Jump to content

2011 Asian Athletics Championships – Women's 400 metres

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The women's 400 metres at the 2011 Asian Athletics Championships was held at the Kobe Universiade Memorial Stadium on 7 and 8 July.[1]

The original gold and silver medallists, Kazakhstan's Olga Tereshkova and Iraq's Gulustan Ieso, were later disqualified after testing positive for testosterone and methylhexaneamine, respectively. Initial bronze medallist Chen Jingwen of China was elevated to the gold medal position, while fourth and fifth placed runners Chandrika Subashini and Chisato Tanaka moved into the minor medal positions.[2]

Medalists

[edit]
Gold Chen Jingwen
 China
Silver Chandrika Subashini
 Sri Lanka
Bronze Chisato Tanaka
 Japan

Records

[edit]
Standing records prior to the 2010 European Athletics Championships
World record  Marita Koch (GDR) 47.60 Canberra, Australia 6 October 1985
Asian record  Ma Yuqin (CHN) 49.81 Beijing, China 11 September 1993
Championship record  Damayanthi Dharsha (SRI) 51.05 Jakarta, Indonesia 2000
World Leading  Allyson Felix (USA) 49.81 Rome, Italy 26 May 2011
Asian Leading  Chandrika Subashini (SRI) 52.66 Kingston, Jamaica 23 June 2011

Schedule

[edit]
Date Time Round
7 July 2011 11:00 Round 1
8 July 2011 18:40 Final

Results

[edit]

Round 1

[edit]

First 3 in each heat (Q) and 2 best performers (q) advance to the finals.[3]

Rank Heat Name Nationality Time Notes
1 2 Chandrika Subashini  Sri Lanka 54.05 Q
2 1 Chen Jingwen  China 54.06 Q
3 1 Chisato Tanaka  Japan 54.16 Q
4 1 Miho Shingu  Japan 54.36 Q
5 2 Sayaka Aoki  Japan 54.46 q
6 1 Alaa Al-Qaysi  Iraq 54.68 q
7 2 Yujin Woo  South Korea 55.78
8 1 Leong Ka Man  Macau 1:00.04
2 Olga Tereshkova  Kazakhstan 53.53 Q, DQ
2 Gulustan Ieso  Iraq 53.81 Q, DQ
1 Marina Maslyonko  Kazakhstan DNF

Final

[edit]

[4]

Rank Lane Name Nationality Time Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) 7 Chen Jingwen  China 52.89
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 9 Chandrika Subashini  Sri Lanka 53.35
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 4 Chisato Tanaka  Japan 54.08
4 2 Sayaka Aoki  Japan 54.15
5 8 Miho Shingu  Japan 54.28
6 3 Alaa Al-Qaysi  Iraq 54.85
5 Olga Tereshkova  Kazakhstan 52.37 DQ
6 Gulustan Ieso  Iraq 52.80 DQ

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Schedule" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2011-07-07.
  2. ^ Silver for India in relay. The Hindu (2012-03-09). Retrieved on 2012-03-31.
  3. ^ Round one, heat 1 results, Round one, heat 2 results
  4. ^ Final results