4×100 metres relay at the World Championships in Athletics - Biblioteka.sk

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4×100 metres relay at the World Championships in Athletics
 ...
4 × 100 metres relay
at the World Athletics Championships
The 2009-winning men's relay team from Jamaica
Overview
GenderMen and women
Years heldMen: 19832023
Women: 19832023
Championship record
Men37.04 Jamaica (2011)
Women41.03 United States (2023)
Reigning champion
Men United States (USA)
Women United States (USA)

The 4×100 metres relay at the World Championships in Athletics has been contested by both men and women since the inaugural edition in 1983. It is the second most prestigious title in the discipline after the 4×100 metres relay at the Olympics. The competition format typically has one qualifying round leading to a final between eight teams. As of 2015, nations can qualify for the competition through a top eight finish at the previous IAAF World Relays event, with the remaining teams coming through the more traditional route of ranking highly on time in the seasonal lists.[1] This system was modified due to the postponement of 2023 World Athletics Relays to 2024: therefore, the eight teams directly qualified are those of the 2022 World Championships, in Eugene, completed by eight more 2022-2023 top lists' teams.[2]

The championship records for the event are 37.04 seconds for men, set by Jamaica in 2011, and 41.03 seconds for women, set by the United States in 2023.[3] The men's world record has been broken or equalled at the competition on four occasions.[4] The women's world record has never been broken or equalled at the competition.

The United States is the most successful nation in the discipline, with nine men's gold medals and nine women's gold medals. The next most successful nation is Jamaica, which has won four gold medals for men's and five for the women's events. Jamaica won in 1991, 2009, 2013, 2015, and 2019. The USA has won the most overall medals at 26 with Jamaica having the second most at 24. Canada, with three golds, and France, with two, are the only other nations to have won multiple titles. Great Britain has the third highest overall medal tally in the event with 15 medals.

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce is the most successful athlete of the event, with four gold medals and four silver medals. Her compatriot Usain Bolt is the next most successful, with four consecutive gold medals from 2009 to 2015 and a silver medal in 2007. Kerron Stewart and Nesta Carter of Jamaica and Carl Lewis of the USA are the only other athletes to have won three gold medals in the relay event.

The United States has twice been stripped of the gold medal due to doping by athletes on the national team, having lost both men's and women's titles in 2001.

Age

Distinction Male Female
Athlete Age Date Athlete Age Date
Youngest champion  Dexter Lee (JAM) 20 years, 229 days 4 Sep 2011  Merlene Frazer (JAM) 17 years, 248 days 17 years, 248 days
Youngest medalist  Darrel Brown (TTO) 16 years, 305 days 12 Aug 2001  Khalifa St. Fort (TTO) 17 years, 197 days 17 years, 197 days
Youngest finalist  Ibrahim Meité (CIV) 16 years, 277 days 22 Aug 1993  Vernicha James (GBR) 17 years, 66 days 17 years, 66 days
Youngest participant  Yahya Saed Al-Kahes (KSA) 15 years, 174 days 2 Aug 2001  Liang Xiaojing (CHN) 16 years, 133 days 16 years, 133 days
Oldest champion  Justin Gatlin (USA) 37 years, 237 days 5 Oct 2019  Patricia Girard (FRA) 35 years, 144 days 30 Aug 2003
Oldest medalist  Troy Douglas (NED) 40 years, 274 days 31 Aug 2003  Chandra Sturrup (BAH) 37 years, 344 days 22 Aug 2009
Oldest finalist  Troy Douglas (NED) 40 years, 274 days 31 Aug 2003  Chandra Sturrup (BAH) 37 years, 344 days 22 Aug 2009
Oldest participant  Troy Douglas (NED) 40 years, 274 days 31 Aug 2003  Merlene Ottey (SLO) 43 years, 111 days 29 Aug 2003

