Madrid: 04July09

04/07/2009

28º Meeting de Atletismo Madrid 2009
Madrid, 04/07/2009

Men’ results

100 Metres - Men Final Wind: -1.9 m/s
Pts
1 Mullings , Steve JAM 10.11 10
2 Obikwelu , Francis POR 10.35 8
3 Buckland , Stéphane MRI 10.38 7
4 Emelieze , Peter NGR 10.39 6
5 Waugh , Ainsley JAM 10.40 5
6 Lewis-Francis , Mark GBR 10.40 4
7 Fasuba , Olusoji A. NGR 10.41 3
Collio , Simone ITA DNF

100 Metres - Men Heats Race 1 Wind: -1.9 m/s

1 Mullings , Steve                 JAM      10.27                   
2 Obikwelu , Francis               POR      10.48                   
3 Collio , Simone                  ITA      10.55
4 van Luijk , Patrick              NED      10.63
5 de Lima , Vicente                BRA      10.71
6 López , José                     ESP      10.89

100 Metres - Men Heats Race 2 Wind: -1.0 m/s

1 Waugh , Ainsley                  JAM      10.30                   
2 Emelieze , Peter                 NGR      10.30                   
3 Lewis-Francis , Mark             GBR      10.38                   
4 Fasuba , Olusoji A.              NGR      10.39                   
5 Buckland , Stéphane              MRI      10.43                   
6 Rodríguez , Ángel David          ESP      10.51
  Jelks , Mark                     USA        DNS                   

400 Metres - Men
Pts
1 Gillick , David IRL 44.77 10
2 van Branteghem , Cedric BEL 45.67 8
3 Hurtault , Erison DMA 45.97 7
4 Marciniszyn , Marcin POL 46.50 6
5 Smith , Pieter RSA 47.53 5
6 Briones , Roberto ESP 47.71 4
7 Fernandéz , Antonio ESP 47.83 3

800 Metres - Men (Summary)
Pts
1 Kivuna , Jackson Mumbwa KEN 1:44.86 10
2 Casado , Arturo ESP 1:45.52 8
3 Mulaudzi , Mbulaeni RSA 1:45.81 7
4 Olmedo , Manuel ESP 1:45.91 6
5 Ismail , Ismail Ahmed SUD 1:46.08 5
6 Chepkirwok , Abraham UGA 1:46.14 4
7 Barrios , Eugenio ESP 1:46.30 3
8 Mumba , Prince ZAM 1:46.60 2

800 Metres - Men Race 1
Pts
1 Mulaudzi , Mbulaeni RSA 1:45.81 7
2 Olmedo , Manuel ESP 1:45.91 6
3 Ismail , Ismail Ahmed SUD 1:46.08 5
4 Kazi , Tamás HUN 1:46.74
5 Lewandowski , Marcin POL 1:46.98
6 Milkevics , Dmitrijs LAT 1:47.04
7 Quesada , Miguel ESP 1:47.30
8 Marco , Luis Alberto ESP 1:47.91
9 Peçanha , Fabiano BRA 1:49.75
10 Reina , Antonio Manuel ESP 1:55.34
Kiilu , Vincent Mumo KEN DNF

800 Metres - Men Race 2
Pts
1 Kivuna , Jackson Mumbwa KEN 1:44.86 10
2 Casado , Arturo ESP 1:45.52 8
3 Chepkirwok , Abraham UGA 1:46.14 4
4 Barrios , Eugenio ESP 1:46.30 3
5 Mumba , Prince ZAM 1:46.60 2
6 Higuero , Juan Carlos ESP 1:47.27
7 Czapiewski , Pawel POL 1:48.32
8 Troya , Juan José ESP 1:48.74
9 Chehibi , Mouhssin MAR 1:49.09
10 Jurado , Juan de Dios ESP 1:49.94
Ruiz , Daniel ESP DNF

