| 10th IAAF World Indoor Championships | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 5 March–7 March |
| Host city | Budapest, Hungary |
| Venue | Budapest Arena |
| Events | 28 |
| Participation | 677 athletes from 139 nations |
The10thIAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics under the auspices of theInternational Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) were held in theBudapest Arena, Hungary between March 5 and March 7, 2004. A total off 139 countries were represented by 677 athletes at thechampionships.[1]
It was the second visit of the championships toBudapest having previously visited there 15 years earlier in1989. The newly built 13,000 capacityarena was built on the site of a former stadium that was destroyed by fire in 1999.
This was the last World Indoor Championships where the 200 m event was contested. The event was discontinued as the tight bends involved in running indoors left athletes drawn to run on the inside lanes with minimal or no chance of winning.
| Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 metres details | Jason Gardener | 6.49 | Shawn Crawford | 6.52 | Georgios Theodoridis | 6.54(=SB) | ||
| After twice finishing third in the event Jason Gardener knew it was time to step up. With the quickest time from the semi-finals he was brimming with confidence and equalled that time of 6.49 seconds to take the gold ahead of the 2001 200 m champion Crawford. The Greek Theodoridis ran a season's best to take the third place medal ahead ofMickey Grimes USA (4th in personal best),Matic Osovnikar (5th in Slovenian record),Francis Obikwelu Portugal (6th),Simone Collio Italy (7th) andNiconnor Alexander (8th). | ||||||||
| 200 metres details | Dominic Demeritte | 20.66NR | Johan Wissman | 20.72 | Tobias Unger | 21.02 | ||
| In a poor year for the event Demeritte improved on his third position from Birmingham in 2003 to take gold in a new Bahamian record of 20.66 seconds albeit the slowest winning time since 1991. No other competitor in the final could even raise themselves to a season's best although there were national records in the heats forHeber Viera (21.36 s) ofUruguay, Marcelo Figueroa (22.8 s)El Salvador, Hamoud Abdallah Al-Dalhami (21.97 s)Oman and Russel Roman (23.68 s) ofPalau though none of these athletes progressed through their respective rounds. | ||||||||
| 400 metres details | Alleyne Francique | 45.88(SB) | Davian Clarke | 45.92(SB) | Gary Kikaya | 46.30(SB) | ||
| The medal winners all ran season's best times, though not breaking any records. The other finalists wereSofiane Labidi (4th) fromTunisia,Milton Campbell USA (5th) andJoe Mendel USA (6th). | ||||||||
| 800 metres details | Mbulaeni Mulaudzi | 1:45.71 | Rashid Ramzi | 1:46.15AR | Osmar dos Santos | 1:46.26 | ||
| Mulaudzi won South Africa's only medal of the championships beating Ramzi who became Bahrain's first ever medallist at either of the athletics world championships with an Asian record of 1:46.15, a four-second improvement on his semi-final time from the 2003 championships. The other finalists wereAmine Laalou Morocco (4th),William Yiampoy Kenya (5th) and former World Junior ChampionJoseph Mutua Kenya a disappointing (6th). | ||||||||
| 1500 metres details | Paul Korir | 3:52.31 | Ivan Heshko | 3:52.34 | Laban Rotich | 3:52.93 | ||
| In a tactical ran race Korir, who had progressed from the qualifying round as a fastest loser, held off Heshko by just 0.03 seconds with Rotich a further 0.5 seconds away in third. Rotich was only awarded the bronze one hour after the race when the athlete who had crossed the line in third place, Great Britain'sMichael East, was disqualified for a pushing incident. Other finalists wereAbdelkader Hachlaf Morocco (4th),James Thie Great Britain (5th),Mirosław Formela Poland (6th) andJosé Redolat Spain (7th) andYoussef Baba Morocco (8th). | ||||||||
| 3000 metres details | Bernard Lagat | 7:56.34 | Rui Silva (athlete) | 7:57.08 | Markos Geneti | 7:57.87 | ||