Doping

The men's event was affected by doping in its debut tournament in 1983, with Ben Johnson running for Canada, although the team did not progress beyond the first round. Johnson's drug use was only self-admitted during this period and he did not fail a drug test that year. Johnson ran for the fourth-placed Canada team at the 1987 event. His Canadian team mate Angella Issajenko later became the first female relay athlete to be sanctioned – she helped Canada to fifth at the same edition.[6]

The positive drug test for Nigeria's Innocent Asonze in 1999 marked the first instance where a medal-winning team was disqualified at the World Championships in Athletics. Brazil was elevated to the bronze medal as a result.[6] Doping persisted two years later, as France's Christophe Cheval was disqualified after a positive test for nandrolone shortly before the event (the team were semi-finalists only).[7] The greatest disqualifications yet followed after the BALCO scandal in 2005. Tim Montgomery of the 2001-winning men's team was later disqualified following his admission of doping during the period, meaning that the American gold medallists were stricken from the record (South Africa were elevated as champions).[8] Similarly, Marion Jones's and Kelli White's admitted usage led to the disqualification of the winning American women's team (Germany were made champions as a result).[6]

The impact of the BALCO scandal extended to the 2003 edition, as medals were again reassigned as a result of British athlete Dwain Chambers doping. Brazil were elevated to silver and the Netherlands became the bronze medallists. The next doping disqualification to occur in the relay was in 2009, when Nigerian women's runner Toyin Augustus had her team's first round result annulled. A similar fate met Lim Hee-Nam and the South Korean men in 2011.[6] The fourth-placed Trinidad and Tobago team had their result retrospectively disqualified due to Semoy Hackett's failed doping test prior to the competition.[9] A third straight championships was affected as a result of Ukraine's Yelyzaveta Bryzhina failing a doping test for drostanolone (as of 2015 the Ukrainian relay team's first round result still stands, however).[10]