1500 Metres - Men (Summary)
Pts
1 Cronje , Johan RSA 3:37.33 10
2 Silva , Rui POR 3:38.62 8
3 Magut , James Kiplagat KEN 3:38.86 7
4 Kithii , Josphat Mitunga KEN 3:39.04 6
5 Wolde , Dawit ETH 3:39.54 5
6 Brewer , James GBR 3:39.65 4
7 Fernández , Álvaro ESP 3:39.91 3
8 Carriqueo , Javier ARG 3:40.45 2
9 Estévez , Reyes ESP 3:41.59 1
10 Milne , Taylor CAN 3:42.62 1
11 Cronin , Ian USA 3:47.17 1
12 Galindo , Alberto ESP 3:47.35 1

1500 Metres - Men Race 1
Pts
1 Cronje , Johan RSA 3:37.33 10
2 Silva , Rui POR 3:38.62 8
3 Magut , James Kiplagat KEN 3:38.86 7
4 Kithii , Josphat Mitunga KEN 3:39.04 6
5 Wolde , Dawit ETH 3:39.54 5
6 Brewer , James GBR 3:39.65 4
7 Fernández , Álvaro ESP 3:39.91 3
8 Carriqueo , Javier ARG 3:40.45 2
9 Estévez , Reyes ESP 3:41.59 1
10 Milne , Taylor CAN 3:42.62 1
Wendimu , Mulugeta ETH DNF
Baba , Youssef MAR DNF
Daba , Demma ETH DNF
Welday , Hais ERI DNF
Esteso , Pedro Antonio ESP DNF
Ahrass , Jamel FRA DNS

1500 Metres - Men Race 2
Pts
1 Cronin , Ian USA 3:47.17 1
2 Galindo , Alberto ESP 3:47.35 1
3 Paredes , Alberto ESP 3:54.10
4 Marhum , Mohamed ESP 3:55.61
5 España , José ESP 3:56.61
6 Bachiller , Francisco ESP 3:58.40
7 Del Cano , Antonio ESP 4:01.11
8 Yaaich , Said ESP 4:01.18
9 Torres , Joaquín ESP 4:07.04
Carnicer , Felipe ESP DNF
Lahaba , Daniel ESP DNF
Sabhi , Moulay Abdelhak MAR DNS
Mesel , Amanuel ERI DNS
Gil , Raul ESP DNS

110 Metres Hurdles - Men Final Wind: -0.2 m/s
Pts
1 Sedoc , Gregory NED 13.40 10
2 Wignall , Maurice JAM 13.52 8
3 Mitchum , Eric USA 13.61 7
4 Akins , Tyrone USA 13.63 6
5 Quiñónez , Jackson ESP 13.66 5
6 Vivancos , Felipe ESP 13.77 4
7 Herring , Aubrey USA 13.80 3
Brown , Joel USA DNS

110 Metres Hurdles - Men Heats Race 1 Wind: -2.3 m/s

1 Mitchum , Eric                   USA      13.69                   
2 Sedoc , Gregory                  NED      13.73                   
3 Quiñónez , Jackson               ESP      13.90                   
4 Kelley , Kai                     USA      13.97
5 da Silva , Anselmo               BRA      14.14
6 Castelo Branco , Thiago          BRA      14.27
7 Taylor , David                   ESP      15.27

110 Metres Hurdles - Men Heats Race 2 Wind: -1.4 m/s

1 Brown , Joel                     USA      13.59
2 Wignall , Maurice                JAM      13.62                   
3 Akins , Tyrone                   USA      13.75                   
4 Vivancos , Felipe                ESP      13.76                   
5 Herring , Aubrey                 USA      13.83                   
6 Demidyuk , Sergiy                UKR      14.01

400 Metres Hurdles - Men
Pts
1 Phillips , Isa JAM 48.09 10
2 McFarlane , Danny JAM 48.53 8
3 Greene , David GBR 49.19 7
4 Iakovákis , Periklís GRE 49.36 6
5 Gaymon , Justin USA 49.97 5
6 Sarmiento , Ignacio ESP 50.73 4
7 Yoshikata , Masahira JPN 50.84 3
8 Romera , José María ESP 51.94 2

