2019 Athletissima

The 2019 Athletissima was the 43rd edition of the annual outdoor track and field meeting in Lausanne, Switzerland. Held from 4–5 July primarily at the Stade Olympique de la Pontaise, it was the eighth leg of the 2019 IAAF Diamond League – the highest level international track and field circuit. The women's pole vault (the City Event) was held on 4 July at the esplanade of the Le Flon district, with the other events following the next day at the Stade Olympique. 28 events total were contested with 14 of them being point-scoring Diamond League disciplines.

2019 Athletissima
Dates4–5 July 2019
Host cityLausanne, Switzerland
VenueStade Olympique de la Pontaise
Level2019 IAAF Diamond League
Events28 (14 Diamond League)
2018
2020

The last race of the meet staged the eighth fastest men's 200 m performance in history by Noah Lyles, who broke Usain Bolt's meeting record with world-leading time of 19.50 seconds.[1][2] That made him the fourth fastest man over 200 m in history, and the second fastest American ever after former world record holder Michael Johnson.[3] Meeting records and world leads were also set in the men's 1500 m and pole vault events by Timothy Cheruiyot (3:28.77) and Piotr Lisek (6.01 m) respectively, the latter also a Polish record.[4][1] Hagos Gebrhiwet notably finished and celebrated one lap early in the men's 5000 m, causing him to fall back to tenth place once he realized his mistake and to cede the race to Ethiopian teammate Yomif Kejelcha.[5]

On the women's side, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce finished the Diamond League 100 m with a time of 10.74 seconds, winning by a 0.17-second margin ahead of last year's joint-fastest women Dina Asher-Smith and Marie-Josée Ta Lou.[6][7] It was Fraser-Pryce's 13th race under 10.80 seconds in her career and tied Marion Jones' record for the most races under the same time.[2] In the Diamond League 400 m, Salwa Eid Naser almost handed Aminatou Seyni a win while relaxing in the home straight, but Naser was able to narrowly hold off Seyni (49.17 to 49.19) after Naser realized her mistake.[2] Naser's time broke Marie-José Pérec's 23-year-old meeting record of 49.45 seconds, and Seyni's new Nigerien record was the second fastest ever run by an African woman.[8]

Diamond League results

Athletes competing in the Diamond League disciplines earned extra compensation and points which went towards qualifying for one of two Diamond League finals (either Zürich or Brussels depending on the discipline). First place earned 8 points, with each step down in place earning one less point than the previous, until no points are awarded in 9th place or lower.[9]

Men

Long jump
Place Athlete Mark Points
1 Juan Miguel Echevarría (CUB)8.32 m (wind: +0.5 m/s)23 (+8)
2 Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE)8.19 m (wind: +0.5 m/s)14 (+7)
3 Luvo Manyonga (RSA)8.13 m (wind: +0.1 m/s)18 (+6)
4 Tajay Gayle (JAM)8.13 m (wind: -0.9 m/s)17 (+5)
5 Ruswahl Samaai (RSA)8.08 m (wind: +0.7 m/s)16 (+4)
6 Darcy Roper (AUS)8.05 m (wind: +0.7 m/s)3 (+3)
7 Will Claye (USA)7.74 m (wind: +0.6 m/s)2 (+2)
8 Benjamin Gföhler (SUI)7.68 m (wind: +1.5 m/s)1 (+1)

Women

Javelin throw
Place Athlete Mark Points
1 Christin Hussong (GER)66.59 m18 (+8)
2 Kelsey-Lee Barber (AUS)65.63 m PB10 (+7)
3 Barbora Špotáková (CZE)63.79 m8 (+6)
4 Liu Shiying (CHN)62.63 m5 (+5)
5 Tatsiana Khaladovich (BLR)62.07 m5 (+4)
6 Līna Mūze (LAT)60.18 m16 (+3)
7 Annu Rani (IND)59.35 m2 (+2)
8 Elizabeth Gleadle (CAN)58.76 m1 (+1)
9 Kara Winger (USA)56.99 m5
10 Sara Kolak (CRO)56.19 m0
NM Liina Laasma (EST)No Mark0
NM Eda Tuğsuz (TUR)No mark7