| On the comeback trail after pulling out of the2003 outdoor championships due to a suspect positive drug test Bernard was overjoyed at taking gold ahead of Silva and Geneti. The other finalists were Spanish pairAntonio David Jiménez (4th) andSergio Gallardo (5th),Gert-Jan Liefers, Netherlands (6th),Kevin Sullivan, Canada (7th), MoroccansMohammed Amyne (8th) andHicham Bellani (9th), AustralianCraig Mottram (10th),Abiyote Abate, Ethiopia (11th) andSerhiy Lebid, Ukraine 12th. | ||||||||
| 60 metres hurdles details | Allen Johnson | 7.36CR | Liu Xiang | 7.43AR | Maurice Wignall | 7.48NR | ||
| After only qualifying for the final by virtue of being a fastest loser, Allen Johnson claimed his third world indoor title, to go with his four previous outdoor titles, in a championship record of 7.36 seconds ahead of Liu of China (2nd in Asian record) who went one better than his third in Birmingham the year before and Wignall (3rd in Jamaican record) who edged out, by 1/100th of a second, Stanislavs Olijars of Latvia (4th in personal best). Other finalists wereYuniel Hernández, Cuba (5th),Robert Kronberg, Sweden (6th in season's best),Yoel Hernández, Cuba (7th) andDwight Thomas Jamaica (8th). | ||||||||
| 4 × 400 metre relay details | Gregory Haughton Leroy Colquhoun Michael McDonald Davian Clarke Richard James* Sanjay Ayre* | 3:05.21WL | Dmitriy Forshev Boris Gorban Andrey Rudnitskiy Aleksandr Usov | 3:06.23(SB) | Robert Daly Gary Ryan David Gillick David McCarthy | 3:10.44 | ||
| With the United States of America team being disqualified, after crossing the line in third place, for dropping the baton and the Bahamian team falling over this was one of the most eventful races of the championships. This left the way open for the reigning silver medalists Jamaica to step in and snatch the gold ahead of the Russians who took silver and Ireland, who had broken the national record in the heats, going home with the bronze. Switzerland took 4th place with the Bahamians picking themselves off the floor to take 5th. | ||||||||
| High jump details | Stefan Holm | 2.35 | Yaroslav Rybakov | 2.32(SB) | Ştefan Vasilache | 2.25 | ||
| Germaine Mason | ||||||||
| Jaroslav Bába | ||||||||
| Sweden's Stefan Holm went one better than his silver at the outdoors in 2003 with a straightforward win clearing all of his five heights at the first attempt to finish with 2.35 m. Rybakov was the only competitor to mount a challenge but he could only manage 2.32 metres. Five athletes were tied with jumps 10 cm behind the winner but countback saw BelarusianGennadiy Moroz, UkrainianAndriy Sokolovskyy and Ireland'sAdrian O'Dwyer miss out on the medals withJamie Nieto of USA completing the final line up. | ||||||||
| Pole vault details | Igor Pavlov | 5.80(=PB) | Adam Ptácek | 5.70(=SB) | Denys Yurchenko | 5.70 | ||
| In a below par pole vault Russian indoor national champion Pavlov took a surprise gold with a personal best of 5.80 m. followed by four athletes who all cleared 5.70 m. Ptácek took silver and Yurchenko bronze on countback ahead of Sweden'sPatrik Kristiansson (4th), GermanTim Lobinger (5th). 10 cm further behind were ItalianGiuseppe Gibilisco (6th) andRomain Mesnil of France (7th). Netherlands'Rens Blom failed to clear his opening height of 5.60 metres to finish eighth. | ||||||||
| Long jump details | Savanté Stringfellow | 8.40 | James Beckford | 8.31(SB) | Vitaliy Shkurlatov | 8.28(SB) | ||
| Savanté Stringfellow jumped exactly the same distance, 8.40 m, as he had when taking silver at the 2001 outdoors championships but this time got his hands on a gold medal. The 2003 outdoor silver medalist Beckford again finished second with Russian Shkurlatov completing the podium line-up. RomanianBogdan Tarus (4th),Volodymyr Zyuskov, Ukraine (5th with a personal best), Great Britain'sChris Tomlinson set a national record finishing (6th),Sosunov Kirill, Russia (7th) and former five-time championIván Pedroso could only manage 8th place. | ||||||||
| Triple jump details | Christian Olsson | 17.83=WR | Jadel Gregório | 17.43 | Yoandri Betanzos | 17.36 | ||