Long Jump - Men
Pts Wind
1 Lapierre , Fabrice AUS 8.57 10 +3.6
2 Mokoena , Godfrey Khotso RSA 8.50 8 +1.3
3 Saladino , Irving PAN 8.43 7 +4.0
4 Watt , Mitchell AUS 8.38 6 +2.8
5 Al-Sabee , Hussein Taher KSA 8.26 5 +3.3
6 Cáceres , Eusebio ESP 8.17 4 +2.3
7 Starzak , Marcin POL 8.15 3 +3.4
8 Tomlinson , Christopher GBR 8.10 2 +0.9
9 Badji , Ndiss Kaba SEN 7.94 +2.5
10 Atanasov , Nikolay BUL 7.90 +3.2
11 Lukashevych , Olexiy UKR 7.58 +2.1

Discus Throw - Men
Pts
1 Alekna , Virgilijus LTU 67.20 10
2 Malachowski , Piotr POL 64.57 8
3 Kövágó , Zoltán HUN 62.70 7
4 Israel , Märt EST 61.37 6
5 Waltz , Ian USA 60.30 5
6 Rome , Jarred USA 60.25 4
7 Nesterenko , Mykyta UKR 59.83 3
8 Cadee , Erik NED 59.80 2
9 Casañas , Yennifer Frank ESP 58.19

Women’ results

100 Metres - Women Wind: -1.6 m/s
Pts
1 Asumnu , Gloria USA 11.40 10
2 Madison , Tianna USA 11.56 8
3 Murillo , Digna Luz COL 11.64 7
4 Douglas , Montell GBR 11.75 6
5 Tavares , Sónia POR 11.76 5
6 Alozie , Glory ESP 11.89 4
7 Tavares , Carla POR 11.93 3
8 Recio , Belén ESP 12.13 2

400 Metres - Women
Pts
1 Amertil , Christine BAH 51.77 10
2 McConnell , Lee GBR 52.29 8
3 Abugan , Folasade NGR 52.64 7
4 Ugboaku , Alice NGR 54.56 6
5 Torres , Teresa ESP 55.11 5
6 Fernández , Susana ESP 56.29 4
Fuentes , Cristina ESP DNS
Garrido , Begoña ESP DNS

800 Metres - Women (Summary)
Pts
1 Benhassi , Hasna MAR 1:59.03 10
2 Simpson , Jemma GBR 1:59.31 8
3 Okoro , Marilyn GBR 2:00.04 7
4 Wurth-Thomas , Christin USA 2:00.16 6
5 Fernández , Nuria ESP 2:00.45 5
6 Pape , Madeleine AUS 2:00.70 4
7 Rostkowska , Anna POL 2:00.86 3
8 Meadows , Jennifer GBR 2:01.15 2

800 Metres - Women Race 1
Pts
1 Benhassi , Hasna MAR 1:59.03 10
2 Simpson , Jemma GBR 1:59.31 8
3 Okoro , Marilyn GBR 2:00.04 7
4 Wurth-Thomas , Christin USA 2:00.16 6
5 Fernández , Nuria ESP 2:00.45 5
6 Pape , Madeleine AUS 2:00.70 4
7 Rostkowska , Anna POL 2:00.86 3
8 Meadows , Jennifer GBR 2:01.15 2
9 Hak , Yvonne NED 2:01.31
10 Krevsun , Yuliya UKR 2:05.04
11 Teixeira , Sandra POR 2:05.13
Tavares , Carmo POR DNF

800 Metres - Women Race 2

1 Adam , Muna Jabir                SUD    2:02.50
2 Akkaoui , Malika                 MAR    2:03.21
3 Fuentes-Pila , Iris              ESP    2:04.96
4 Bird , Tara                      GBR    2:05.05
5 Périz , Elián                    ESP    2:05.07
6 Fuentes-Pila , Margarita         ESP    2:06.14
  Macías , Isabel                  ESP        DNF                   
  Akhigbe , Kudirat                NGR        DNF                   

