2012 Summer Olympics / Athletics
Athletics at the XXX. 2012 Olympic Games |
|
---|---|
information | |
venue | London |
Competition venue | Olympic Stadium , The Mall |
Nations | 201 |
Athletes | 2,079 (1,088 , 991 ) |
date | 3rd to 12th August 2012 |
decisions | 47 |
← Beijing 2008 |
At the XXX. For the 2012 Olympic Games in the British capital, London , 47 athletics competitions were held in the Olympic Stadium from August 3 to 12 , 23 of which were for women and 24 for men. All five street competitions, three in walking and two in marathon , started and ended on The Mall in central London.
Balance sheet
Medal table
space | country | total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | 9 | 12 | 7th | 28 |
2 | Jamaica | 4th | 5 | 3 | 12 |
3 | Ethiopia | 3 | 2 | 3 | 8th |
4th | Kenya | 2 | 4th | 7th | 13 |
5 | Australia | 2 | 1 | - | 3 |
6th | Poland | 2 | - | - | 2 |
7th | Germany | 1 | 5 | 2 | 8th |
8th | People's Republic of China | 1 | 4th | 4th | 9 |
9 | Trinidad and Tobago | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4th |
10 | France | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
11 | Dominican Republic | 1 | 1 | - | 2 |
12 | Czech Republic | 1 | - | 2 | 3 |
13 | Algeria | 1 | - | - | 3 |
Bahamas | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Bahrain | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Grenada | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Kazakhstan | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Croatia | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
New Zealand | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
South Africa | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Tunisia | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Uganda | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Hungary | 1 | - | - | 1 | |
Cuba | - | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
25th | Botswana | - | 1 | - | 1 |
Finland | - | 1 | - | 1 | |
Guatemala | - | 1 | - | 1 | |
Iran | - | 1 | - | 1 | |
Colombia | - | 1 | - | 1 | |
Slovenia | - | 1 | - | 1 | |
31 | Ukraine | - | - | 3 | 3 |
32 | Estonia | - | - | 1 | 1 |
Ireland | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Italy | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Japan | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Canada | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Qatar | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Lithuania | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Morocco | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Puerto Rico | - | - | 1 | 1 | |
Three bronze medals were awarded in the men's high jump. |
Medalist
Men
Women
Attendees
With regard to the participating nations, there were relatively few restrictions this time compared to previous games. The IOC had withdrawn the recognition of the National Olympic Committee - NOK - of the Netherlands Antilles , but their athletes were allowed to participate as so-called independent Olympic participants, provided they met the qualification requirements. There was just one other limitation. This concerned South Sudan , which did not yet have its own NOK. But their athletes could also be there in London under the same conditions as the athletes from the Netherlands Antilles. The marathon runner Guor Marial , who lives in the USA, also made use of this.
At these games, too, the topic of South and North Korea was at least marginally topical again. At a women's soccer match between Colombia and North Korea in Glasgow the South Korean flag was accidentally shown instead of the North Korean flag and it took a long time for the mishap to be corrected.
Competitions
The competition program was identical to that of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing . The competitions for women and men were largely aligned. There was and is only one discipline that was and still is missing in the women's area compared to the men's offer: when walking, only one distance is carried out, as opposed to two distances for men. Further differences can be found in the hurdle height on the two hurdle distances and the length of the shorter hurdle route, which is 110 meters for men and 100 meters for women, in order to take into account the different stride lengths of the sexes. In addition, a heptathlon was and will be fought as an all- around for women and a decathlon for men .
Olympic Stadium
In contrast to many stadiums built in earlier games, the London Olympic Stadium was completed much faster than originally planned. This also had an impact on the costs, which were also lower than initially estimated - a novelty in Olympic history. The requirements of environmental compatibility and sustainability were also taken into account to a particular degree through a lightweight construction using less steel than usual and through long-term considerations for integrating the stadium into an overall nature-friendly leisure concept.
Schedule of the individual disciplines
qualification
Qualification criteria
A total of about 2000 athletes took part in the competitions. Each NOK was allowed to use three athletes per discipline if they had achieved the A standard in the qualification period or one athlete per discipline if they had achieved the B standard. In both cases, a reserve athlete could still be nominated if he had also achieved the respective standard. If no woman or no man from a country had qualified, they were allowed to use one athlete in any discipline, regardless of the standard, with the exception of the 10,000 meters, the obstacle course and the all-around competition.
The norms for 10,000 meters, marathon, walking and all-around competitions had to be achieved between January 1, 2011 and July 8, 2012, for all other disciplines between May 1, 2011 and July 8, 2012. The IAAF announced the standards in April 2011. Qualification competitions were all competitions organized by the IAAF and the individual member associations if they met the requirements of the IAAF. These included u. a. the use of trained referees, electronic time measurement for running decisions, wind measurement for sprints or public access to the competition. For walking and marathon only qualification competitions announced by the IAAF on January 1, 2011 were permitted.
To qualify the relays, the two best times that a relay of a NOK had achieved between January 1, 2011 and July 2, 2012 were added together. The 16 best relays qualified for all four competitions.
Athletes who were 18 or 19 years old as of December 31, 2012 were not allowed to participate in the marathon or the 50 km walk. If athletes were 16 or 17 years old on the cut-off date, they were not allowed to participate in the marathon, 10,000-meter run, walking, decathlon and the men's throwing disciplines. Athletes who were not 16 years old on the cut-off date were generally not allowed to take part in the competitions.
Competitions and qualification standards
2012 Olympic Qualification Standards | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
discipline | Men | Women | ||
A standard | B standard | A standard | B standard | |
100 m | 10.18 s | 10.24 s | 11.29 s | 11.38 s |
200 m | 20.55 s | 20.65 s | 23.10 s | 23.30 s |
400 m | 45.30 s | 45.90 s | 51.55 s | 52.35 s |
800 m | 1: 45.60 min | 1: 46.30 min | 1: 59.90 min | 2: 1.30 min |
1500 m | 3: 35.50 min | 3: 38.00 min | 4: 06.00 min | 4: 08.90 min |
5000 m | 13: 20.00 min | 13: 27.00 min | 15: 20.00 min | 15: 30.00 min |
10,000 m | 27: 45.00 min | 28: 05.00 min | 31: 45.00 min | 32: 10.00 min |
Marathon run | 2: 15.00 h | 2: 18.00 h | 2: 37.00 h | 2: 43.00 h |
20 km walking | 1: 22.30 h | 1: 24.30 h | 1: 33.30 h | 1: 38.00 h |
50 km of walking | 3: 59.00 h | 4: 09.00 h | - | - |
100 m hurdles | - | - | 12.96 s | 13.15 s |
110 m hurdles | 13.52 s | 13.60 s | - | - |
400 m hurdles | 49.50 s | 49.80 s | 55.50 s | 56.65 s |
3000 m obstacle | 8: 23.10 min | 8: 32.00 min | 9: 43.00 min | 9: 48.00 min |
4 × 100 m | 16th or better in the world leaderboard for the qualifying period |
|||
4 × 400 m | ||||
high jump | 2.31 m | 2.28 m | 1.95 m | 1.92 m |
Pole vault | 5.72 m | 5.60 m | 4.50 m | 4.40 m |
Long jump | 8.20 m | 8.10 m | 6.75 m | 6.65 m |
Triple jump | 17.20 m | 16.85 m | 14.30 m | 14.10 m |
Shot put | 20.50 m | 20.00 m | 18.30 m | 17.20 m |
Discus throw | 65.00 m | 63.00 m | 62.00 m | 59.50 m |
Hammer throw | 78.00 m | 74.00 m | 71.50 m | 69.00 m |
Javelin throw | 82.00 m | 79.50 m | 61.00 m | 59.00 m |
Heptathlon | - | - | 6150 pts. | 5950 pts. |
Decathlon | 8200 pts. | 7950 pts. | - | - |
doping
The number of doping cases increased in these games to unimaginable dimensions. Athletics was also unacceptably affected by this. Some of the affected athletes were caught shortly after their competition, others were not allowed to compete in the first place because of positive doping tests, the result of which became official before the start of the games, and numerous other athletes were only caught many years later during follow-up checks on the preserved samples using new testing methods. For those concerned, this usually resulted in the withdrawal of their results, a request for the return of any medals they may have received and often bans of different lengths. In the medal table listed in this article, the correspondingly changed results in the individual disciplines are fully taken into account. The swamp into which athletics had found itself continued in an intensified manner, and an end was still not really in sight. The stupid athletes were and are the honest athletes who received their medals years later, who were denied participation in final fights by the doping fraudsters and who lost the funding they were actually entitled to because the real placements were only verified a long time after the competitions.
The list of doping offenders is much longer than in the previous games:
- Tyson Gay , USA - 100-meter run (initially fourth) and 4 x 100-meter relay (initially silver). As a result of a positive doping test, all competition results since July 15, 2012 have been withdrawn from him.
