2004 Summer Olympics / Athletics - 400 m (women)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | 400 meter run | ||||||||
gender | Women | ||||||||
Attendees | 42 athletes from 32 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Athens Olympic Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | August 21, 2004 (preliminary round) August 22, 2004 (semi-finals) August 24, 2004 (final) |
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The women's 400-meter run at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens was held on August 21, 22 and 24, 2004 in the Athens Olympic Stadium. 42 athletes took part.
Olympic champion was Tonique Williams-Darling from the Bahamas. She won ahead of the Mexican Ana Guevara and the Russian Natalja Antjuch .
Athletes from Germany, Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.
Current titleholders
Olympic champion 2000 | Cathy Freeman ( Australia ) | 49.11 s | Sydney 2000 |
World Champion 2003 | Ana Guevara ( Mexico ) | 48.89 s | Paris 2003 |
European Champion 2002 | Olesja Sykina ( Russia ) | 50.45 s | Munich 2002 |
Pan American Champion 2003 | Ana Guevara ( Mexico ) | 50.36 s | Santo Domingo 2003 |
Central America and Caribbean Champion 2003 | Hazel-Ann Regis ( Grenada ) | 51.56 s | St. George’s 2003 |
South American Champion 2003 | Geisa Aparecida Coutinho ( Brazil ) | 51.81 s | Barquisimeto 2003 |
Asian Champion 2003 | Yin Yin Khine ( Myanmar ) | 52.96 s | Manila 2003 |
African champion 2004 | Fatou Bintou case ( Senegal ) | 50.62 s | Brazzaville 2004 |
Oceania Champion 2002 | Makalesi Bulikiobo ( Fiji ) | 56.67 s | Christchurch 2002 |
Existing records
World record | 47.80 s | Marita Koch ( GDR ) | Canberra , Australia | October 6, 1985 |
Olympic record | 48.25 s | Marie-José Pérec ( France ) | Atlanta Final , USA | July 29, 1996 |
Note: All times are based on Athens local time ( UTC + 2 ).
Preliminary round
A total of six preliminary runs were completed. The first three athletes of each run qualified for the semi-finals. In addition, the six fastest drivers, the so-called lucky losers , made it through. The directly qualified runners are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
Forward 1
August 21, 2004, 9:50 a.m.
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ana Guevara | Mexico | 50.93 | |
2 | Lee McConnell | Great Britain | 51.19 | |
3 | Grażyna Prokopek | Poland | 51.29 | |
4th | Fatou Bintou case | Senegal | 51.87 | |
5 | Hortense Béwouda | Cameroon | 52.11 | |
6th | Oksana Lunewa | Kyrgyzstan | 52.94 | |
7th | Ruwida El-Hubti | Libya | 63.57 | NO |
Forward 2
August 21, 2004, 9:57 a.m.
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Monique Hennagan | United States | 51.02 | |
2 | Marijana Dimitrova | Great Britain | 51.29 | |
3 | Kaltouma Nadjina | Chad | 51.50 | |
4th | Nadia Davy | Jamaica | 52.04 | |
5 | Maria Laura Almirão | Brazil | 52.10 | |
6th | Kirsi Mykkänen | Finland | 52.53 | |
7th | Bo fan catch | People's Republic of China | 56.01 |
Forward 3
August 21, 2004, 10:04 am
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Natalia Nazarova | Russia | 50.82 | |
2 | Donna Fraser | Great Britain | 51.19 | |
3 | Hazel-Ann Regis | Grenada | 51.66 | |
4th | Estie Wittstock | South Africa | 51.89 | |
5 | Amy Mbacké Thiam | Senegal | 52.44 | |
6th | Amantle Montsho | Botswana | 53.77 | NO |
7th | Samira Amirova | Uzbekistan | 54.43 |
Forward 4
August 21, 2004, 10:11 am
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Natalja Antjuch | Russia | 50.54 | |
2 | DeeDee Trotter | United States | 50.56 | |
3 | Novlene Williams-Mills | Jamaica | 50.59 | |
4th | Aliann Pompey | Guyana | 51.33 | |
5 | Egle Uljas | Estonia | 51.91 | NO |
6th | Svetlana Bodritzkaja | Kazakhstan | 53.35 | |
7th | Shifana Ali | Maldives | 60.92 | NO |
Forward 5
August 21, 2004, 10:18 am
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tonique Williams-Darling | Bahamas | 51.20 | |
2 | Svyatlana Usovich | Belarus | 51.37 | |
3 | Antonina Yefremova | Ukraine | 51.53 | |
4th | Mireille Nguimpo | Cameroon | 51.90 | |
5 | Allison Beckford | Jamaica | 52.85 | |
6th | Sandrine Thiébaud-Kangni | Togo | 52.87 | |
7th | Damayanthi Dharsha | Sri Lanka | 54.58 |
Forward 6
August 21, 2004, 10:25 am
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sanya Richards-Ross | United States | 50.11 | |
2 | Christine Amertil | Bahamas | 50.23 | |
3 | Christine Ohuruogu | Great Britain | 50.50 | |
4th | Tiandra Ponteen | St. Kitts and Nevis | 51.17 | |
5 | Geisa Aparecida Coutinho | Brazil | 52.18 | |
6th | Makelesi Bulikiobo | Fiji | 53.58 | |
7th | Salamtou Hassane | Niger | 63.28 | NO |
Semifinals
The first two athletes qualified for the final in the three semi-finals per run. In addition, the two fastest times, the so-called lucky losers , made it through. The directly qualified runners are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
Run 1
August 22, 2004, 10:20 p.m.
