Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics

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Athletics at the
2000 Summer Olympics
Athletics pictogram.svg
Track events
100 m   men   women
200 m men women
400 m men women
800 m men women
1500 m men women
5000 m men women
10,000 m men women
100 m hurdles women
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men women
3000 m
steeplechase
men
4×100 m relay men women
4×400 m relay men women
Road events
Marathon men women
20 km walk men women
50 km walk men
Field events
Long jump men women
Triple jump men women
High jump men women
Pole vault men women
Shot put men women
Discus throw men women
Javelin throw men women
Hammer throw men women
Combined events
Heptathlon women
Decathlon men
Wheelchair races

At the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, 46 events in athletics were contested, 24 for men and 22 for women. There were a total number of 2134 participating athletes from 193 countries.

Medal summary

Men

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Maurice Greene
 United States
9.87 Ato Boldon
 Trinidad and Tobago
9.99 Obadele Thompson
 Barbados
10.04
200 metres
details
Konstantinos Kenteris
 Greece
20.09 Darren Campbell
 Great Britain
20.14 Ato Boldon
 Trinidad and Tobago
20.20
400 metres
details
Michael Johnson
 United States
43.84 Alvin Harrison
 United States
44.40 Greg Haughton
 Jamaica
44.70
800 metres
details
Nils Schumann
 Germany
1:45.08 Wilson Kipketer
 Denmark
1:45.14 Djabir Saïd-Guerni
 Algeria
1:45.16
1500 metres
details
Noah Ngeny
 Kenya
3:32.07
(OR)
Hicham El Guerrouj
 Morocco
3:32:32 Bernard Lagat
 Kenya
3:32.44
5000 metres
details
Million Wolde
23x15px Ethiopia
13:35.49 Ali Saïdi-Sief
 Algeria
13:36.20 Brahim Lahlafi
 Morocco
13:36.47
10,000 metres
details
Haile Gebrselassie
23x15px Ethiopia
27:18.20 Paul Tergat
 Kenya
27:18.29 Assefa Mezgebu
23x15px Ethiopia
27:19.75
110 metres hurdles
details
Anier Garcia
 Cuba
13.00 Terrence Trammell
 United States
13.16 Mark Crear
 United States
13.22
400 metres hurdles
details
Angelo Taylor
 United States
47.50 Hadi Al-Somaily
 Saudi Arabia
47.53 Llewellyn Herbert
 South Africa
47.81
3000 metres
steeplechase
details
Reuben Kosgei