- The other runners who were involved in the success of the US 4 x 100 meter relay had to surrender their medals after a decision in May 2015.
- Diego Palomeque , Colombia - 400 meter run (excluded from participation before the start). He was not allowed to compete after a positive A and B test for testosterone.
- Amine Laalou , Morocco - 1,500 meter run (refused entry to Great Britain). After a positive doping result at the beginning of August in connection with the Diamond League event in Monaco , he was refused entry to Great Britain for the Games. He was then banned for two years.
- Hassan Hirt , France - 5000 meter run (eliminated in the preliminary stages). He tested positive for EPO . The doping test was taken on August 3rd in Rouen before the Olympic competition. The result was only available after the 5000 meter lead. Hirt was banned from the French federation and subsequently disqualified.
- Hussain Jamaan Alhamdah , Saudi Arabia - 5000 meter run (eliminated in the preliminary stages ). He was subsequently disqualified for manipulating his biological passport .
- Valery Borchin , Russia - 20 km walk (competition abandoned). He was banned for a doping offense on January 20, 2015 with retroactive effect from October 15, 2012 for eight years. His results were canceled for three periods: July 14th to September 15, 2009, June 16 to September 27, 2011 and April 11 to September 3, 2012.
- Vladimir Kanaikin Russia - 20 km walk (competition abandoned). He was convicted of doping abuse by means of his blood passport and banned for life because he was a repeat offender.
- Andrei Kriwow Russia - 20 km walking (disqualified for violating the walking rules). His results between May 20, 2011 and July 6, 2013 were canceled.
- Sergei Kirdjapkin , Russia - 50 km walk (first first). Because of a doping offense, he was subsequently deprived of first place by a decision by the International Court of Justice for Sports .
- Igor Yerochin Russia - 50 km walk (first fifth and then fourth). He was diagnosed with doping abuse by means of his blood passport.
- Sergei Bakulin Russia - 50 km walk (initially sixth or fifth). He was also convicted of doping abuse using his blood passport.
- Maksym Masuryk , Ukraine - pole vault (eliminated in qualification). He was subsequently disqualified in 2016 after dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was found during the examination of his doping test .
- Andrej Michnewitsch , Belarus - shot put (eliminated in qualification). At the beginning of March 2013, traces of prohibited substances were found in his sample from the 2005 World Championships in a subsequent doping test . In July 2013, the IAAF confirmed a lifelong ban, which was subsequently imposed by the disciplinary commission of the Belarusian anti-doping agency.
- Ivan Zichan , Belarus - hammer throw (excluded from participation before the start). After positive tests became known to him several times before the games, he was not allowed to participate.
- Pavel Kryvitski , Belarus - hammer throw (eliminated in qualification). He was subsequently disqualified by the IOC . During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substances dehydrochloromethyltestosterone and stanozolol were found .
- Kirill Ikonnikow , Russia - hammer throw (initially fifth). He was also subsequently disqualified by the IOC for doping abuse. During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substance dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was detected.
- Oleksandr Pjatnyzja , Ukraine - javelin throw (initially runner-up). He was exposed as a doping sinner in 2016 and subsequently disqualified. During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substance dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was detected.
- Tameka Williams , St. Kitts and Nevis - Sprint (previously excluded from participation). After a positive test, she admitted to taking illegal drugs and had to leave the Olympic village .
- Marija Savinova , Russia - 800 meter run (first first). She was disqualified on November 9, 2015 for doping abuse.
- Jelena Arshakova , Russia - 800 meter run (initially sixth). She was banned because of abnormal values in her biological passport. Your result subsequently canceled.
- Mariem Alaoui Selsouli . Morocco - 1500-meter run (suspended shortly before the start of the games). During a control in July 2012, she tested positive for the diuretic furosemide , which can be used to disguise other doping substances. The consequence was a ban for eight years until July 24, 2012.
- Aslı Çakır Alptekin , Turkey - 1500 meter run (first first). In May 2013 it became known that blood tests that indicate doping had been found in her. Since the Turkish federation did not impose a ban, the IAAF sued the international sports court CAS. The athlete was suspended for eight years in August 2015, and her results from July 29, 2010 were canceled.
- Natallja Karejwa , Belarus - 1500 meter run. She was suspected of tampering with her biological passport in July 2010 and was banned until August 2016. Your results since 2010 have been deleted.
- Jekaterina Kostezkaja , Russia - 1500 meter run. In August 2011, she was also suspected of tampering with her biological passport and was banned until January 2015. Your results since 2011 have been canceled.
- Gamze Bulut , Turkey - 1,500 meter run (first runner-up, then winner). She was banned by the IAAF at the end of March 2017 because of blood irregularities in her blood passport, and the gold medal was stripped from her.
- Yelisaveta Grechishnikova , Russia - 10,000 meter run (initially nineteenth). She was convicted of doping in 2013 and banned until August 2015, all of her results since August 2009 have been canceled.
- Nevin Yanıt , Turkey - 100 meter hurdles (initially fifth). She was convicted of doping with stanozolol and testosterone in August 2013 and banned for three years. Your results have been retroactively canceled from June 28, 2012.
- Ghofrane Mohamed (often called Ghfran Almouhamad), Syria - 400 meter hurdles (eighth and last of their heats). She tested positive for methylhexanamine after her race, resulting in a six-month ban.
- Julija Saripowa , Russia - 3000 meter obstacle course (first first). The gold medal was retroactively withdrawn in 2016 for doping abuse.
- Marta Domínguez , Spain - 3000 meter obstacle course (initially twelfth). Her rating was deleted because she was convicted of doping abuse.
- Switlana Schmidt , Ukraine - 3000 meter obstacle course (eliminated in the preliminary run as eleventh of her race). In May 2015, she was subsequently disqualified because of abnormalities in her biological passport .
- Binnaz Uslu , Turkey - 3000 meter steeplechase (eliminated in the preliminary run as the last of their race). In 2014 she received a lifelong ban for repeated doping, which took effect retroactively from August 30, 2011.
- Antonina Kriwoschapka , Russia - 4-by-400-meter relay (initially second with the Russian relay). She tested positive for the anabolic steroid dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (Turinabol) during follow-up checks . Thus the Russian relay runners lost their medals.
- Natalja Nasarowa , Russia - 4 x 400 meter relay (only used in the preliminary run, but also initially a silver medalist). On November 30, 2017, the IOC announced that Nazarova had also been convicted of dehydrochloromethyltestosterone during follow-up tests.
- Olga Kaniskina , Russia - 20 km walk . She was subsequently convicted of doping abuse and disqualified in 2016.
- Anna Nasarowa , Russia - long jump (initially fifth). She was proven doping abuse by means of Dehydrochlormethyltestosterone (Oral-Turinabol), which resulted in her disqualification.
- Nastassja Mirontschyk-Iwanowa , Belarus - long jump (initially seventh). She was disqualified after a positive doping test.
- Karin Melis Mey , Turkey - long jump (initially qualified for the final, but then excluded from participation). She was excluded from the final because of a doping test that tested positive at the 2012 European Championships in Helsinki . The IAAF World Athletics Federation learned of the athlete's doping violation too late to prevent participation in the long jump qualification in London.
- Viktorija Valyukevich , Russia - triple jump (initially eighth). In March 2017, she was subsequently disqualified for doping abuse.
- Nadseja Astaptschuk , Russia - Shot Put (First First). She was stripped of her gold medal for doping abuse.
- Yevgenia Kolodko , Russia - Shot put (first second). She too had to give up her medal in 2016 for doping abuse.
- Darja Pishchalnikova , Russia - Discus throw (initially second). As a repeat offender, she was banned from the Russian athletics association WFLA for ten years. Her silver medal was stripped of her.
- Tatjana Lyssenko , Russia - hammer throw (first first). She was stripped of her gold medal for doping abuse in 2016.
- Aksana Myankova , Belarus - hammer throw (initially sixth). As in 2008, she was disqualified for violating the doping regulations .
- Zalina Petrivskaya , Republic of Moldova - hammer throw (initially seventh). She was stripped of her seventh place for doping abuse.
- Marija Bespalowa , Russia - hammer throw (initially tenth). She was banned from competitions for four years because of steroid doping and her result was annulled.
- Gulfija Chanafejewa , Russia - hammer throw (eliminated in qualification). Her result from the London Games was canceled after a positive doping test.
- Marina Marghieva , Republic of Moldova - Hammer Throw (previously suspended), Zalina Petrivskaya's sister. She had been removed from the Moldovan Olympic team after a positive doping test.
- Tatiana Tschernowa , Russia - heptathlon (initially third). The Sports Court confirmed the cancellation of all Chernova's results between August 15, 2011 and July 22, 2013. As a result, the 2011 World Championships and the 2012 Olympic bronze are also revoked.