| Olsson retained his title here with a third-round jump of 17.83 m to equal the seven-year-old indoor world record previously set by Cuba'sAliecer Urrutia in 1997. Gregório had his best performance by far in a major competition by taking home the silver with Betanzos taking the bronze. Other finalists were BelarusianDmitriy Valyukevich (4th),Marian Oprea, Romania (5th in season's best), UkrainianSavolaynen Mykola could not improve on the national record he set in qualifying to finish (6th),Danila Burkenya, Russia (7th) and France'sJulien Kapek (8th). | ||||||||
| Shot put details | Christian Cantwell | 21.49 | Reese Hoffa | 21.07(PB) | Joachim Olsen | 20.99 | ||
| The 23-year-old Cantwell added to the IAAF World Athletics Final victory from 2003 to take his second major win with his second round throw of 21.49 m. Compatriot Hoffa, 3 years his senior, made his first podium finish in a championship with a personal best opening distance of 21.07 m. ahead of the more experienced Dane Olsen. The improvingTomasz Majewski of Poland also raised his game to improve on the personal best he set in qualifying with a national record in the final but missed out on bronze by 16 cm. to take 4th place. The other finalists were reigning championManuel Martínez (5th), BelarusianAndrei Mikhnevich (6th), Great Britain'sCarl Myerscough (7th) andYuriy Bilonoh of Ukraine (8th). | ||||||||
| Heptathlon details | Roman Šebrle | 6438WL | Bryan Clay | 6365(PB) | Lev Lobodin | 6203(SB) | ||
| With one event to go, Šebrle lay 32 points behind Clay, with Lobodin a further 168 points back in third. But despite a personal best in the 1,000 m. Clay trailed in a massive 50 seconds behind Roman. This handed the gold to the Czech to give him the title to add to the gold he had won in 2001. Clay held onto silver with Lobodin safely in third. In this invitation only event Kazakhstan'sDmitriy Karpov finished fourth ahead of reigning Olympic championErki Nool from Estonia (5th),Aleksandr Pogorelov of Russia (6th), former silver medalistJón Arnar Magnússon ofIceland in (7th) andRanko Leskovar of Slovenia in (8th). | ||||||||
| Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 metres details | Gail Devers | 7.08(SB) | Kim Gevaert | 7.12(NR) | Yulia Nestsiarenka | 7.12 |
| Gail Devers took her third 60 m gold, to add to her 60 m hurdles title won in 2003, ahead of Gevaert (Belgian record) who pipped Nestsiarenka to silver in aphoto finish though both were given the same time. Other finalists were former bronze medalistTorri Edwards USA (4th),Muriel Hurtis France (5th in season's best),Yuliya Tabakova Russia (6th),Christine Arron France (7th) andNatalya Safronnikova Russia (8th). | ||||||
| 200 metres details | Natallia Safronnikava | 23.13 | Svetlana Goncharenko | 23.15 | Karin Mayr-Krifka | 23.18 |
| Anastasiya Kapachinskaya had crossed the line first and been awarded the gold medal but this was later taken back after she tested positive for theanabolic steroid stanozolol. This moved Safronnikava up to the gold medal position, 2 places better than her only other medal performance at the indoor championships in 2001 though her winning time of 23.13 s was the slowest the title had been won in. Goncharenko moved into silver position the same place that she had finished in 1999 and one better than her 1997 finish, and Mayr-Krifka took a surprise bronze. The other finalists wereMaryna Maydanova andNataliya Pygyda both of Ukraine. | ||||||
| 400 metres details | Natalya Nazarova | 50.19CR | Olesya Forsheva | 50.65(PB) | Tonique Williams-Darling | 50.87NR |
| In a quickly run race Natalya took gold in a championship record of 50.19 seconds to retain her title with her two main challengers both running personal bests to claim the minor medals. The other finalists wereIonela Târlea ROM,Clay Julian USA andFani Halkia GRE. | ||||||
| 800 metres details | Maria de Lurdes Mutola | 1:58.50 | Jolanda Čeplak | 1:58.72(SB) | Joanne Fenn | 1:59.50NR |
| Mutola took her record sixth individual gold in the event ahead of world record holder and main rival Jolanda. Joanne ran a personal best in taking the bronze setting a new national record of 1:59.50.Jen Toomey USA (4th) andTatyana Andrianova RUS (5th) also set PB's withOlga Raspopova RUS coming in sixth. | ||||||
| 1500 metres details | Kutre Dulecha | 4:06.40 | Carmen Douma-Hussar | 4:08.18NR | Gulnara Samitova | 4:08.26 |