 Kenya
8:21.43 Wilson Boit Kipketer
 Kenya
8:21.77 Ali Ezzine
 Morocco
8:22.15
4×100 metres relay
details
 United States (USA)
Jon Drummond
Bernard Williams
Brian Lewis
Maurice Greene
Tim Montgomery*
Kenneth Brokenburr*
37.61  Brazil (BRA)
Vicente Lenilson
Edson Ribeiro
André da Silva
Claudinei Quirino
Cláudio Souza*
37.90  Cuba (CUB)
Luis Alberto Pérez-Rionda
Ivan Garcia
Freddy Mayola
José Ángel César
38.04
4×400 metres relay
details
 Nigeria (NGR)
Clement Chukwu
Jude Monye
Sunday Bada
Enefiok Udo-Obong
Nduka Awazie*
Fidelis Gadzama*[1]
2:58.68  Jamaica (JAM)
Michael Blackwood
Greg Haughton
Christopher Williams
Danny McFarlane
Sanjay Ayre*
Michael McDonald*
2:58.78  Bahamas (BAH)
Avard Moncur
Troy McIntosh
Carl Oliver
Chris Brown
Timothy Munnings*
2:59.23
20 kilometres walk
details
Robert Korzeniowski
 Poland
1:18.59
(OR)
Noé Hernández
 Mexico
1:19.03 Vladimir Andreyev
 Russia
1:19.27
50 kilometres walk
details
Robert Korzeniowski
 Poland
3:42.22 Aigars Fadejevs
 Latvia
3:43.40 Joel Sánchez Guerrero
 Mexico
3:44.36
Marathon
details
Gezahegne Abera
23x15px Ethiopia
2:10.11 Erick Wainaina
 Kenya
2:10.31 Tesfaye Tola
23x15px Ethiopia
2:11.10
Long jump
details
Iván Pedroso
 Cuba
8.55 m Jai Taurima
 Australia
8.49 m Roman Shchurenko
 Ukraine
8.31 m
Triple jump
details
Jonathan Edwards
 Great Britain
17.71 m Yoel García
 Cuba
17.47 m Denis Kapustin
 Russia
17.46 m
High jump
details
Sergey Klyugin
 Russia
2.35 m Javier Sotomayor
 Cuba
2.32 m Abderrahmane Hammad
 Algeria
2.32 m
Pole vault
details
Nick Hysong
 United States
5.90 m Lawrence Johnson
 United States
5.90 Maksim Tarasov
 Russia
5.90
Shot put
details
Arsi Harju
 Finland
21.29 m Adam Nelson
 United States
21.21 m John Godina
 United States
21.20 m
Discus throw
details
Virgilijus Alekna
 Lithuania
69.30 m Lars Riedel
 Germany
68.50 m Frantz Kruger
 South Africa
68.19 m
Javelin throw
details
Jan Železný
 Czech Republic
90.17 m
(OR)
Steve Backley
 Great Britain
89.85 m Sergey Makarov
 Russia
88.67 m
Hammer throw
details
Szymon Ziółkowski
 Poland
80.02 m Nicola Vizzoni
 Italy
79.64 m Igor Astapkovich
 Belarus
79.17 m
Decathlon
details
Erki Nool
 Estonia
8642 Roman Šebrle
 Czech Republic
8606 Chris Huffins
 United States
8595