- Ljudmyla Jossypenko , Russia - heptathlon (initially fourth). In September 2013 she was convicted of doping through her blood passport and was excluded from all competitions until March 2017, in addition, all results from the 2012 games onwards were retrospectively deleted.
Sporting successes
The level of performance at these Olympic Games was very high. Although the quality decreased after the large number of athletes who had to be disqualified for doping reasons over the years after the games, it was still at a high level afterwards. Four world records were set:
> 800 meter run : David Lekuta Rudisha ( Kenya ) - 1: 40.91 min
> 4 x 100 meter relay : Jamaica ( Nesta Carter , Michael Frater , Yohan Blake , Usain Bolt ) - 36.84 s
> 4 x 100 meter relay: USA ( Tianna Madison , Allyson Felix , Bianca Knight , Carmelita Jeter ) - 40.82 s
> 20 km walk : Jelena Laschmanowa (Russia) - 1:25:02 h
In addition, the Olympic record was improved five times in eleven disciplines, twice for women and three times for men.
The most successful nation was once again the United States with nine Olympic champions and a total of 28 medals. Jamaica , Great Britain and Russia each had four gold medals in their accounts. Ethiopia followed with three Olympic victories. There were two gold medals each for Kenya , Australia and Poland . All other nations won at most one gold medal in athletics.
For the individual athletes, the following services are particularly worth mentioning.
- Two athletes won three gold medals each at these games:
- Usain Bolt ( Jamaica ) - 100 meters , 200 meters and 4 x 100 meters relay , over 100 meters with Olympic and in relay with world records
- Allyson Felix ( USA ) - 200 meters, 4 by 100 meters and 4 by 400 meters relay.
- Two other athletes each won two gold medals at these games:
- Mo Farah ( UK ) - 5000 meters and 10,000 meters
- Sanya Richards-Ross (USA) - 400 meters and 4 by 400 meters relay.
- Six athletes managed to repeat their 2004 Olympic victory in Athens :
- Usain Bolt (Jamaica) - 100 and 200 meters
- Tomasz Majewski ( Poland ) - Shot put
- Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (Jamaica) - 100 meters
- Tirunesh Dibaba ( Ethiopia ) - 10,000 meters
- Valerie Adams ( New Zealand ) - Shot Put
- Barbora Špotáková ( Czech Republic ) - javelin throw
- Two athletes repeated their Olympic victories in Sydney in 2000 :
Results men
100 m
space | athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Usain Bolt | JAM | 9.63 OR |
2 | Yohan Blake | JAM | 9.75 |
3 | Justin Gatlin | United States | 9.79 |
4th | Ryan Bailey | United States | 9.88 |
5 | Churandy Martina | NED | 9.94 |
6th | Richard Thompson | TTO | 9.98 |
7th | Asafa Powell | JAM | 11.99 |
DSQ | Tyson Gay | United States |
Final: August 5th, 2012, 10:50 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: +1.5 m / s
For the first time in an Olympic final, six runners stayed under ten seconds. Asafa Powell pulled a muscle while running and hobbled to the finish.
Tyson Gay finished fourth in the final in 9.80 seconds, but as a result of a positive doping test, all competition results since July 15, 2012 were withdrawn from him.
200 m
space | athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Usain Bolt | JAM | 19.32 |
2 | Yohan Blake | JAM | 19.44 |
3 | Warren Weir | JAM | 19.84 |
4th | Wallace Spearmon | United States | 19.90 |
5 | Churandy Martina | NED | 20.00 |
6th | Christophe Lemaitre | FRA | 20.19 |
7th | Álex Quiñónez | ECU | 20.52 |
8th | Anaso Jobodwana | RSA | 20.69 |
Final: August 9, 2012, 9:55 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: +0.4 m / s
400 m
space | athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Kirani James | GRN | 43.94 NO |
2 | Luguelin Santos | DOM | 44.46 |
3 | Lalonde Gordon | TTO | 44.52 |
4th | Chris Brown | BAH | 44.79 |
5 | Kevin Borlée | BEL | 44.81 |
6th | Jonathan Borlée | BEL | 44.83 |
7th | Demetrius Pinder | BAH | 44.98 |
8th | Steven Solomon | OUT | 45.14 |
Final: August 6, 2012, 10:30 p.m. (CEST)
There was a doping case in this discipline. The Colombian Diego Palomeque was not even allowed to compete after a positive A and B test for testosterone.
800 m
space | athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | David Lekuta Rudisha | KEN | 1: 40.91 WR |
2 | Nijel Amos | BOT | 1: 41.73 NR / JWR |
3 | Timothy Kitum | KEN | 1: 42.53 |
4th | Duane Solomon | United States | 1: 42.82 |
5 | Nick Symmonds | United States | 1: 42.95 |
6th | Mohammed Aman | ETH | 1: 43.20 NO |
7th | Abubaker persimmon | SOUTH | 1: 43.32 |
8th | Andrew Osagie | GBR | 1: 43.77 |
Final: August 9, 2012, 9:00 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Sören Ludolph GER (1: 48.57 min / eliminated as 7th of his preliminary run)
1500 m
space | athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Taoufik Makhloufi | ALG | 3: 34.08 |
2 | Leonel Manzano | United States | 3: 34.79 |
3 | Abdalaati Iguider | MAR | 3: 35.13 |
4th | Matthew Centrowitz | United States | 3: 35.17 |
5 | Henrik Ingebrigtsen | NOR | 3: 35.43 NO |
6th | Mekonnen Gebremedhin | ETH | 3: 35.44 |
7th | Silas Kiplagat | KEN | 3: 36.19 |
8th | İlham Tanui Özbilen | DOOR | 3: 36.72 |
Final: August 7, 2012, 10:15 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Carsten Schlangen GER (3: 38.23 min / eliminated as 11th of his semi-finals)
Austrian participant:
Andreas Vojta AUT (3: 43.52 min / eliminated as 12th of his preliminary run)
The Moroccan Amine Laalou , who was registered for this competition, was refused entry to Great Britain for the Games after a positive doping result at the beginning of August in connection with the Diamond League event in Monaco . He was then banned for two years.
5000 m
space | athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mo Farah | GBR | 13: 41.66 |
2 | Dejen Gebremeskel | ETH | 13: 41.98 |
3 | Thomas Pkemei Longosiwa | KEN | 13: 42.36 |
4th | Bernard Lagat | United States | 13: 42.99 |
5 | Isiah Kiplangat Koech | KEN | 13: 43.83 |
6th | Abdalaati Iguider | MAR | 13: 44.19 |
7th | Galen Rupp | United States | 13: 45.04 |
8th | Juan Luis Barrios | MEX | 13: 45.30 |
Final: August 11, 2012, 8:30 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Arne Gabius GER (13: 28.01 min; eliminated as 7th of the heat)
In this competition, two athletes were disqualified for violating the doping regulations.
Frenchman Hassan Hirt tested positive for EPO . The doping test was taken on August 3rd in Rouen before the Olympic race. The result was only available after the competition. Hirt was banned from the French federation and subsequently disqualified.
Hussain Jamaan Alhamdah from Saudi Arabia was also subsequently disqualified for manipulating his biological passport .
10,000 m
space | athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mo Farah | GBR | 27: 30.42 |
2 | Galen Rupp | United States | 27: 30.90 |
3 | Tariku Bekele | ETH | 27: 31.43 |
4th | Kenenisa Bekele | ETH | 27: 32.44 |
5 | Bedan Karoki Muchiri | KEN | 27: 32.94 |
6th | Zersenay Tadese | ERI | 27: 33.51 |
7th | Teklemariam Medhin | ERI | 27: 34.76 |
8th | Gebregziabher Gebremariam | ETH | 27: 36.34 |
August 4, 2012, 10:15 p.m. (CEST)
marathon
space | athlete | country | Time (h) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Stephen Kiprotich | UGA | 2:08:01 |
2 | Abel Kirui | KEN | 2:08:27 |
3 | Wilson Kipsang | KEN | 2:09:37 |
4th | Meb Keflezighi | United States | 2:11:06 |
5 | Marílson dos Santos | BRA | 2:11:10 |
6th | Kentaro Nakamoto | JPN | 2:11:16 |
7th | Cuthbert Nyasango | ZIM | 2:12:08 |
8th | Paulo Roberto Paula | BRA | 2:12:17 |
August 12, 2012, 12:00 p.m. (CEST)
Swiss participants:
Viktor Röthlin SUI (2:12:48 h / 11.)
Liechtenstein participant:
Marcel Tschopp LIE (2:28:54 h / 75.)
Austrian participant:
Günther Weidlinger AUT ( DNF )
The gold medal for Stephen Kiprotich was only the second Olympic victory for Uganda , the first forty years earlier, in 1972 , was won by John Akii-Bua in the 400-meter hurdles .