| Dulecha became Ethiopia's first ever women's 1,500 m medalist at the championships with a surprise win taking the gold ahead of Douma-Hussar (2nd), who set a Canadian national record and Samitova (3rd). It was by far Kutre's best performance at a major competition although she had set a junior world record at the distance outdoors back in 1997. The other finalists wereDaniela Yordanova, Bulgaria (4th),Nataliya Tobias, Ukraine (5th),Yuliya Kosenkova Russia (6th),Alesya Turova, Belarus (7th),Lidia Okninska, Poland (8th) and Great Britain'sKelly Holmes who had probably been the favourite going into the race but took a fall just after halfway through the race and could not make up the ground eventually finishing 9th. | ||||||
| 3000 metres details | Meseret Defar | 9:11.22 | Berhane Adere | 9:11.43 | Shayne Culpepper | 9:12.15 |
| In the slowest women's 3,000 m the championship had seen, and 22 seconds slower than the quickest heat, 2003 bronze medalist Defar turned the tables on reigning champion Adere with Culpepper taking third. The other finalists were Spain'sMarta Domínguez (4th), Great Britain'sJoanne Pavey (5th),Yelena Zadorozhnaya, Russia (6th),Sabrina Mockenhaupt, Germany (7th), Ukraine'sMaryna Dubrova (8th),Maria McCambridge, Ireland (9th), BelgianVeerle Dejaeghere (10th) andGalina Bogomolova (11th). Great Britain'sHayley Tullett had qualified for the final but did not start due to injury. | ||||||
| 60 metres hurdles details | Perdita Felicien | 7.75CR | Gail Devers | 7.78 | Linda Ferga-Khodadin | 7.82NR |
| Canadian Felicien edged out reigning champion Devers by just 3/100th's of a second with Ferga-Khodadin third in a French national record. Other finalists wereJoanna Hayes, USA (4th),Susanna Kallur, Sweden (5th),Lacena Golding-Clarke, Jamaica (6th),Flóra Redoúmi, Greece (7th) andNicole Ramalalanirina, France (8th). | ||||||
| 4 × 400 metre relay details | Olesya Krasnomovets Olga Kotlyarova Tatyana Levina Natalya Nazarova | 3:23.88WR | Natalya Sologub Anna Kozak Ilona Usovich Svetlana Usovich | 3:29.96NR | Angela Moroșanu Alina Râpanu Maria Rus Ionela Târlea | 3:30.06NR |
| A scintillating run by the Russian women's team saw them take gold in a world record time of 3:23.88. The second placed Belarusians broke their national record to claim silver and the Romanians did the same to take the bronze. Poland also broke their national record but finished without a medal in 4th with the Jamaican ladies finishing 5th and the Greek team, who also set a national record in the heats coming in 6th. An inexperienced USA team could only manage fourth place in their first round heat. | ||||||
| High jump details | Yelena Slesarenko | 2.04=WL | Anna Chicherova | 2.00 | Blanka Vlašić | 1.97 |
| Two 22-year-old Russians took the main medals with Slesarenko beating her compatriot Chicherova with a near faultless display, failing on only one of her jumps. Blanka took bronze on countback ahead of UkrainianVita Palamar (4th) andDaniela Rath of Germany (5th) all clearing 1.97 m. Spain'sMarta Mendía set a personal best in qualifying for the final but ended up in 6th place ahead of BulgarianVenelina Veneva (7th) andViktoriya Styopina of Ukraine in 8th. | ||||||
| Pole vault details | Yelena Isinbayeva | 4.86WR | Stacy Dragila | 4.81AR | Svetlana Feofanova | 4.70 |
| With three former winners of the title along with the previous years silver medalist this was always going to be a fascinating contest in this relatively young event. The 21-year-old world junior record holder Isinbayeva added to her growing reputation with a world record clearance of 4.86 m. to improve on her silver from a year ago and her bronze at the 2003 outdoors championship taking the gold ahead of the reigning Olympic champion Dragila in silver and reigning world champion Feofanova, bronze.Jillian Schwartz of USA set a personal best in 4th place ahead ofVanessa Boslak who set a French national record in finishing equal fifth withMonika Pyrek of Poland. Pyrek compatriotAnna Rogowska took 7th place with a disappointing 8th place for 1999 championNastja Ryjikh. | ||||||