* Athletes who participated in the heats only and received medals.

Women

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Not awarded[2] Ekaterini Thanou
 Greece
11.12 Merlene Ottey
 Jamaica
11.19
Tayna Lawrence
 Jamaica
11.18
200 metres
details
Pauline Davis-Thompson
 Bahamas
22.27 Susanthika Jayasinghe
 Sri Lanka
22.28
(NR)
Beverly McDonald
 Jamaica
22.35
400 metres
details
Cathy Freeman
 Australia
49.11 Lorraine Graham
 Jamaica
49.58 Katharine Merry
 Great Britain
49.72
800 metres
details
Maria de Lurdes Mutola
 Mozambique
1:56.15 Stephanie Graf
 Austria
1:56.64 Kelly Holmes
 Great Britain
1:56.80
1500 metres
details
Nouria Mérah-Benida
 Algeria
4:05.10 Violeta Beclea
 Romania
4:05.15 Gabriela Szabo
 Romania
4:05.27
5000 metres
details
Gabriela Szabo
 Romania
14:40.79
(OR)
Sonia O'Sullivan
 Ireland
14:41.02
(NR)
Gete Wami
23x15px Ethiopia
14:42.23
10,000 metres
details
Derartu Tulu
23x15px Ethiopia
30:17.49
(OR)
Gete Wami
23x15px Ethiopia
30:22.48 Fernanda Ribeiro
 Portugal
30:22.88
(NR)
100 metres hurdles
details
Olga Shishigina
 Kazakhstan
12.65 Glory Alozie
 Nigeria
12.68 Melissa Morrison
 United States
12.76
400 metres hurdles
details
Irina Privalova
 Russia
53.02 Deon Hemmings
 Jamaica
53.45 Nezha Bidouane
 Morocco
53.57
4×100 metres relay
details
 Bahamas (BAH)
Savatheda Fynes
Chandra Sturrup
Pauline Davis-Thompson
Debbie Ferguson
Eldece Lewis*
41.95  Jamaica (JAM)
Tayna Lawrence
Veronica Campbell
Beverly McDonald
Merlene Ottey
Merlene Frazer*
42.13  United States (USA)
Chryste Gaines
Torri Edwards
Nanceen Perry
Passion Richardson*[3]
42.20
4×400 metres relay
details
 United States (USA)
Jearl Miles-Clark
Monique Hennagan
LaTasha Colander
Andrea Anderson*[3]
3:22.62  Jamaica (JAM)
Sandie Richards
Catherine Scott
Deon Hemmings
Lorraine Graham
Charmaine Howell*
Michelle Burgher*
3:23.25  Russia (RUS)
Yuliya Sotnikova
Svetlana Goncharenko
Olga Kotlyarova
Irina Privalova
Natalya Nazarova*
Olesya Zykina*
3:23.46
20 kilometres walk
details
Wang Liping
 China
1:29.05
(OR)
Kjersti Plätzer
 Norway
1:29.33 María Vasco
 Spain
1:30.23
Marathon
details
Naoko Takahashi
 Japan
2:23.14
(OR)
Lidia Șimon
 Romania
2:23.22 Joyce Chepchumba
 Kenya
2:24.45
Long jump
details
Heike Drechsler
 Germany
6.99 m Fiona May
 Italy
6.92 Tatyana Kotova
 Russia
6.83 m
High jump
details
Yelena Yelesina
 Russia
2.01 m Hestrie Cloete
 South Africa
2.01 m Kajsa Bergqvist
 Sweden
1.99 m
Oana Pantelimon[4]
 Romania
Triple jump
details
Tereza Marinova
 Bulgaria
15.20 m Tatyana Lebedeva
 Russia
15.00 m Olena Hovorova
 Ukraine
14.96 m
Pole vault
details
Stacy Dragila
 United States
4.60 m
(OR)
Tatiana Grigorieva
 Australia
4.55 m Vala Flosadóttir
 Iceland
4.50 m
Shot put
details
Yanina Karolchik
 Belarus
20.56 m Larisa Peleshenko
 Russia
19.92 m Astrid Kumbernuss
 Germany
19.62 m
Discus throw
details
Ellina Zvereva
 Belarus
68.40 m Anastasía Kelesídou
 Greece
65.71 m Iryna Yatchenko
 Belarus
65.20 m
Javelin throw
details
Trine Hattestad
 Norway
68.91 m
(OR)
Mirela Maniani-Tzelili
 Greece
67.51 m Osleidys Menéndez
 Cuba
66.18 m
Hammer throw
details
Kamila Skolimowska
 Poland
71.16 m Olga Kuzenkova
 Russia
69.77 m Kirsten Münchow
 Germany
69.28 m
Heptathlon
details
Denise Lewis
 Great Britain
6584 Yelena Prokhorova
 Russia
6531 Natallia Sazanovich
 Belarus
6527

* Athletes who participated in the heats only and received medals.