110 m hurdles
space | athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Aries Merritt | United States | 12.92 |
2 | Jason Richardson | United States | 13.04 |
3 | Hansle Parchment | JAM | 13.12 NO |
4th | Lawrence Clarke | GBR | 13.39 |
5 | Ryan Brathwaite | BAR | 13.40 |
6th | Orlando Ortega | CUB | 13.43 |
7th | Lehann Fourie | RSA | 13.53 |
DSQ | Dayron Robles | CUB |
Final: August 8, 2012, 10:15 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: −0.3 m / s
German participants:
Alexander John GER (13.67 s / eliminated as 6th of his preliminary run)
Matthias Bühler GER (13.68 s / eliminated as the 6th of his preliminary run)
Erik Balnuweit GER (13.77 s / eliminated as 6th of his preliminary run)
400 m hurdles
space | athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Félix Sánchez | DOM | 47.63 |
2 | Michael Tinsley | United States | 47.91 |
3 | Javier Culson | PURE | 48.10 |
4th | David Greene | GBR | 48.24 |
5 | Angelo Taylor | United States | 48.25 |
6th | Jehue Gordon | TTO | 48.86 |
7th | Leford Green | JAM | 49.12 |
8th | Kerron Clement | United States | 49.15 |
Final: August 6, 2012, 9:45 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Silvio Schirrmeister GER (50.21 s / eliminated as 4th of his preliminary run)
Félix Sánchez scored the same time as in the 2004 Olympic victory in Athens .
3000 m obstacle
space | athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ezekiel Kemboi | KEN | 8: 18.56 |
2 | Mahiedine Mekhissi-Benabbad | FRA | 8: 19.08 |
3 | Abel Kiprop Mutai | KEN | 8: 19.73 |
4th | Roba Gari | ETH | 8: 20.00 |
5 | Brimin Kiprop Kipruto | KEN | 8: 23.03 |
6th | Evan Jager | United States | 8: 23.87 |
7th | Hamid Ezzine | MAR | 8: 24.90 |
8th | Donald Cabral | United States | 8: 25.91 |
Final: August 5, 2012, 10:25 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Steffen Uliczka GER (8: 41.08 min / eliminated as 13th of his preliminary run)
4 × 100 m relay
space | country | Athletes | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jamaica |
Nesta Carter Michael Frater Yohan Blake Usain Bolt in the lead also: Kemar Bailey-Cole |
36.84 WR |
2 | Trinidad and Tobago |
Keston Bledman Marc Burns Emmanuel Callender Richard Thompson |
38.12 |
3 | France |
Jimmy Vicaut Christophe Lemaitre Pierre-Alexis Pessonneaux Ronald Pognon |
38.16 |
4th | Japan |
Ryōta Yamagata Masashi Eriguchi Shinji Takahira Shōta Iizuka |
38.35 |
5 | Netherlands |
Brian Mariano Churandy Martina Giovanni Codrington Patrick van Luijk |
38.39 |
6th | Australia |
Anthony Alozie Isaac Ntiamoah Andrew McCabe Joshua Ross |
38.43 |
DSQ | Canada |
Gavin Smellie Oluseyi Smith Jared Connaughton Justyn Warner |
|
DSQ | United States |
Trell Kimmons Justin Gatlin Tyson Gay Ryan Bailey in advance also: Jeffery Demps Darvis Patton |
Final: August 11, 2012, 10:00 p.m. (CEST)
Germany (38.37 s / eliminated as 6th of their lead)
The Canadian relay came in third, but was disqualified for entering the lane boundary.
The American Tyson Gay had to surrender his medal because of a doping case. In May 2015, the entire US season was stripped of the silver medal.
4 × 400 m relay
space | country | Athletes | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bahamas |
Chris Brown Demetrius Pinder Michael Mathieu Ramon Miller |
2: 56.72 NO |
2 | United States |
Bryshon Nellum Joshua Mance Tony McQuay Angelo Taylor in the lead also: Manteo Mitchell |
2: 57.05 |
3 | Trinidad and Tobago |
Lalonde Gordon Jarrin Solomon Ade Alleyne-Forte Deon Lendore |
2: 59.40 NO |
4th | Great Britain |
Conrad Williams Jack Green David Greene Martyn Rooney |
2: 59.53 |
5 | Russia |
Maxim Dyldin Denis Alexejew Vladimir Krasnov Pawel Trenichin |
3: 00.09 |
6th | Belgium |
Kevin Borlée Antoine Gillet Jonathan Borlée Michael Bultheel in the lead also: Nils Duerinck |
3: 01.83 |
7th | Venezuela |
Arturo Ramírez Alberto Aguilar Albert Bravo Omar Longart in the lead also: José Melendez |
3: 02.18 |
8th | South Africa |
Shaun de Jager Willem de Beer Louis Jacobus van Zyl Oscar Pistorius in the run-up also: Ofentse Mogawane |
3: 03.46 |
DNF | Cuba |
William Collazo Raidel Acea Noel Ruíz Omar Cisneros in the lead also: Orestes Rodríguez |
Final: August 10, 2012, 10:20 p.m. (CEST)
Germany (3: 03.50 min / eliminated as 6th in the run-up)
The finals were started with nine relays, as the South African Ofentse Mogawane was hindered by the Kenyan Vincent Mumo in the run-up and his team could not finish the race. Manteo Mitchell (USA) had reached the goal in the run-up despite a broken leg, which he had suffered three days earlier in a fall in the Olympic village and which was initially not diagnosed as such.
20 km walking
space | athlete | country | Time (h) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Chen thing | CHN | 1:18:46 OR |
2 | Erick Barrondo | GUA | 1:18:57 |
3 | Wang Zhen | CHN | 1:19:25 |
4th | Cai Zelin | CHN | 1:19:44 |
5 | Miguel Ángel López | ESP | 1:19:49 |
6th | Eder Sánchez | MEX | 1:19:52 |
7th | Jared Tallent | OUT | 1:20:02 |
8th | Bertrand Moulinet | FRA | 1:20:12 |
August 4, 2012, 6:00 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
André Höhne GER (1:22:02 h / 21st)
All Russian walkers were disqualified for doping offenses in this competition as well as in the 50 km walk . These were Valery Borchin , who gave up the competition a few kilometers from the finish, Vladimir Kanaikin , who had also given up the competition, and Andrei Krivov , who had been disqualified for violating the walking rules.
50 km of walking
space | athlete | country | Time (h) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jared Tallent | OUT | 3:36:53 OR |
2 | Si Tianfeng | CHN | 3:37:16 |
3 | Robert Heffernan | IRL | 3:37:54 NO |
4th | Li Jianbo | CHN | 3:39:01 |
5 | Matej Tóth | SVK | 3:41:24 |
6th | Łukasz Nowak | POLE | 3:42:47 |
7th | Koichiro Morioka | JPN | 3:43:14 |
8th | André Höhne | GER | 3:46:26 |
August 11, 2012, 10:00 a.m. (CEST)
German participants:
André Höhne GER (3:44:26 h / 8th)
Christopher Linke GER (3:49:19 h / 21st)
All Russians were stripped of their medals and placements because of doping offenses , as they had already done for the 20 km walk in this competition. These were Sergei Kirdjapkin , who was first to cross the finish line, as well as Igor Jerochin and Sergei Bakulin , who initially came fifth and sixth .
high jump
space | athlete | country | Height (m) |
---|---|---|---|
DSQ |
|
|
|
2 | Erik Kynard | United States | 2.33 |
3 | Robert Grabarz | GBR | 2.29 |
Mutaz Essa Barshim | QAT | ||
Derek Drouin | CAN | ||
6th | Jamie Nieto | United States | 2.29 |
7th | Bohdan Bondarenko | UKR | 2.29 |
8th | Michael Mason | CAN | 2.29 |
Final: August 7, 2012, 8:00 p.m. (CEST)
Iwan Uchow won the gold medal, but was subsequently convicted of doping in February 2019 and banned for four years. Its results between July 16, 2012 and December 31, 2015 have been canceled.
Pole vault
space | athlete | country | Height (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Renaud Lavillenie | FRA | 5.97 OR |
2 | Bjorn Otto | GER | 5.91 |
3 | Raphael Holzdeppe | GER | 5.91 |
4th | Dmitri Starodubtsev | RUS | 5.75 |
5 | Steven Lewis | GBR | 5.75 |
Yevgeny Lukyanenko | RUS | ||
7th | Konstandinos Filippidis | GRE | 5.65 |
8th | Jan Kudlička | CZE | 5.65 |
Final: August 10, 2012, 8:00 p.m. (CEST)
Another German participant:
Malte Mohr GER (5.50 m / 9th in the final)
The Ukrainian Maksym Masuryk was subsequently disqualified in 2016 after dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was found during the examination of his doping sample .