Medalists

Men

Championships Gold Silver Bronze
1983 Helsinki
(details)
 United States (USA)
Emmit King
Willie Gault
Calvin Smith
Carl Lewis
 Italy (ITA)
Stefano Tilli
Carlo Simionato
Pierfrancesco Pavoni
Pietro Mennea
 Soviet Union (URS)
Andrey Prokofyev
Nikolay Sidorov
Vladimir Muravyov
Viktor Bryzhin
1987 Rome
(details)
 United States (USA)
Lee McRae
Lee Vernon McNeill
Harvey Glance
Carl Lewis
 Soviet Union (URS)
Aleksandr Yevgenyev
Viktor Bryzhin
Vladimir Muravyov
Vladimir Krylov
 Jamaica (JAM)
John Mair
Andrew Smith
Clive Wright
Ray Stewart
1991 Tokyo
(details)
 United States (USA)
Andre Cason
Leroy Burrell
Dennis Mitchell
Carl Lewis
 France (FRA)
Max Morinière
Daniel Sangouma
Jean-Charles Trouabal
Bruno Marie-Rose
 Great Britain (GBR)
Tony Jarrett
John Regis
Darren Braithwaite
Linford Christie
1993 Stuttgart
(details)
 United States (USA)
Jon Drummond
Andre Cason
Dennis Mitchell
Leroy Burrell
Calvin Smith*
 Great Britain (GBR)
Colin Jackson
Tony Jarrett
John Regis
Linford Christie
Jason John*
Darren Braithwaite*
 Canada (CAN)
Robert Esmie
Glenroy Gilbert
Bruny Surin
Atlee Mahorn
1995 Gothenburg
(details)
 Canada (CAN)
Donovan Bailey
Robert Esmie
Glenroy Gilbert
Bruny Surin
 Australia (AUS)
Paul Henderson
Tim Jackson
Steve Brimacombe
Damien Marsh
 Italy (ITA)
Giovanni Puggioni
Ezio Madonia
Angelo Cipolloni
Sandro Floris
1997 Athens
(details)
 Canada (CAN)
Robert Esmie
Glenroy Gilbert
Bruny Surin
Donovan Bailey
Carlton Chambers*
 Nigeria (NGR)
Osmond Ezinwa
Olapade Adeniken
Francis Obikwelu
Davidson Ezinwa
 Great Britain (GBR)
Darren Braithwaite
Darren Campbell
Douglas Walker
Julian Golding
Dwain Chambers*
1999 Seville
(details)
 United States (USA)
Jon Drummond
Tim Montgomery
Brian Lewis
Maurice Greene
 Great Britain (GBR)
Jason Gardener
Darren Campbell
Marlon Devonish
Dwain Chambers
Allyn Condon*
 Brazil (BRA)
Raphael de Oliveira
Claudinei da Silva
Édson Ribeiro
André Domingos
2001 Edmonton
(details)
 South Africa (RSA)
Morné Nagel
Corné du Plessis
Lee-Roy Newton
Matthew Quinn
 Trinidad and Tobago (TRI)
Marc Burns
Ato Boldon
Jacey Harper
Darrel Brown
 Australia (AUS)
Matt Shirvington
Paul Di Bella
Steve Brimacombe
Adam Basil
2003 Saint-Denis
(details)
 United States (USA)
John Capel
Bernard Williams
Darvis Patton
Joshua J. Johnson
 Brazil (BRA)
Vicente de Lima
Édson Ribeiro
André Domingos
Cláudio Roberto Souza
 Netherlands (NED)
Timothy Beck
Troy Douglas
Patrick van Balkom
Caimin Douglas
Guus Hoogmoed*
2005 Helsinki
(details)
 France (FRA)
Ladji Doucouré
Ronald Pognon
Eddy De Lépine
Lueyi Dovy
Oudéré Kankarafou*
 Trinidad and Tobago (TRI)
Kevon Pierre
Marc Burns
Jacey Harper
Darrel Brown
 Great Britain (GBR)
Jason Gardener
Marlon Devonish
Christian Malcolm
Mark Lewis-Francis
2007 Osaka
(details)
 United States (USA)
Darvis Patton
Wallace Spearmon
Tyson Gay
Leroy Dixon
Rodney Martin*
 Jamaica (JAM)
Marvin Anderson
Usain Bolt
Nesta Carter
Asafa Powell
Dwight Thomas*
Steve Mullings*
 Great Britain (GBR)
Christian Malcolm
Craig Pickering
Marlon Devonish
Mark Lewis-Francis
2009 Berlin
(details)
 Jamaica (JAM)
Steve Mullings
Michael Frater
Usain Bolt
Asafa Powell
Dwight Thomas*
Lerone Clarke*
 Trinidad and Tobago (TRI)
Darrel Brown
Marc Burns
Emmanuel Callender
Richard Thompson
Keston Bledman*
 Great Britain (GBR)
Simeon Williamson
Tyrone Edgar
Marlon Devonish
Harry Aikines-Aryeetey
2011 Daegu
(details)
 Jamaica (JAM)
Nesta Carter
Michael Frater
Yohan Blake
Usain Bolt
Dexter Lee*
 France (FRA)
Teddy Tinmar
Christophe Lemaitre
Yannick Lesourd
Jimmy Vicaut
 Saint Kitts and Nevis (SKN)
Jason Rogers
Kim Collins
Antoine Adams
Brijesh Lawrence
2013 Moscow
(details)
 Jamaica (JAM)
Nesta Carter
Kemar Bailey-Cole
Nickel Ashmeade
Usain Bolt
Warren Weir*
Oshane Bailey*
 United States (USA)
Charles Silmon
Mike Rodgers
Mookie Salaam
Justin Gatlin
 Canada (CAN)
Gavin Smellie
Aaron Brown
Dontae Richards-Kwok
Justyn Warner
2015 Beijing
(details)
 Jamaica (JAM)
Nesta Carter
Asafa Powell
Nickel Ashmeade
Usain Bolt
Rasheed Dwyer*
 China (CHN)
Mo Youxue
Xie Zhenye
Su Bingtian
Zhang Peimeng
 Canada (CAN)
Aaron Brown
Andre De Grasse
Brendon Rodney
Justyn Warner
2017 London
(details)
 Great Britain (GBR)
Chijindu Ujah
Adam Gemili
Danny Talbot
Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake
 United States (USA)
Mike Rodgers
Justin Gatlin
Jaylen Bacon
Christian Coleman
BeeJay Lee*
 Japan (JPN)
Shuhei Tada
Shōta Iizuka
Yoshihide Kiryū
Kenji Fujimitsu
Asuka Cambridge*
2019 Doha
(details)
 United States (USA)
Christian Coleman
Justin Gatlin
Mike Rodgers
Noah Lyles
Cravon Gillespie*
 Great Britain (GBR)
Adam Gemili
Zharnel Hughes
Richard Kilty
Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake
 Japan (JPN)
Shuhei Tada
Kirara Shiraishi
Yoshihide Kiryū
Abdul Hakim Sani Brown
Yuki Koike*
2022 Eugene
(details)
 Canada (CAN)
Aaron Brown
Jerome Blake
Brendon Rodney
Andre De Grasse
 United States (USA)
Christian Coleman
Noah Lyles
Elijah Hall
Marvin Bracy
 Great Britain (GBR)
Jona Efoloko
Zharnel Hughes
Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake
Reece Prescod
Adam Gemili*
2023 Budapest
(details)
 United States (USA)
Christian Coleman
Fred Kerley
Brandon Carnes
Noah Lyles
JT Smith *
 Italy (ITA)
Roberto Rigali
Lamont Marcell Jacobs
Lorenzo Patta
Filippo Tortu
 Jamaica (JAM)
Ackeem Blake
Oblique Seville
Ryiem Forde
Rohan Watson

