World Athletics Championships 2001 / 10,000 m women
8th World Athletics Championships | |||||||||
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discipline | 10,000 meter run | ||||||||
gender | Women | ||||||||
Attendees | 24 athletes from 17 countries | ||||||||
venue | Edmonton | ||||||||
Competition location | Commonwealth Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | August 7th | ||||||||
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The 10,000 Meters of women at the 2001 World Championships in Athletics was on August 7, 2001 at Commonwealth Stadium, the Canadian city of Edmonton held.
In this competition, the Ethiopian long-distance runners achieved a triple success . It won twice Olympic champion ( 1992 / 2000 ) and Vice World Champion 1999 Derartu Tulu . Second place went to the two-time African champion ( 1993 : 10,000 meters / 1998 : 5000 meters ) Berhane Adere . Bronze went to the defending champion, Olympic runner-up in 2000 and third at the African Championships in 1993, Gete Wami , who was also third in the Olympic Games over 5000 meters last year.
Existing records
World record | 29: 31.78 min | Wang Junxia | Beijing , People's Republic of China | September 8, 1993 |
World Cup record | 30: 24.56 min | Gete Wami | 1999 World Cup in Seville , Spain | August 26, 1999 |
The existing world championship record was not set and not improved at these world championships.
There was a new national record:
- 32: 31.46 min - Hrisostomía Iakóvou Greece
execution
As in the 1999 World Championships , the organizers decided to forego the preliminaries this year, as all runners competed in the final together.
Result
August 7, 2001, 9:05 pm
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
Derartu Tulu | Ethiopia | 31: 48.81 | |
Berhane Adere | Ethiopia | 31: 48.85 | |
Gete Wami | Ethiopia | 31: 49.98 | |
4th | Paula Radcliffe | Great Britain | 31: 50.06 |
5 | Mihaela Botezan | Romania | 32: 03.46 |
6th | Lyudmila Petrova | Russia | 32: 04.94 |
7th | Asmae Leghzaoui | Morocco | 32: 06.35 |
8th | Yamna Belkacem | France | 32: 09.21 |
9 | Haruko Okamoto | Japan | 32: 14.56 |
10 | Lyudmila Biktasheva | Russia | 32: 18.64 |
11 | Deena Kastor | United States | 32: 18.65 |
12 | Olivera Jevtić | Yugoslavia | 32: 19.44 |
13 | Mizuki Noguchi | Japan | 32: 19.94 |
14th | Aster Demissie | Ethiopia | 32: 25.81 |
15th | Teresa Recio | Spain | 32: 30.56 |
16 | Hrisostomía Iakóvou | Greece | 32: 31.46 NO |
17th | Natalija Berkut | Ukraine | 32: 32.68 |
18th | Gunhild Haugen | Norway | 32: 33.72 |
19th | Mari Ozaki | Japan | 32: 39.17 |
20th | Tina Connelly | Canada | 33: 00.37 |
21st | Ana Dias | Portugal | 33: 03.78 |
22nd | Jennifer Rhines | United States | 33: 11.22 |
23 | Inga Juodeškiené | Lithuania | 33: 11.60 |
24 | Maria Paredes | Ecuador | 35: 44.52 |
The defending champion, Olympic runner-up in 2000 , third at the African Championships in 1993 and Olympic third in 2000 over 5000 meters, Gete Wami (far right) won bronze
Video
- 2001 World Championships- Women's 10,000m on youtube.com, accessed August 19, 2020
Web links
- 8th IAAF World Championships In Athletics , accessed August 19, 2020
- Women 10000m Athletics VIII World Championship 2001 Edmonton (CAN) on todor66.com, accessed August 19, 2020
- Results in the IAAF Statistics Handbook for the 2019 World Cup in Doha, Women 10000 m, Edmonton 2001, p. 287f (PDF; 10.3 MB), English, accessed on August 19, 2020
References and comments
- ↑ IAAF world records. 10,000 m women on rekorde-im-sport.de, accessed on August 19, 2020