Long jump
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Greg Rutherford | GBR | 8.31 |
2 | Mitchell Watts | OUT | 8.16 |
3 | Will Claye | United States | 8.12 |
4th | Michel Tornéus | SWE | 8.11 |
5 | Sebastian Bayer | GER | 8.10 |
6th | Christopher Tomlinson | GBR | 8.07 |
7th | Mauro Vinícius da Silva | BRA | 8.01 |
8th | Godfrey Khotso Mokoena | RSA | 7.93 |
Final: August 4, 2012, 8:55 pm (CEST)
Other German participants:
Christian Reif GER (7.92 m / eliminated 9th in his qualification group)
Alyn Camara GER (7.72 m / eliminated 13th in his qualification group)
Triple jump
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Christian Taylor | United States | 17.81 |
2 | Will Claye | United States | 17.62 |
3 | Fabrizio Donato | ITA | 17.48 |
4th | Daniele Greco | ITA | 17.34 |
5 | Leevan Sands | BAH | 17.19 |
6th | Benjamin Compaoré | FRA | 17.08 |
7th | Tosin Oke | NGR | 16.95 |
8th | Alexis Copello | CUB | 16.92 |
Final: August 9, 2012, 8:20 p.m. (CEST)
Shot put
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Tomasz Majewski | POLE | 21.89 |
2 | David Storl | GER | 21.86 |
3 | Reese Hoffa | United States | 21.23 |
4th | Christian Cantwell | United States | 21.19 |
5 | Dylan Armstrong | CAN | 20.93 |
6th | German Lauro | ARG | 20.84 NO |
7th | Asmir Kolašinac | SRB | 20.71 |
8th | Pavel Lyschyn | BLR | 20.69 |
Final: August 3, 2012, 9:30 p.m. (CEST)
Another German participant:
Ralf Bartels GER (20.00 m / eliminated as 7th in his qualification group)
The Belarusian Andrej Michnewitsch , bronze medalist from Beijing , finished eighth in the qualification with 19.89 m and was thus eliminated. At the beginning of March 2013, traces of prohibited substances were found in a sample from the 2005 World Championships in a subsequent doping test . In July 2013, the IAAF confirmed a lifelong ban, which was subsequently imposed by the disciplinary commission of the Belarusian anti-doping agency.
Discus throw
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Robert Harting | GER | 68.27 |
2 | Ehsan Hadadi | IRI | 68.18 |
3 | Gerd Kanter | EST | 68.03 |
4th | Virgilijus Alekna | LTU | 67.38 |
5 | Piotr Małachowski | POLE | 67.19 |
6th | Martin Wierig | GER | 65.85 |
7th | Frank Casañas | ESP | 65.56 |
8th | Vikas Gowda | IND | 64.79 |
Final: August 7, 2012, 8:45 p.m. (CEST)
Another German participant:
Markus Münch GER (59.95 m / eliminated as 14th in his qualification group)
Austrian participant:
Gerhard Mayer AUT (60.81 m / eliminated as 14th in his qualification group)
Hammer throw
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Krisztián Pars | HUN | 80.59 |
2 | Primož Kozmus | SLO | 79.36 |
3 | Kōji Murofushi | JPN | 78.71 |
4th | Oleksiy Sokyrskyi | UKR | 78.25 |
5 | Kirill Ikonnikow | RUS | 77.86 |
6th | Lukáš Melich | CZE | 77.17 |
7th | Szymon Ziółkowski | POLE | 77.10 |
8th | Nicola Vizzoni | ITA | 76.07 |
Final: August 5, 2012, 9:20 p.m. (CEST)
There were three doping cases in this discipline: The Belarusian Iwan Zichan , who had already been repeatedly affected by the withdrawal of his illegally won medals due to doping, was not even allowed to travel to the games after positive doping tests.
The Belarusian Pavel Kryvitski , who was eliminated in the qualification, was subsequently disqualified by the IOC . During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substances dehydrochloromethyltestosterone and stanozolol were found .
The Russian Kirill Ikonnikow , who was initially fifth in the final, was also subsequently disqualified by the IOC for doping abuse. During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substance dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was detected.
Javelin throw
space | athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Keshorn Walcott | TTO | 84.58 NO |
2 | Antti Ruuskanen | FIN | 84.12 |
3 | Vítězslav Veselý | CZE | 83.34 |
4th | Tero Pitkämäki | FIN | 82.80 |
5 | Andreas Thorkildsen | NOR | 82.63 |
6th | Spiridon Lebesis | GRE | 81.91 |
7th | Tino Häber | GER | 81.21 |
8th | Stuart Farquhar | NZL | 80.22 |
Final: August 11, 2012, 8:20 p.m. (CEST)
Another German participant:
Matthias de Zordo GER (no valid attempt in qualification)
The Ukrainian Oleksandr Pjatnyzja , who initially came in second , was exposed as a doping offender in 2016 and subsequently disqualified. During follow-up examinations of his doping test, the prohibited substance dehydrochloromethyltestosterone was detected.
Decathlon
space | athlete | country | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Ashton Eaton | United States | 8869 |
2 | Trey Hardee | United States | 8671 |
3 | Leonel Suarez | CUB | 8523 |
4th | Hans Van Alphen | BEL | 8447 |
5 | Damian Warner | CAN | 8442 |
6th | Rico Freimuth | GER | 8320 |
7th | Oleksiy Kasyanov | UKR | 8283 |
8th | Sergei Swiridov | RUS | 8219 |
8/9 August 2012, 10:00 a.m. (CEST)
Other German participants:
Pascal Behrenbruch GER (8126 points / 10.)
Jan Felix Knobel GER (injured, canceled)
Results women
100 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce | JAM | 10.75 |
2 | Carmelita Jeter | United States | 10.78 |
3 | Veronica Campbell-Brown | JAM | 10.81 |
4th | Tianna Madison | United States | 10.85 |
5 | Allyson Felix | United States | 10.89 |
6th | Kelly-Ann Baptiste | TTO | 10.94 |
7th | Murielle Ahouré | CIV | 11.00 |
8th | Blessing Okagbare | NGR | 11.01 |
Final: August 4th, 2012, 10:55 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: +1.5 m / s
German participants:
Verena Sailer GER (11.25 s / eliminated as 6th of her semi-finals)
Tatjana Pinto GER (11.39 s / eliminated as 4th of her preliminary run)
Sprinter Tameka Williams from St. Kitts and Nevis admitted taking banned drugs after a positive test and had to leave the Olympic village before the start of the competitions.
200 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Allyson Felix | United States | 21.88 |
2 | Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce | JAM | 22.09 |
3 | Carmelita Jeter | United States | 22.14 |
4th | Veronica Campbell-Brown | JAM | 22.38 |
5 | Sanya Richards-Ross | United States | 22.39 |
6th | Murielle Ahouré | CIV | 22.57 |
7th | Myriam Soumaré | FRA | 22.63 |
8th | Semoy Hackett | TTO | 22.87 |
Final: August 8, 2012, 10:00 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: −0.2 m / s
Swiss participant:
Léa Sprunger SUI (23.27 s / eliminated 4th in her preliminary run)
Sprinter Tameka Williams from St. Kitts and Nevis admitted taking banned drugs after a positive test and had to leave the Olympic village .
400 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sanya Richards-Ross | United States | 49.55 |
2 | Christine Ohuruogu | GBR | 49.70 |
3 | DeeDee Trotter | United States | 49.72 |
4th | Amantle Montsho | BOT | 49.75 |
5 | Novlene Williams-Mills | JAM | 50.11 |
6th | Antonina Kriwoschapka | RUS | 50.17 |
7th | Francena McCorory | United States | 50.33 |
8th | Rosemarie Whyte | JAM | 50.79 |
Final: August 5, 2012, 10:10 p.m. (CEST)
800 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Caster Semenya | RSA | 1: 57.23 |
2 | Ekaterina Poistogova | RUS | 1: 57.53 |
3 | Pamela Jelimo | KEN | 1: 57.59 |
4th | Alysia Montaño | United States | 1: 57.93 |
5 | Francine Niyonsaba | BDI | 1: 59.63 |
5 | Janeth Jepkosgei Busienei | KEN | 2: 00.19 |
DSQ | Elena Arshakova | RUS | |
Maria Savinova | RUS |
Final: August 11, 2012, 9:00 p.m. (CEST)
There were two doped finalists in this competition.
In 2013, Jelena Arshakova , who originally took sixth place, was banned from her biological passport due to abnormal values. Your result was subsequently canceled.
In February 2017, the Russian Marija Savinova was also stripped of her gold medal from the CAS because of doping abuse. The Russian Ekaterina Poistogowa, who was later banned for two years for doping abuse, received silver.
