European Athletics Championships 2002/4 × 100 m men
18th European Athletics Championships | |||||||||
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discipline | 4 × 100 m relay | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 15 relays with 61 athletes | ||||||||
venue | Munich | ||||||||
Competition location | Olympic Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | August 10th (preliminary) August 11th (final) |
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The men's 4 x 100 meter relay at the 2002 European Athletics Championships took place on August 10 and 11, 2002 in the Munich Olympic Stadium.
Ukraine became European champion in the line-up of Kostjantyn Wasjukow , Kostjantyn Rurak , Anatolij Dowhal and Oleksandr Kajdasch . Second place went to Poland with Ryszard Pilarczyk , Łukasz Chyła , Marcin Nowak and Marcin Urbaś ( final ) as well as Piotr Balcerzak, who was also used in the preliminary run . Bronze went to Germany ( Ronny Ostwald , Marc Blume , Alexander Kosenkow , Christian Schacht ).
The Polish runner, who was only used in the preliminary run, also received a silver medal.
Existing records
World record | 37.40 s |
USA ( Jon Drummond , Andre Cason , Dennis Mitchell , Leroy Burrell ) |
World Cup Stuttgart BR Germany |
22nd August 1993 |
European record | 37.73 s |
Great Britain ( Jason Gardener , Darren Campbell , Marlon Devonish , Dwain Chambers ) |
Seville Spain |
August 29, 1999 |
EM record | 37.79 s |
France ( Max Morinière , Daniel Sangouma , Jean-Charles Trouabal and Bruno Marie-Rose ) |
EM Split Yugoslavia |
August 31, 1990 |
The existing EM record was not set at these European championships and was not improved.
doping
After the withdrawal of the gold medal of the British relay - decision of the IAAF in 2006 - as a result of a positive doping test of the British final runner Dwain Chambers in 2003, the following relays moved up one rank. Four years after the competitions, the Ukrainian relay was awarded the gold medal, the Polish relay the silver and the German relay the bronze medal:
Two seasons in particular were disadvantaged as a result:
- Germany - The team only received its medal four years late,
- Finland - The team would have been eligible to start in the final.
Preliminary round
August 10, 2002
The preliminary round was held in two runs. The first three seasons per run - highlighted in light blue - as well as the two fastest teams - highlighted in light green - qualified for the final.
Forward 1
space | Season | occupation | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Germany |
Ronny Ostwald Marc Blume Alexander Kosenkow Christian Schacht |
39.21 |
2 | Russia |
Alexander Smirnow Sergei Blinow Alexander Ryabow Sergei Bychkow |
39.24 |
3 | Ukraine |
Kostjantyn Wasjukow Kostjantyn Rurak Anatolij Dowhal Oleksandr Kajdasch |
39.24 |
4th | Italy |
Francesco Scuderi Alessandro Cavallaro Maurizio Checcucci Marco Torrieri |
39.28 |
5 | Finland |
Tommi Hartonen Tuomas Nasi Stefan Koivikko Markus Pöyhönen |
39.58 actually qualified for the final |
6th | Slovenia |
Rok Predanič Matic Osovnikar Boštjan Fridrih Urban Acman |
39.71 |
7th | Greece |
Aristotélis Gavélas Aléxandros Kóntzos Georgios Theodoridis Vasílios Séggos |
39.92 |
8th | Sweden |
Peter Häggström Lenny Martinez Patrik Lövgren Johan Engberg |
39.99 |
Forward 2
space | Season | occupation | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | France |
David Patros Aimé-Issa Nthépé Jerome Eyana Ronald Pognon |
38.93 |
2 | Poland |
Piotr Balcerzak Łukasz Chyła Ryszard Pilarczyk Marcin Nowak |
38.98 |
3 | Spain |
Cecilio Maestra Angel David Rodriguez Orkatz Beitia Carlos Berlanga |
39.08 |
4th | Estonia |
Argo Golberg Maidu Laht Martin Vihmann Erki Nool |
39.69 NO |
DNF | Israel |
Kfir Golan Tamás Mezei Gideon Jablonka Alexandr Porchomowski |
|
DNF | Netherlands |
Martijn Ungerer Troy Douglas Timothy Beck Patrick van Balkom |
|
DOP | Great Britain |
Christian Malcolm Darren Campbell Marlon Devonish Dwain Chambers |
admitted to the finals |
final
August 11, 2002
space | Season | occupation | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ukraine |
Kostjantyn Wasjukow Kostjantyn Rurak Anatolij Dowhal Oleksandr Kajdasch |
38.53 NO |
2 | Poland |
Ryszard Pilarczyk Łukasz Chyła Marcin Nowak Marcin Urbaś ( final ) in the preliminary also: Piotr Balcerzak |
38.71 |
3 | Germany |
Ronny Ostwald Marc Blume Alexander Kosenkow Christian Schacht |
38.88 |
4th | France |
David Patros Aimé-Issa Nthépé Jerome Eyana Ronald Pognon |
38.97 |
5 | Spain |
Cecilio Maestra Angel David Rodriguez Orkatz Beitia Carlos Berlanga |
39.07 |
6th | Russia |
Alexander Smirnow Sergei Blinow Alexander Ryabow Sergei Bychkow |
39.12 |
DNF | Italy |
Francesco Scuderi Alessandro Cavallaro Maurizio Checcucci Marco Torrieri |
|
DOP | Great Britain |
Christian Malcolm Darren Campbell Marlon Devonish Dwain Chambers |
Web links
- European Athletics Championships - Munich 2002 at european-athletics.org, accessed on October 28, 2019
- Men 4x100m Relay European Championship 2002 Munich on todor66.com, accessed on October 28, 2019
- Track and Field Statistics, EM 2002 on trackfield.brinkster.net, accessed on October 28, 2019
- European Athletics Championships Zurich 2014 - Statistics Handbook , Men 4x100m Relay European Championship 2002 Munich, p. 484 (PDF, 13,363 kB), in English at european-athletics.org, accessed on October 28, 2019
- Results of all European Athletics Championships - 2002, 4 × 100 m men on sportschau.de, accessed on October 28, 2019
- 18th European Athletics Championships 2002 in Munich, Germany from ifosta.de, accessed on October 28, 2019
References and comments
- ↑ IAAF world records. 4 × 100 m , accessed on October 28, 2019
- ^ Progression of the European Outdoor Records. 4 × 100 m on rfea.es, p. 36 (PDF, 271 kB), accessed on October 28, 2019
- ↑ European champion Dwain Chambers banned for two years Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, February 24, 2004, accessed on October 28, 2019