's 20 kilometres walk

Men's 20 kilometres walk
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
VenueThe Mall
Date4 August 2012
Competitors56 from 34 nations
Winning time1:18:46 OR
Medalists
   China
   Guatemala
   China
Athletics at the
2012 Summer Olympics
Track events
100 m   men   women
200 m men women
400 m men women
800 m men women
1500 m men women
5000 m men women
10,000 m men women
100 m hurdles women
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men women
3000 m
steeplechase
men women
4×100 m relay men women
4×400 m relay men women
Road events
Marathon men women
20 km walk men women
50 km walk men
Field events
Long jump men women
Triple jump men women
High jump men women
Pole vault men women
Shot put men women
Discus throw men women
Javelin throw men women
Hammer throw men women
Combined events
Heptathlon women
Decathlon men

The men's 20 kilometres race walk at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London took place on 4 August on a route along The Mall and Constitution Hill in central London.[1][2]

Robert Heffernan and Grzegorz Sudol took the early lead, soon joined by Yusuke Suzuki. Like a bicycle race, the unhearlded Suzuki steadily broke away from the peloton. Suzuki led past the 8k mark but was eventually swallowed by a group led by Wang Zhen, followed by his teammate Chen Ding and Valeriy Borchin. By the half way mark the lead pack was down to twelve. Around the 11K mark, leader Wang made an odd gesture, hand over head, to the pack behind him, moments later Bertrand Moulinet broke away from the pack as Wang slowed. After gaining as much as a seven-second lead, the chasers caught back up to Moulinet and left him to fall off the pace, while Chen took his turn to break off the front as the pack started to string out in chase. Wang, Borchin and Erick Barrondo were the strongest chasers, forming a pack of four. A few minutes later Vladimir Kanaykin, then Luis Fernando López managed to bridge back to the leaders. Moments after joining the lead group, Lopez was given the red paddle, signifying his disqualification. Kanaykin was also given the paddle a minute after that. For a moment they were four abreast, but again Chen put the hammer down, eventually dropping Wang. By the bell Chen had built an 8-second lead over Borchin, who was picking up warnings and cards from the judges. Chen signaled one finger to the crowd. As Borchin struggled, Wang zoomed past the two remaining chasers. Barrondo reacted and accelerated to put some distance ahead of Wang. An exhausted Borchin chased for only a few moments then collapsed into a fence alongside the course. The third Chinese Zelin Cai hovered off the back of the pack and steadily picked off all the stragglers to eventually finish fourth for a remarkable 1-3-4 team performance. A jubilant Chen celebrated all the way from the final turn. Even though he gave up significant time along the way, Chen set a new Olympic Record at 1:18:46. China's Chen Ding won the gold medal. Erick Barrondo from Guatemala won silver and Wang Zhen, also of China, took bronze. Barrondo's silver medal was the first Olympic medal for Guatemala.[3]

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
4 August 2012 17:00Final

Records

Prior to this event, the existing World and Olympic records stood as follows.

World record  Vladimir Kanaykin (RUS) 1:17:16 Saransk, Russia 29 September 2007
Olympic record  Robert Korzeniowski (POL) 1:18:59 Sydney, Australia 22 September 2000
2012 World leading  Alex Schwazer (ITA) 1:17:30 Lugano, Switzerland 18 March 2012

The following new Olympic record was set during this event:

Date Event Athlete Time Notes
4 August Final  Chen Ding (CHN) 1:18.46 OR

The following National records were set during this competition.

China national record  Chen Ding (CHN) 1:18.46
India national record  Irfan Kolothum Thodi (IND) 1:20.21
Canada national record  Inaki Gomez (CAN) 1:20.58
Greece national record  Alexandros Papamichail (GRE) 1:21.12
Argentina national record  Juan Manuel Cano (ARG) 1:22.10

Result

Racers walk past the gates of Buckingham Palace
RankAthleteNationalityTimeNotes[4]
1st, gold medalist(s) Chen Ding China 1:18:46 OR
2nd, silver medalist(s) Erick Barrondo Guatemala 1:18:57
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Wang Zhen China 1:19:25
4 Cai Zelin China 1:19:44
5 Miguel Ángel López Spain 1:19:49 PB
6 Eder Sánchez Mexico 1:19:52 SB
7 Jared Tallent Australia 1:20:02 SB
8 Bertrand Moulinet France 1:20:12 PB
9 Robert Heffernan Ireland 1:20:18 SB
10 Irfan Kolothum Thodi India 1:20:21 NR
11 João Vieira Portugal 1:20:41 SB
12 Dzianis Simanovich Belarus 1:20:42 PB
13 Inaki Gomez Canada 1:20:58 NR
14 Erik Tysse Norway 1:21:00 SB
15 Alexandros Papamichail Greece 1:21:12 NR
16 Ivan Trotski Belarus 1:21:23 SB
17 Kim Hyun-Sub South Korea 1:21:36 SB
18 Isamu Fujisawa Japan 1:21:48
19 Dawid Tomala Poland 1:21:55
20 Eider Arevalo Colombia 1:22:00
21 André Höhne Germany 1:22:02
22 Juan Manuel Cano Argentina 1:22:10 NR
23 Anton Kučmín Slovakia 1:22:25 PB
24 Grzegorz Sudoł Poland 1:22:40
25 Takumi Saito Japan 1:22:43
26 Trevor Barron United States 1:22:46
27 Nazar Kovalenko Ukraine 1:22:54
28 James Rendon Colombia 1:22:54 SB
29 Rafał Augustyn Poland 1:23:17
30 Ruslan Dmytrenko Ukraine 1:23:21
31 Byun Young-Jun South Korea 1:23:26
32 Máté Helebrandt Hungary 1:23:32 PB
33 Gurmeet Singh India 1:23:34
34 Isaac Palma Mexico 1:23:35
35 Georgiy Sheiko Kazakhstan 1:23:52
36 Yusuke Suzuki Japan 1:23:53 SB
37 Andrey Krivov Russia 1:24:17
38 Chris Erickson Australia 1:24:19
39 Caio Bonfim Brazil 1:24:45
40 Marius Žiūkas Lithuania 1:24:45
41 Yerko Araya Chile 1:25:27 SB
42 Giorgio Rubino Italy 1:25:28
43 Baljinder Singh India 1:25:39
44 Mauricio Arteaga Ecuador 1:25:51
45 Arnis Rumbenieks Latvia 1:26:26
46 Ever Palma Mexico 1:26:30
47 Ivan Losyev Ukraine 1:26:50
48 Predrag Filipović Serbia 1:27:22
Valeriy Borchin Russia DNF, DQ
Álvaro Martín Spain DNF
Park Chil-Sung South Korea DNF
Ebrahim Rahimian Iran DNF
Adam Rutter Australia DNF
Hassanine Sebei Tunisia DNF
Vladimir Kanaykin Russia DQ
Luis Fernando López Colombia DQ

References

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