1500 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Maryam Yusuf Jamal | BRN | 4: 10.74 |
2 | Tatiana Tomaschowa | RUS | 4: 10.90 |
3 | Ababa Aregawi | ETH | 4: 11.03 |
4th | Shannon Rowbury | United States | 4: 11.26 |
5 | Lucia Klocová | SVK | 4: 12.64 |
6th | Lisa Dobriskey | United States | 4: 13.02 |
7th | Laura Weightman | GBR | 4: 15.60 |
8th | Bright Obiri | KEN | 4: 16.57 |
Final: August 10, 2012, 9:55 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Corinna Harrer GER (4: 05.70 min / eliminated as 5th in her semi-final)
There were a total of five doping cases for this discipline, four of which concerned finalists:
The Moroccan Mariem Alaoui Selsouli was banned for doping shortly before the games.
In May 2013 it became public that Aslı Çakır Alptekin , who crossed the finish line first with 4: 10.23 min, had blood values that indicate doping. Since the Turkish federation did not impose a ban, the IAAF sued the international sports court CAS. The athlete was suspended for eight years in August 2015, and her results from July 29, 2010 were canceled.
Two further doping cases became known, the sinners were subsequently disqualified, the Belarusian Natallja Karejwa after manipulating her biological passport - ban until August 2016, cancellation of her results since 2010 - as well as the Russian Ekaterina Kostezkaja , who became conspicuous in August 2011 - ban until January 2015 , Deletion of their results since 2011.
At the end of March 2017, the first winner, Gamze Bulut, from Turkey, was banned from the IAAF because of blood irregularities in her blood passport, and her Olympic victory was revoked.
5000 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Meseret Defar | ETH | 15: 04.25 |
2 | Vivian Cheruiyot | KEN | 15: 04.73 |
3 | Tirunesh Dibaba | ETH | 15: 05.15 |
4th | Sally Kipyego | KEN | 15: 05.79 |
5 | Wear burqa | ETH | 15: 10.66 |
6th | Viola Jelagat Kibiwot | KEN | 15: 11.59 |
7th | Joanne Pavey | GBR | 15: 12.72 |
8th | Julia Bleasdale | GBR | 15: 14.55 |
Final: August 10, 2012, 9:05 p.m. (CEST)
10,000 m
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Tirunesh Dibaba | ETH | 30: 20.75 |
2 | Sally Kipyego | KEN | 30: 26.37 |
3 | Vivian Cheruiyot | KEN | 30: 30.44 |
4th | Werknesh Kidane | ETH | 30: 39.38 |
5 | Belaynesh Oljira | ETH | 30: 45.56 |
6th | Shitaye Eshete | BRN | 30: 47.25 NO |
7th | Joanne Pavey | GBR | 30: 53.20 |
8th | Julia Bleasdale | GBR | 30: 55.63 |
August 3, 2012, 10:25 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Sabrina Mockenhaupt GER (31: 50.35 min / 17th in the final)
The Russian Yelisaveta Grechischnikowa , who initially came in nineteenth , was convicted of doping in 2013 and banned until August 2015, all of her results since August 2009 have been canceled.
marathon
space | Athlete | country | Time (h) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Tiki Gelana | ETH | 2:23:07 OR |
2 | Priscah Jeptoo | KEN | 2:23:12 |
3 | Tatiana Petrova | RUS | 2:23:29 |
4th | Mary Jepkosgei Keitany | KEN | 2:23:56 |
5 | Tetjana Hamera-Schmyrko | UKR | 2:24:32 NO |
6th | Zhu Xiaolin | CHN | 2:24:48 |
7th | Jéssica Augusto | POR | 2:25:11 |
8th | Valeria Straneo | ITA | 2:25:27 |
August 5, 2012, 12:00 p.m. (CEST)
German participants:
Irina Mikitenko GER (2:26:44 h / 14th)
Susanne Hahn GER (2:30:22 h / 32nd)
Swiss participant:
Maja Neuenschwander SUI (2:34:50 h / 53rd)
Austrian participant:
Andrea Mayr AUT (2:34:51 h / 54th)
100 m hurdles
space | Athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sally Pearson | OUT | 12.35 OR |
2 | Dawn Harper | United States | 12.37 |
3 | Kellie Wells | United States | 12.48 |
4th | LoLo Jones | United States | 12.58 |
5 | Phylicia George | CAN | 12.65 |
6th | Jessica Zelinka | CAN | 12.69 |
7th | Beate scrap | AUT | 13.07 |
DSQ | Nevin Yanıt | DOOR |
Final: August 7, 2012, 10:10 p.m. (CEST)
Wind: −0.2 m / s
German participants:
Cindy Roleder GER (13.02 s / 7th of her semifinals)
Carolin Nytra GER (13.31 s / 7th of her semifinals)
Swiss participant:
Noemi Zbären SUI (13.33 s / 6th of their lead)
The Turkish Nevin Yanıt, who initially came in fifth, was convicted of doping with stanozolol and testosterone in August 2013 and banned for three years. Your results have been retroactively canceled from June 28, 2012.
400 m hurdles
space | Athlete | country | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Natalja Antjuch | RUS | 52.70 |
2 | Lashinda Demus | United States | 52.77 |
3 | Zuzana Hejnová | CZE | 53.38 |
4th | Kaliese Spencer | JAM | 53.66 |
5 | Georganne Moline | United States | 53.92 |
6th | T'erea Brown | United States | 55.07 |
7th | Denisa Rosolová | CZE | 55.27 |
8th | Muizat Ajoke Odumosu | NGR | 55.31 |
Final: August 8, 2012, 8:45 p.m. (CEST)
The Syrian participant Ghofrane Mohamed (often also called Ghfran Almouhamad) tested positive for methylhexanamine after her race, which resulted in a six-month ban.
3000 m obstacle
space | Athlete | country | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Habiba Ghribi | TO DO | 9: 08.37 NO |
2 | Sofia Assefa | ETH | 9: 09.84 |
3 | Milcah Chemos Cheywa | KEN | 9: 09.88 |
4th | Hiwot Ayalew | ETH | 9: 12.98 |
5 | Etenesh Diro | ETH | 9: 19.89 PB |
6th | Antje Möldner-Schmidt | GER | 9: 21.78 SB |
7th | Gesa Felicitas Krause | GER | 9: 23.52 PB |
8th | Emma Coburn | United States | 9: 23.54 PB |
Final: August 6, 2012, 10:05 p.m. (CEST)
There were four doping-related disqualifications:
The original Russian first place winner , Julija Saripowa , was retroactively stripped of the gold medal for doping abuse in 2016.
The ranking of the Spaniard Marta Domínguez , who came in twelfth place , was deleted because she had also been convicted of doping abuse.
In May 2015, the Ukrainian Switlana Schmidt - eliminated in eleventh place in the third round - was subsequently disqualified due to abnormalities in her biological passport . The Turkish woman Binnaz Uslu - who finished last in the first run - received a lifelong ban in 2014 for repeated doping, which came into effect retrospectively from August 30, 2011.
4 × 100 m relay
space | country | Athletes | Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | United States |
Tianna Madison Allyson Felix Bianca Knight Carmelita Jeter in the lead also: Jeneba Tarmoh Lauryn Williams |
40.82 WR |
2 | Jamaica |
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce Sherone Simpson Veronica Campbell-Brown Kerron Stewart in the lead also: Samantha Henry-Robinson Schillonie Calvert |
41.41 NO |
3 | Ukraine |
Olessja Powch Chrystyna Stuj Marija Rjemjen Jelysaveta Bryshina |
42.04 NO |
4th | Nigeria |
Christy Udoh Gloria Asumnu Oludamola Osayomi Blessing Okagbare |
42.64 |
5 | Germany |
Leena Günther Anne Cibis Tatjana Pinto Verena Sailer |
42.67 |
6th | Netherlands |
Kadene Vassel Dafne Schippers Eva Lubbers Jamile Samuel |
42.70 |
7th | Brazil |
Ana Cláudia Silva Franciela Krasucki Evelyn Dos Santos Rosângela Santos |
42.91 |
DNF | Trinidad and Tobago |
Michelle-Lee Ahye Kelly-Ann Baptiste Kai Selvon Semoy Hackett |
Final: August 10, 2012, 9:40 p.m. (CEST)
Switzerland (43.54 s / 7th of their lead)
4 × 400 m relay
space | country | Athletes | Time (min) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | United States |
DeeDee Trotter Allyson Felix Francena McCorory Sanya Richards-Ross in the lead also: Keshia Baker Diamond Dixon |
3: 16.87 |
2 | Jamaica |
Christine Day Rosemarie Whyte Shericka Williams Novlene Williams-Mills in advance also: Shareefa Lloyd |
3: 20.95 |
3 | Ukraine |
Alina Lohwynenko Olha Semljak Hanna Jaroschtschuk Natalija Pyhyda |
3: 23.57 |
4th | Great Britain |
Shana Cox Lee McConnell Perri Shakes-Drayton Christine Ohuruogu in advance also: Eilidh Doyle |
3: 24.76 |
5 | France |
Phara Anacharsis Muriel Hurtis Marie Gayot Floria Gueï |
3: 25.92 |
6th | Czech Republic |
Denisa Rosolová Zuzana Bergrová Jitka Bartoničková Zuzana Hejnová |
3: 27.77 |
DSQ | Nigeria |
Omolare Omotosho Muizat Ajike Odumosum Regina George Bukola Abogunloko in the preliminary also: Idara Otu |
|
DSQ | Russia |
Julija Guschtschina Antonina Kriwoschapka Tatjana Firowa Natalja Antjuch in the lead-up also: Natalja Nasarowa Anastassja Kapatschinskaja |
Final: August 11, 2012, 9:25 p.m. (CEST)
Germany (3: 31.06 min / 8th of their lead time)
On February 1, 2017, the IOC announced that Russian runner Antonina Kriwoschapka had tested positive during follow-up checks. The prohibited substance is the anabolic steroid dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (Turinabol). Thus the Russian relay runners lost their medals, Jamaica moved up to silver and Ukraine to bronze.