Note * Indicates athletes who ran only in the preliminary round and also received medals.

Medals by country

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States (USA) 9 3 0 12
2  Jamaica (JAM) 4 1 2 7
3  Canada (CAN) 3 0 3 6
4  Great Britain (GBR) 1 3 6 10
5  France (FRA) 1 2 0 3
6  South Africa (RSA) 1 0 0 1
7  Trinidad and Tobago (TTO) 0 3 0 3
8  Italy (ITA) 0 2 1 3
9  Australia (AUS) 0 1 1 2
 Brazil (BRA) 0 1 1 2
 Soviet Union (URS) 0 1 1 2
12  Nigeria (NGR) 0 1 0 1
 China (CHN) 0 1 0 1
14  Japan (JPN) 0 0 2 2
15  Netherlands (NED) 0 0 1 1
 Saint Kitts and Nevis (SKN) 0 0 1 1


Multiple medalists

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=4×100_metres_relay_at_the_World_Championships_in_Athletics
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Rank Athlete Nation Period Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Usain Bolt  Jamaica (JAM) 2007–2017 4 1 0 5
2 Nesta Carter  Jamaica (JAM) 2007–2015 3 1 0 4
3 Carl Lewis  United States (USA) 1983–1991 3 0 0 3
4 Christian Coleman  United States (USA) 2017–2023 2 2 0 4
5 Asafa Powell  Jamaica (JAM) 2007–2015 2 1 0 3
Noah Lyles  United States (USA) 2019–2023 2 1 0 3
7 Robert Esmie  Canada (CAN) 1993–1997 2 0 1 3
Glenroy Gilbert  Canada (CAN) 1993–1997 2 0 1 3
Bruny Surin  Canada (CAN) 1993–1997 2 0 1 3
10 Calvin Smith  United States (USA) 1983–1993 2 0 0 2
Andre Cason  United States (USA) 1991–1993 2 0 0 2
Dennis Mitchell  United States (USA) 1991–1993 2 0 0 2
Leroy Burrell  United States (USA) 1991–1993 2 0 0 2
Jon Drummond