1500 Metres - Women
Pts
1 Rodríguez , Natalia ESP 4:04.82 10
2 Domínguez , Marta ESP 4:04.84 8
3 Mishchenko , Anna UKR 4:07.44 7
4 Roman , Sonja SLO 4:08.41 6
5 Ejdys , Sylwia POL 4:09.16 5
6 Elmore , Malindi CAN 4:09.82 4
7 Assefa , Meskerem ETH 4:10.30 3
8 Augusto , Jessica POR 4:14.10 2
9 Goshu , Frehiwat ETH 4:14.69 1
10 Bani , Aïcha MAR 4:17.42 1
11 Scott , Susan GBR 4:27.92 1
12 Weldu , Nazret ERI 4:30.46 1
Rahmouni , Khadija ESP DNF
Tsyganova , Natalya RUS DNF
Herzog , Adrienne NED DNS

High Jump - Women
Pts
1 Beitia , Ruth ESP 1.93 10
2 Acuff , Amy USA 1.93 8
3 Stepaniuk , Kamila POL 1.91 7
4 Mendía , Marta ESP 1.86 6
5 Demireva , Mirela BUL 1.86 5
6 Holosha , Olena UKR 1.76 4
7 Alvarez , Raquel ESP 1.76 3

Pole Vault - Women
Pts
1 Kiryashova , Aleksandra RUS 4.56 10
2 Dennison , Kate GBR 4.56 8
3 Janson , Lacy USA 4.46 7
4 Shvedova , Anastasiya RUS 4.46 6
5 Piwowarska , Joanna POL 4.46 5
6 Johnson , Chelsea USA 4.46 4
7 Steiner Bennett , April USA 4.36 3
8 Dragila , Stacy USA 4.36 2
9 Schwartz , Jillian USA 4.36
10 Agirre , Naroa ESP 4.26
11 Costa , Joana BRA 4.16

Triple Jump - Women
Pts Wind
1 Lebedeva , Tatyana RUS 15.01 10 +4.5
2 Pyatykh , Anna RUS 14.84 8 +3.7
3 Rypakova , Olga KAZ 14.69 7 +5.0
4 Aldama , Yamilé SUD 14.68 6 +3.8
5 Smith , Trecia JAM 14.15 5 +3.3
6 Trybanska , Malgorzata POL 14.13 4 +3.5
7 Veldáková , Dana SVK 14.02 3 +1.2
8 Sarrapio , Patricia ESP 13.69 2 +5.1

Hammer Throw - Women
Pts
1 Hrasnová , Martina SVK 75.11 10
2 Frizell , Sultana CAN 70.68 8
3 Joyce , Jennifer CAN 70.35 7
4 Claretti , Clarissa ITA 69.24 6
5 Marghiev , Marina MDA 67.72 5
6 Gilreath , Erin USA 67.59 4
7 Castells , Berta ESP 65.39 3

10.11 into -1.9 is pretty impressive for Mullings, about a 9.95 with a little tailwind.

Check out the men’s long jump! That’s a lot of guys over 8m, though a lot of them had some wind assistance.

Africa Continental record for Mokoena, but Aussie “Fab” Lapierre (2005 NCAA champ) struck after two fouls to win with 8.57 on his third round. Then he jumped a wind-legal PB 8.35 and another Aussie kid, Mitchell Watt was fourth with his 8.34. Either of those wind-legal leaps by the two Aussies would have been long enough for at least bronze in every Olympics ever held. Thunder from Downunder. Shame Dwight wasn’t out there, he might have gone out the far end :cool: But Berlin is still a month away, so these guys have to make sure they don’t overcook it before then. Lapierre has been working with his Texas A&M coach on extending his run-up to gain time to build speed. Apparently the adjustment was a smart move!

good time by David Gillick in the 400m 44.77…sub 45 for first time

No fluke either as he knocked off Saladino.

Is Obikwelu making a come back after this year’s European Cup, or is still just for ‘fun’? And what about Olu? Anyone knows what’s up with him these days? Also, why didn’t Collio finished his race?

Whom is he working with?