Non-Diamond League results

Men

Event First Second Third
100 m (wind: +0.2 m/s)  Justin Gatlin (USA)9.92  Mike Rodgers (USA)10.01  Aaron Brown (CAN)10.07
400 m  Terrence Agard (NED)45.65  Liemarvin Bonevacia (NED)45.69  Ricky Petrucciani (SUI)46.64
800 m  Jonas Schöpper (SUI)1:49.01  Pascal Furtwängler (SUI)1:49.82  Joaquim Jaegar (SUI)1:49.89
400 m hurdles  Luke Campbell (GER)49.54 (.534)  Rasmus Mägi (EST)49.54 (.536)  Mamadou Kassé Hann (FRA)49.90
1500 m wheelchair  Marcel Hug (SUI)3:04.78  Yassine Gharbi (TUN)3:04.89  Alhassane Baldé (GER)3:05.24

Women

Event First Second Third
100 m (wind: +0.4 m/s)  Ge Manqi (CHN)11.04 PB  Liang Xiaojing (CHN)11.19 PB  Marije van Hunenstijn (NED)11.28
200 m (wind: +1.0 m/s)  Gabrielle Thomas (USA)22.69  Jodie Williams (GBR)22.75  Anthonique Strachan (BAH)22.81
400 m  Yasmin Giger (SUI)52.91 PB  Femke Bol (NED)52.98  Rachel Pellaud (SUI)54.06
800 m  Nelly Jepkosgei (KEN)1:59.54  Halimah Nakaayi (UGA)1:59.97  Gabriela Gajanová (SVK)2:01.25
4×100 m relay  The Netherlands42.33  China42.50   Switzerland42.60
Pole vault  Katie Nageotte (USA)4.82 m PB  Anzhelika Sidorova (ANA)4.72 m  Holly Bradshaw (GBR)4.72 m

Swiss under-18

Event First Second Third
1500 m boys Abdi-Salam Ali4:12.69 Colin Maneff4:13.15 Antoine Tâche4:13.62
1500 m girls Lilly Nägeli4:33.91 Juliette Morath4:35.46 Shirley Lang4:36.74

Swiss under-14

Event First Second Third
5×80 m relay mixed Lausanne-Sports50.21 ST Bern52.26 COA Valais Romand52.43

See also

References

  1. Lyles, Cheruiyot lead record rampage in Lausanne. Kenyan Digest (2019-07-05). Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  2. Mulkeen, Jon (2019). Lausanne Diamond League — Noah Lyles In Rare Company. Track & Field News. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  3. Noah Lyles becomes fourth-fastest man in history in 200m NBC Sports (2019-07-05). Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  4. 2019 Lausanne DL Recap: Gebrhiwet Miscounts His Laps, Cheruiyot Runs 3:28 and SAFP Runs 10.74. LetsRun.com (2019-07-05). Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  5. Kelly, Madeleine (2019-07-05). Hagos Gebrhiwet stops running Lausanne 5,000m one lap too early. Canadian Running. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  6. Dunbar, Graham (2019-07-05). Noah Lyles runs 19.50 in 200 meters, 4th best time ever. The Seattle Times/Associated Press. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  7. Levy, Leighton (2019-07-05). 'Happy' Fraser-Pryce blazes 10.74 for impressive win in Lausanne. SportsMax TV. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  8. Diamond League: Noah Lyles clocks 19.50 in 200m win in Lausanne. BBC Sport (2019-07-05). Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  9. High-powered head-to-heads on tap in Shanghai - IAAF Diamond League. IAAF (2019-05-16). Retrieved 2020-03-31.
Results
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.