| Long jump details | Tatyana Lebedeva | 6.98WL | Tatyana Kotova | 6.93(SB) | Carolina Klüft | 6.92NR |
| Lebedeva, fresh from her world record in the triple jump the previous day, jumped a world leading distance of 6.98 m to record her second gold medal ahead of reigning champion Kotova who jumped a season's best and Sweden's heptathlete queen Klüft who set a national record. The other finalists were China'sYingnan Guan (4th), Latvia'sValentīna Gotovska (5th), Italy'sFiona May (6th), Spain'sConcepción Montaner (7th)Adina Anton of Romania who finished 8th. | ||||||
| Triple jump details | Tatyana Lebedeva | 15.36WR | Yamilé Aldama | 14.90AR | Hrysopiyí Devetzí | 14.73 |
| Lebedeva first qualifying jump put her through to the final where her second round jump of 15.25 m gave her a comfortable lead over the field. She then opted out of her third and fifth round jumps saving herself in case a big jump was required in the final round. Her nearest rival Aldama had recorded 14.90 m also in the second round to lie in silver medal position with Devetzí's fourth round 14.73 m giving her bronze. Tatyana decided to take her last jump in the knowledge that gold medal was hers and produced a world record jump of 15.36 m. She followed this up by winning the long jump also the following day. The other finalists wereTrecia Smith (4th in a Jamaican record), Italy'sMagdelín Martínez (5th),Françoise Mbango Etone of Cameroon (6th), Romania'sAdelina Gavrilă (7th),Olena Hovorova, Ukraine (8th),Mabel Gay, Cuba (9th),Baya Rahouli, Algeria (10th), Italy'sSimona La Mantia (11th) andNatallia Safronava of Belarus (12th). | ||||||
| Shot put details | Svetlana Krivelyova | 19.90(SB) | Yumileidi Cumbá | 19.31(SB) | Nadine Kleinert | 19.05(SB) |
| In an amazing turn of events UkrainianVita Pavlysh finished first only to be stripped of her title when receiving a lifetime ban after testing positive foranabolic steroids again. This was a repeat of the events following the 1999 Indoor Championship when she had also taken the gold only for it to be taken away when she was given a two-year ban for the same offence. This left Krivelyova to actually be awarded first place ahead of Cumbá and Kleinert. The other finalists wereKrystyna Zabawska tantalisingly just 5 cm. back in 4th, China'sLi Meiju (5th),Misleydis González of Cuba 6th, and two-time silver medalistNadzeya Astapchuk of Belarus 7th. | ||||||
| Pentathlon details | Naide Gomes | 4759WL | Nataliya Dobrynska | 4727NR | Austra Skujytė | 4679NR |
| With the lowest ever winning number of points, Gomes, who had led from the third event held on from Dobrynska by 32 points with Lithuanian Skujyte a further 48 points behind in the bronze medal position. The second- and third-place finishers set national records as didKarin Ruckstuhl of Netherlands who was (4th). Belgium'sTia Hellebaut came (5th),Irina Butor of Belarus (6th),Larisa Netšeporuk of Estonia (7th) withKim Schiemenz of USA completing the line up in (8th) place. | ||||||
| Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 18 | |
| 2 | United States (USA) | 4 | 5 | 1 | 10 |
| 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | |
| 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | ||
| 5 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 | |
| 6 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 5 | |
| 7 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |
| 8 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | |
| 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | ||
| 10 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | |
| 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | ||
| 12 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
| 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 15 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 3 | |
| 0 | 2 | 1 | 3 | ||
| 17 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
| 18 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | ||
| 23 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | |
| 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | ||
| 26 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| Totals (32 entries) | 27 | 28 | 29 | 84 | |