Probabably jumpin Jim VanHootegem

8.35 may not be enough for a medal at worlds this year, though. Sebastian Bayer just jumped 8.49, and I wouldn’t be surprised if 8.50 was required for a medal in Berlin. Exciting times for fans of the long jump!

Stolen from Jon on TFN, this is the list so far this year:

  1. 8.74/1.2 Dwight Phillips (USA) Eugene OR Jun 7
  2. 8.71i Sebastian Bayer (GER) Turin Mar 8
  3. 8.63/0.4 Irving Saladino (PAN) Eugene OR Jun 7
    ----- 8.56/0.8 Saladino Hengelo Jun 1
    ----- 8.54/0.9 Phillips Hengelo Jun 1
    ----- 8.51/1.8 Phillips Baie Mahault May 1
  4. 8.50/1.3 Godfrey Mokoena (RSA) Madrid Jul 4
    ----- 8.49/1.9 Bayer Ulm Jul 4
  5. 8.42/0.4 Salim Sdiri (FRA) Pierre-Bénite Jun 12
  6. 8.38/0.6 Yahya Berrabah (MAR) Rabat May 23
    ----- 8.37/-0.7 Phillips Carson CA May 16
  7. 8.35/1.3 Fabrice Lapierre (AUS) Madrid Jul 4
  8. 8.34/2.0 Mitchell Watt (AUS) Madrid Jul 4
    ----- 8.33/0.9 Mokoena Kalamáta May 30
    ----- 8.33/1.0 Mokoena Berlin Jun 14
    ----- 8.33/1.8 Mokoena Ostrava Jun 17
  9. 8.30/0.6 Ibrahim Camejo (CUB) Malles Jun 28

Wind assisted:
----- 8.57/2.2 Phillips Eugene OR Jun 27
----- 8.57/3.6 Lapierre Madrid Jul 4
----- 8.43/4.0 Saladino Madrid Jul 4
----- 8.38/2.8 Watt Madrid Jul 4

He is the man.

Fabrice Lapierre long jumps into historyArticle from: Font size: Decrease Increase Email article: Email Print article: Print Submit comment: Submit comment By Mike Hurst

July 06, 2009 12:00am

IT was a great step for Australian athletics and a giant leap for Sydney’s “Fabulous” Fabrice Lapierre.

The Mauritius-born, Quakers Hill-bred long-jumper went further than any Australian when he jumped 8.57m to defeat the Beijing gold and silver medallists yesterday.

The leap to win the Madrid Grand Prix would have claimed a medal at every Olympics and world championships ever held.

But it was such a near thing after he fouled his first two jumps and was facing sudden-death elimination if he didn’t register a big jump on his next attempt.

He responded like a true champion, leaping a massive 8.57m (wind assistance 3.6m/s) to grab the lead and confirmed that with a wind-legal personal best 8.35m (1.3m/s) on his next. “It was a sensational competition,” Lapierre, nicknamed Fab, told The Daily Telegraph.

"It’s a funny story. I just flew in from America two days ago and they lost my bags in transit. I just got them back today, but I’ve been wearing the same clothes the last two days and I haven’t been able to train or anything. My spikes and everything were in the lost bags.

“So I opened with two fouls on the first two jumps and I had to make the third to get into the final and I jumped the 8.57m.”

That was good enough to knock the wind out of Olympic silver medallist, South Africa’s Godfrey Khotso Mokoena (African continental record 8.50m, +1.3m/s) and Olympic gold medallist and defending world titleholder, Panama’s Irving Saladino (8.43m, +4.0m/s).

Another Australian, 21-year-old Brisbane law student Mitchell Watt, placed fourth with a huge leap of 8.38m (+2.8m/s) and he also had a wind-legal personal best of 8.34m.

Lapierre and Watt’s best wind-legal jumps would have been good enough to win a medal in every Olympic Games in history, so it is now clear Australia is building towards a twin medal assault at the 2012 London Olympics.

Does anybody know if Van Hootegem is a more plyo / strength bound coach or favours speed development?

I’m sure Mike would know.