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ana Guevara | Mexico | 50.15 | |
2 | Christine Amertil | Bahamas | 50.17 | |
3 | Sanya Richards-Ross | United States | 50.54 | |
4th | Christine Ohuruogu | Great Britain | 51.00 | |
5 | Tiandra Ponteen | St. Kitts and Nevis | 51.33 | |
6th | Svyatlana Usovich | Belarus | 51.42 | |
7th | Hazel-Ann Regis | Grenada | 51.47 | |
8th | Egle Uljas | Estonia | 53.13 |
Run 2
August 22, 2004, 10:29 pm
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tonique Williams-Darling | Bahamas | 50.00 | |
2 | DeeDee Trotter | United States | 50.14 | |
3 | Natalia Nazarova | Russia | 50.63 | |
4th | Fatou Bintou case | Senegal | 51.21 | |
5 | Kaltouma Nadjina | Chad | 51.57 | |
6th | Estie Wittstock | South Africa | 51.77 | |
7th | Donna Fraser | Great Britain | 51.94 | |
8th | Grażyna Prokopek | Poland | 51.96 |
Run 3
August 22, 2004, 10:38 pm
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Monique Hennagan | United States | 49.88 | |
2 | Natalja Antjuch | Russia | 50.04 | |
3 | Novlene Williams-Mills | Jamaica | 50.85 | |
4th | Marijana Dimitrova | Bulgaria | 51.20 | |
5 | Aliann Pompey | Guyana | 51.61 | |
6th | Antonina Yefremova | Ukraine | 51.90 | |
7th | Mireille Nguimgo | Cameroon | 52.21 | |
8th | Lee McConnell | Great Britain | 52.63 |
final
space | Surname | nation | Time (s) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tonique Williams-Darling | Bahamas | 49.42 | |
2 | Ana Guevara | Mexico | 49.56 | |
3 | Natalja Antjuch | Russia | 49.89 | |
4th | Monique Hennagan | United States | 49.97 | |
5 | DeeDee Trotter | United States | 50.00 | |
6th | Sanya Richards-Ross | United States | 50.19 | |
7th | Christine Amertil | Bahamas | 50.37 | |
8th | Natalia Nazarova | Russia | 50.65 |
August 24, 2004, 10:50 p.m.
All three US women and two athletes from the Bahamas, two Russians and one Mexican had qualified for the final.
The reigning world champion , the Mexican Ana Guevara, was considered the favorite for the gold medal. The World Cup fifth Tonique Williams-Darling from the Bahamas, who had improved significantly this year, was seen as her strongest competitor. Other medal candidates were World Cup third and 2001 World Champion Amy Mbacké Thiam from Senegal and the three Americans Monique Hennagan, Sanya Richards-Ross and DeeDee Trotter. Of them, Mbacké Thiam was already eliminated in the run-up.
In the final everything was open for a long time. Halfway through the course, the gaps between the first five runners were extremely close. At the start of the home stretch, Williams-Darling was just ahead of Guevara and Richards-Ross. The two favorites had by far the best stamina in the last sixty meters. Guevara moved closer and closer to her competitor, but in the end she couldn't get past her. Tonique Williams-Darling won by 14 hundredths of a second over Guevara. Richards hadn't been able to keep up with her pace and had fallen behind. The Russian Natalja Antjuch came third in front of the three US runners Monique Hennagan, DeeDee Trotter and Sanya Richards-Ross. Christine Amertil from the Bahamas was seventh, the Russian Natalja Nasarowa eighth.
Tonique Williams-Darling was the Bahamas' first ever Olympic and medalist in the women's 400-meter race .
Ana Guevara won the first Mexican medal in this discipline.
Web links
- SportsReference 400m , accessed May 6, 2018
- Results on the IAAF website , accessed on May 6, 2018
- Official Report of the XXVIIIth Olympiad, Results Athletics , English / French (PDF, 3054 KB), accessed on May 6, 2018
Video
- 2004 Olympics Women's 400m , published December 24, 2008 on youtube.com, accessed May 6, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 794 , accessed on May 6, 2018