On November 30, 2017, the IOC announced that Natalia Nazarova , who had been used in the preliminary phase, had also been convicted of dehydrochloromethyltestosterone during follow-up tests.
20 km walking
space | Athlete | country | Time (h) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Elena Laschmanova | RUS | 1:25:02 WR |
2 | Qoijing Gyi | CHN | 1:25:16 AS |
3 | Liu Hong | CHN | 1:26:00 |
4th | Anissja Kirdjapkina | RUS | 1:26:26 |
5 | Lü Xiuzhi | CHN | 1:27:10 |
6th | Elisa Rigaudo | ITA | 1:27:36 |
7th | Beatrice Pascual | ESP | 1:27:56 |
8th | Ana Cabecinha | POR | 1:28:03 |
August 11, 2012, 6:00 p.m. (CEST)
German participants:
Melanie Seeger GER (1:30:44 h / 19th)
Sabine Krantz GER ( DNF )
In 2016, the Russian Olga Kaniskina (silver) was subsequently convicted of doping abuse and disqualified.
high jump
space | Athlete | country | Height (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Anna Chicherova | RUS | 2.05 |
2 | Brigetta Barrett | United States | 2.03 |
3 | Svetlana Schkolina | RUS | 2.03 |
4th | Ruth Beitia | ESP | 2.00 |
5 | Tia Hellebaut | BEL | 1.97 |
6th | Chaunté Lowe | United States | 1.97 |
7th | Svetlana Radzivil | UZB | 1.97 |
8th | Emma Green Tregaro | SWE | 1.93 |
Final: August 11, 2012, 8:00 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Ariane Friedrich GER (1.93 m / eliminated as 8th in her qualification group)
Pole vault
space | Athlete | country | Height (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jennifer Suhr | United States | 4.75 |
2 | Yarisley Silva | CUB | 4.75 NRe |
3 | Elena Isinbayeva | RUS | 4.70 |
4th | Silke Spiegelburg | GER | 4.65 |
5 | Martina Strutz | GER | 4.55 |
6th | Lisa Ryzih | GER | 4.45 |
Jiřina Ptáčníková | CZE | ||
Holly Bleasdale | GBR |
Final: August 6, 2012, 8:00 p.m. (CEST)
Swiss participant:
Nicole Büchler SUI (4.25 m / 11th in her qualification group)
Long jump
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Brittney Reese | United States | 7.12 |
2 | Elena Sokolova | RUS | 7.07 |
3 | Janay DeLoach | United States | 6.89 |
4th | Ineta Radēviča | LAT | 6.88 |
5 | Lyudmila Kolchanova | RUS | 6.76 |
6th | Éloyse Lesueur | FRA | 6.67 |
7th | Shara Proctor | GBR | 6.55 |
8th | Veranika Shutkova | BLR | 6.54 |
Final: August 8, 2012, 9:05 p.m. (CEST)
German participant:
Sosthene Moguenara GER (6.23 m / 10th of her qualification group)
Swiss participant:
Irene Pusterla SUI (6.20 m / 12th in her qualification group)
There were three doping cases in this discipline:
The originally fifth-placed Russian Anna Nasarowa was convicted of doping abuse using dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (Oral-Turinabol), which resulted in her disqualification.
Belarusian Nastassja Mirontschyk-Ivanova , who originally came in seventh, was disqualified after a positive doping test.
The Turkish Karin Melis Mey qualified for the final was excluded from the final because of a doping test that tested positive at the 2012 European Championships in Helsinki . The IAAF World Athletics Federation learned of the athlete's doping violation too late to prevent participation in the long jump qualification in London.
Even before the games, the Greek Paraskevi Papachristou was banned from the Greek NOK because of a racist comment on Twitter .
A fourth doping case could arise in fourth-placed Radēviča, because in November 2018 she was provisionally suspended because the prohibited substance oxandrolone was detected in her in a subsequent sample .
Triple jump
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Olga Rypakova | KAZ | 14.98 |
2 | Caterine Ibargüen | COL | 14.80 |
3 | Olha Saladucha | UKR | 14.79 |
4th | Hanna Knjasjewa | UKR | 14.56 |
5 | Yamilé Aldama | GBR | 14.48 |
6th | Kimberly Williams | JAM | 14.48 |
7th | Trecia Smith | JAM | 14.35 |
8th | Yargelis Savigne | Cuba | 14.12 |
Final: August 5, 2012, 8:35 p.m. (CEST)
In March 2017, the Russian Viktorija Valyukevich , who initially ranked eighth, was subsequently disqualified for doping abuse.
Shot put
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Valerie Adams | NZL | 20.70 |
2 | Gong Lijiao | CHN | 20.22 |
3 | Li Ling | CHN | 19.63 |
4th | Michelle Carter | United States | 19.42 |
5 | Liu Xiangrong | CHN | 19.18 |
6th | Geisa Arcanjo | BRA | 19.02 |
7th | Irina Tarasova | RUS | 19.00 |
8th | Natalia Duco | CHI | 18.80 |
Final: August 6, 2012, 8:15 p.m. (CEST)
German participants:
Christina Schwanitz GER (18.47 m / 9th in the final)
Nadine Kleinert GER (18.36 m / eliminated as 7th in her qualification group)
Josephine Terlecki GER (17.78 m / eliminated as 8th in her qualification group)
On August 13, 2012, the Belarusian Nadseja Astaptschuk (21.36 m) was stripped of the gold medal for doping abuse. She had tested positive for anabolic steroids twice.
In August 2016, the originally second-placed Russian Jewgenija Kolodko was also stripped of the medal because she was also doped.
Discus throw
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sandra Perković | CRO | 69.11 NO |
2 | Li Yanfeng | CHN | 67.22 |
3 | Yarelys Barrios | CUB | 66.38 |
4th | Nadine Müller | GER | 65.94 |
5 | Mélina Robert-Michon | FRA | 63.98 |
6th | Krishna Poonia | IND | 63.62 |
7th | Stephanie Brown Trafton | United States | 63.01 |
8th | Zinaida Sendriuté | LTU | 61.68 |
Final: August 4, 2012, 8:30 p.m. (CEST)
Other German participants:
Anna Rüh GER (61.36 m / 9th in the final)
Julia Fischer GER (60.23 m / eliminated as 8th in her qualification group)
The initially second-placed Russian Darja Pishchalnikova was stripped of her silver medal after a positive doping test. As a repeat offender, she was banned from the Russian athletics association WFLA for ten years.
Hammer throw
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Anita Włodarczyk | POLE | 77.60 OR |
2 | Betty Heidler | GER | 77.12 |
3 | Zhang Wenxiu | CHN | 76.34 |
4th | Kathrin Klaas | GER | 76.05 |
5 | Yipsi Moreno | CUB | 74.60 |
6th | Stéphanie Falzon | FRA | 73.06 |
7th | Joanna Fiodorov | POLE | 72.37 |
8th | Sophie Hitchon | GBR | 69.33 |
Final: August 10, 2012, 8:35 p.m. (CEST)
Betty Heidler's width in the fifth attempt was initially not taken into account due to a software error. The distance was not accepted by the electronic measuring system because it exactly matched the distance of Lyssenko throwing in front of her and was therefore interpreted as a fault of the referee. For Heidler, the distance of the athlete throwing after her was registered. The width of 77.12 m could only be confirmed by re-measuring by hand.
There were six doping cases in this competition. This affected four of the finalists and one athlete who had left the qualification. In addition, a female thrower had already been removed from her team before the competition due to doping.
In October 2016, the original gold medalist Tatiana Lysenko from Russia was stripped of her medal for doping.
The initially sixth-placed Belarusian Aksana Mjankowa was disqualified for violating the doping regulations as in 2008 .
Moldovan Zalina Petrivskaya was also deprived of her seventh place due to doping abuse.
Marija Bespalowa , also from Russia, initially placed tenth. She was banned from competitions for four years because of steroid doping and her result was annulled.