I found this info in an iaaf website story on Lapierre. I’m not sure what it tells us. The other thing is he only recently lengthened his runup to try to get more speed, so maybe his coach had him working off a shorter (much shorter) approach because he felt Fabrice didn’t have the specific strength to jump off a faster approach until very recently, but they’ve been together since 2003…

by the way, the stats on Lapierre are that he weighs 66kg and he is 180cm tall.

…".Lapierre is nevertheless extremely quick and his 105kg clean suggests he has the power-to-weight ratio to make good his bid for a medal at the World Championships in Berlin in August."

Thanks. It’s interesting to see one coach doing that while jumping distance is greatly determined by speed, with height not being excepcionally important. See how far could Lewis jump with very little heigh in comparison with, f.e. Emmiyan.

Those stats make me wonder how far could Jonathan Edwards have jumped with his 2x BW clean and 11 m/s + speed.

Mokoena can do better, says coach
WESLEY BOTTON | JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - Jul 06 2009 13:42

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Considering his consistency this season, Khotso Mokoena’s coach Elna de Beer, believes the Olympic long jump silver medalist can break his African record at the Athletissima Super Grand Prix in Lausanne, Switzerland on Tuesday night.

Mokoena leaped 8,50 metres in Madrid on Saturday evening to smash his South African record by 12 centimetres and Senegalese Cheikh Tidiane Toure’s African mark by four centimetres.

And the 24-year-old will face a line-up packed with most of the world’s best jumpers on Tuesday, which should push him to even greater lengths.

Mokoena jumped 8,33m three times this season before he broke the continental record and De Beer believes his new mark is under threat in Lausanne. She hopes, however, that he doesn’t peak too soon with the World Athletics Championships in Berlin still more than a month away.

“I think he can break it,” De Beer said on Monday. "I hope he saves his best for the World Championships, but he’s been so consistent this year.

"At previous competitions he’s been jumping 8,40m regularly but he has overstepped the board.

“He’s in good form, and I’m not saying he will break his record on Tuesday, but I know he can.”

Dwight Phillips enters the competition as firm favourite after jumping 8,74m in Eugene, Oregon a month ago, but the American won’t
have everything his own way.

Six of the world’s 10 best jumpers this season will be in the mix – including Australian Fabrice Lapierre, who defeated Mokoena in Madrid with an 8,57m jump that recorded a +3,7m wind reading. That mark won’t count in the record books, but Lapierre will be tough to beat.

CONTINUES BELOW

Also likely to push Phillips and Mokoena are Frenchman Salim Sdiri, Morocco’s Yahya Berrabeh and Chris Tomlinson of Great Britain, who have all leaped further than 8,20m this year.

Considering the quality of the line-up, Ivan Pedroso’s meeting record of 8,56m set in 1995 is under serious threat.
T
wo other South Africans are also included in the start list for Tuesday night’s meeting – Johan Cronje and LJ van Zyl.

Cronje, who set a personal best 3:35,11 over 1 500m in Thessaloniki, Greece four weeks ago, faces a strong field that includes four runners who have clocked faster times than him this year.

The 27-year-old will take confidence from his victory in Madrid on Saturday – beating former Olympic and World Championship bronze medalist Rui Silva into second place – and should put together another good showing.

Van Zyl hasn’t been in his best form this year in the 400m hurdles, and will look look to improve on his 48,71 season’s best set in Bydgoszcz, Poland four weeks back.

Van Zyl, who set his career best time of 48,05 in winning the 2006 Commonwealth Games title, also goes up against an impressive line-up that includes Jamaica’s Isa Phillips, who holds three of the world’s seven fastest times in 2009.

Mokoena, Cronje and Van Zyl have already booked themselves places in South Africa’s team for the World Championships, having set A standard qualifying times. – Sapa

he’s only 66kg? wow

Yes! I was primarily a long jumper and very thin (who would believe it today, just look at me in that kilt!) which is why I have a particular interest in long jumpers. I sat next to Mike Powell a bit at one Olympics (after he had retired of course) and have a photo of him and me holding up signs with our respective PBs. His is quite impressive. Mine, err, forget it (8.95 v 7.05) lol.