Notes

  1. On 2 August 2008 the International Olympic Committee formally stripped the US team of their gold medals following the admission of Antonio Pettigrew that he had been using performance-enhancing drugs while competing in Sydney and subsequently returned his medal. Medals were reallocated on 21 July 2012 [1]
  2. On 5 October 2007 Marion Jones of the United States admitted to having taken performance enhancing drugs prior to the 2000 Summer Olympics. On 9 October she relinquished her medals to the United States Olympic Committee and on 12 December, the International Olympic Committee formally stripped her of her medals. In 2009, her medals were reawarded as follows
    100 metres
    1. not awarded
    2. Greece Ekaterini Thanou 11.12 and Jamaica Tayna Lawrence 11.18
    3. Jamaica Merlene Ottey 11.19
    Though the IAAF lists Thanou as the first-place finisher in the women's 100m race, she was not awarded a gold medal by the IOC, the IOC choosing instead to upgrade Lawrence and Ottey, but leave the gold-medal slot vacant.
    200 metres
    1. The Bahamas Pauline Davis-Thompson 22.27
    2. Sri Lanka Susanthika Jayasinghe 22.28
    3. Jamaica Beverly McDonald 22.35
    All three athletes were upgraded from their original medal position.
    Long jump
    1. Germany Heike Drechsler
    2. Italy Fiona May
    3. Russia Tatyana Kotova 6.83
    Kotova, the original fourth-place finisher, was upgraded to the bronze medal.
  3. 3.0 3.1 On 23 November 2007, the IAAF recommended to the IOC Executive Board to disqualify the USA women's 4x100 m and 4x400 m relay teams after Marion Jones admitted to having taken performance enhancing drugs prior to the Games. On 12 December, the IOC disqualified Jones and stripped her of her relay medals but it did not disqualify the U.S. relay teams. On 10 April 2008, the IOC disqualified both U.S. relay teams and asked for Jones' teammates' medals to be returned.[2] France (Linda Ferga, Muriel Hurtis, Fabe Dia, Christine Arron, Sandra Citte*) finished fourth in the 4×100 m relay in a time of 42.42, and Nigeria (Olabisi Afolabi, Opara Charity, Rosemary Okafor, Falilat Ogunkoya-Osheku, Doris Jacob*) finished fourth in the 4×400 m relay in a time of 3:23.80, but no medals were redistributed, the IOC opting to leave the medal spots forfeited by the U.S. teams vacant. All members of the U.S. relay teams except Nanceen Perry (and Marion Jones) then appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport who on 16 July 2010 ruled in favor of them.[3] Their medals were then restored to them.
  4. The IOC report (page 447 of 548) incorrectly states that Pantelimon finished fourth, despite having an identical jumping record.

Medal table

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  United States (USA) 7 4 5 16
2 Ethiopia Ethiopia (ETH) 4 1 3 8
3  Poland (POL) 4 0 0 4
4  Russia (RUS) 3 4 6 13
5  Kenya (KEN) 2 3 2 7
6  Cuba (CUB) 2 2 2 6
 Great Britain (GBR) 2 2 2 6
8  Germany (GER) 2 1 2 5
9  Belarus (BLR) 2 0 3 5
10  Bahamas (BAH) 2 0 1 3
11  Greece (GRE) 1 3 0 4
12  Romania (ROU) 1 2 2 5
13  Australia (AUS) 1 2 0 3
14  Algeria (ALG) 1 1 2 4
15  Czech Republic (CZE) 1 1 0 2
 Norway (NOR) 1 1 0 2
17  Bulgaria (BUL) 1 0 0 1
 China (CHN) 1 0 0 1
 Estonia (EST) 1 0 0 1
 Finland (FIN) 1 0 0 1
 Japan (JPN) 1 0 0 1
 Kazakhstan (KAZ) 1 0 0 1
 Lithuania (LTU) 1 0 0 1
 Mozambique (MOZ) 1 0 0 1
25  Jamaica (JAM) 0 6 3 9
26  Italy (ITA) 0 2 0 2
 Nigeria (NGR) 1 1 0 2
28  Morocco (MAR) 0 1 3 4
29  South Africa (RSA) 0 1 2 3
30  Mexico (MEX) 0 1 1 2
 Trinidad and Tobago (TRI) 0 1 1 2
32  Austria (AUT) 0 1 0 1
 Brazil (BRA) 0 1 0 1
 Denmark (DEN) 0 1 0 1
 Ireland (IRL) 0 1 0 1
 Latvia (LAT) 0 1 0 1
 Saudi Arabia (KSA) 0 1 0 1
 Sri Lanka (SRI) 0 1 0 1
39  Ukraine (UKR) 0 0 2 2
40  Barbados (BAR) 0 0 1 1
 Iceland (ISL) 0 0 1 1
 Portugal (POR) 0 0 1 1
 Spain (ESP) 0 0 1 1
 Sweden (SWE) 0 0 1 1

Participating nations

A total of 193 nations participated in the different athletics events at the 2000 Summer Olympics. Two athletes from East Timor participated as Individual Olympic Athletes. A total of 2135 athletes competed at the competition. Numbers in parenthesis indicate the number of athletes representing each nation.

See also

References

External links