Gulfija Chanafejewa , another Russian, was eliminated in the qualification. Her result from the London Games was canceled after a positive doping test.
Marina Marghieva from the Republic of Moldova was removed from her Olympic team after a positive doping test before the start of the Games .
Javelin throw
space | Athlete | country | Width (m) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Barbora Špotáková | CZE | 69.55 |
2 | Christina Obergföll | GER | 65.16 |
3 | Linda Stahl | GER | 64.91 |
4th | Sunette Viljoen | RSA | 64.53 |
5 | Lu Huihui | CHN | 63.70 |
6th | Katharina Molitor | GER | 62.89 |
7th | Martina Ratej | SLO | 61.62 |
8th | Madara Palameika | LAT | 60.73 |
Final: August 9, 2012, 10:00 p.m. (CEST)
Austrian participant:
Elisabeth Eberl AUT (49.66 m / retired as 17th in her qualification group)
Heptathlon
space | Athlete | country | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jessica Ennis | GBR | 6955 NO |
2 | Lilli Schwarzkopf | GER | 6649 |
3 | Austra Skujytė | LTU | 6599 |
4th | Antoinette Nana Djimou Ida | FRA | 6576 |
5 | Jessica Zelinka | CAN | 6480 |
6th | Kristina Savitskaya | RUS | 6452 |
7th | Laura Ikauniece | LAT | 6414 |
8th | Hanna Kasyanova | UKR | 6392 |
3rd / 4th August 2012
Other German participants:
Jennifer Oeser GER (5455 points / 30.)
Julia Mächtig GER (5338 points / 31st)
Austrian participant:
Ivona Dadic AUT (5935 points / 25th)
Swiss participant:
Ellen Sprunger SUI (6107 points / 19th)
Lilli Schwarzkopf was initially disqualified for allegedly touching the lane marking in the 800-meter run. However, when reviewing the video, it turned out that her foot had been mistakenly assigned to another athlete.
The originally fourth-placed Ukrainian Ljudmyla Jossypenko was subsequently disqualified for doping in 2013 and suspended for five years.
On November 29, 2016, bronze medalist Tatyana Chernova also lost her medal for violating the doping regulations.
Web links
- The XXX Olympic Games on the IAAF website , accessed September 25, 2018
- Results: The XXX Olympic Games on the IAAF website, accessed on September 25, 2018
- Official result book Athletics , official results of the IOC, accessed September 25, 2018
- Athletics at the 2012 London Summer Games from the Sports-Reference.com database, accessed September 25, 2018
- London 2012: Brits are at their best rio.sportschau.de, accessed on September 25, 2018
- IAAF doping, system doping Russia and progress on nolympia.de August 10, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- Third round, last round and final spurt Süddeutsche Zeitung April 5, 2016, accessed on September 25, 2018
- Visit the Gehermacher on taz.de, accessed on September 25, 2018
- Machinations like in cycling 20 years ago , Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung August 2, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
Video
- The Olympic Games in Review Leichtathletik.de August 13, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ False flag at Olympia , ntv July 26, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ London 2012 - Olympiastadion , Peter Popp and Emilia Margaretha on detail.de, July 27, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ IAAF: Qualification System - Games of the XXX Olympiad ( Memento from October 23, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 118 kB)
- ↑ IAAF: Entry Standards ( Memento of October 23, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 13 kB)
- ↑ a b c d US relay has to return Olympic medals , Süddeutsche Zeitung May 13, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b c US relay loses silver medal on sport1.de, May 14, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Colombian runner excluded , RP Online, August 12, 2012, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Laalou excluded because of doping , RP Online, August 3, 2012, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping "Aufdecker" is happy about partial success , derStandard (Austria), August 5, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Message on France 24 from August 10, 2012 (English) ( Memento of the original from January 23, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b List of doping offenders at the Olympic Games in the SportsReference database , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Report from the Associated Press news agency dated November 22, 2013 , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Valeriy Borchin ( Memento of the original from September 8, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. magazinos.com, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Drastic penalties for Russian Olympic champions , Süddeutsche Zeitung January 20, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b CAS confirms sanctions for Russia's Evdokimova & Krivov , Sports Integrity Initiative August 14, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: Russian walker Kirdjapkin loses Olympic gold , Süddeutsche Zeitung March 24, 2016, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Olympic participants: blood pass leads to doping ban , Westfälische Nachrichten September 24, 2013, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: The sixth Russian Olympic goer from 2012 also banned , Die Presse August 8, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b IOC report of October 18, 2016 (English) , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Communication from the IAAF of July 31, 2013 (English / French) , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping fraudster Tichon wins silver , ntv, August 20, 2016, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b IOC announcement of August 9, 2016 (English), accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Report in the Sputniknews portal from October 27, 2016 (English), accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Because of doping: Pyatnyzja loses medal , Kicker online August 10, 2016; accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b c Doping: Sprinter from St. Kitts & Nevis blocked Frankfurter Rundschau July 29, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) imposes four-year period of ineligibility on Russian athlete Mariya Savinova-Farnosova , International Court of Sport CAS February 10, 2017, English (PDF; 210 kB), accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Caster Semenya in line for 2012 800-meter gold after Mariya Savinova banned. on espn.com. February 10, 2017 (English), accessed September 25, 2018.
- ↑ a b 2012: Prominent doping case from Morocco: Mariem Alaoui Selsouli on sportschau.de August 17, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b London Olympic 1,500m champion Asli Cakir Alptekin facing life ban after doping charge by Simon Hart, in: The Daily Telegraph . May 3, 2013, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Turkey’s Asli Cakir Alptekin stripped of Olympic 1500m title for doping , in: The Guardian , August 17, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b c Fraudsters betrayed, desperate victims Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung March 8, 2016, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping - new winner Bulut also has to hand in Olympic gold , Hamburger Abendblatt from March 29, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Report on SportingLive from October 25, 2013 (English) , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b CAS press release , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Report on YönHaber from July 1, 2015 (Turkish.) , Accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b IAAF News 139 at iaaf.org December 18, 2012, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: Saripowa loses obstacle gold , evening newspaper November 21, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: Runner Dominguez loses her world title , spiegel.de from November 20, 2015, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping History of: Binnaz Uslu on olympicgamesstats.com, updated: September 22, 2018 (English), accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping overshadows Turkish athletics Daily Sabah of August 20, 2015 (English), accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b IOC Sanctions three Athletes for Failing Anti-Doping Test at London 2012 , IOC Olympic News , February 1, 2017, accessed September 6, 2018
- ↑ a b Pamela Ruprecht: Flash-News of the day - Follow-up tests from London 2012: Nazarova and Gushchina disqualified , notes, from November 30, 2017, accessed on September 6, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping verdict Russian walkers have to hand in medals . In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung . March 24, 2016, ISSN 0174-4909 ( faz.net [accessed September 6, 2018]).
- ↑ a b Russian women Nazarova and Guschtschina disqualified Focus online November 13, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b c d IOC sanctions seven athletes for failing anti-doping tests at Beijing 2008 and London 2012 , on olympic.org, November 25, 2016, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Focus Online on September 19, 2012 , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Three more Russian women doped at the 2012 Olympics on orf.at March 22, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Shot putter Ostaptschuk loses Gold Focus online August 13, 2012, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Because of doping at the 2012 Olympics: IOC disqualifies Yevgenia Kolodko. IOC disqualifies Russian silver winner www.spox.com. August 20, 2016; accessed on August 21, 2016
- ↑ a b Doping: Olympic runner-up Pishchalnikova banned Frankfurter Rundschau April 30, 2013; accessed on August 21, 2016
- ↑ a b Painful silver for Betty Heidler . on tagesspiegel.de, December 24, 2018, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b All-time women's hammer throw . performances annulled due to doping offense (No. 30) on alltime-athletics.com, May 27, 2018, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Five athletes suspended for doping - WADA report. Süddeutsche Zeitung , November 5, 2015, accessed on August 25, 2020 . .
- ↑ a b IOC disqualifies four Russian athletes on tz.de March 30, 2017, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: Hammer thrower from Moldova tested positive . Focus online, August 3, 2012, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Doping: CAS confirms ban against heptathlete Chernova ( memento of the original from September 7, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Time online, July 18, 2017, accessed September 25, 2018
- ↑ a b Flash-News from September 25, 2013 - Two Olympic athletes blocked after blood passport control on Leichtathletik.de, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ CAS bans twelve Russian athletes around Olympic champion Ivan Ukhov. October 14, 2019, accessed January 2, 2019 .
- ↑ Medal upgrade for two Russian Doper women RP online August 29, 2018, accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ Hamburger Abendblatt on July 26, 2012 , accessed on September 25, 2018
- ↑ Pamela Lechner: Flash News of the Day - Four years of doping ban for Kipyegon bed ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Notes, from: Leichtathletik.de, November 24, 2018, accessed on November 26, 2018