2013_World_Championships_in_Athletics_–_Women's_high_jump

2013 World Championships in Athletics – Women's high jump

2013 World Championships in Athletics – Women's high jump

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The women's high jump at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Luzhniki Stadium on 15–17 August.[1]

Quick Facts Women's high jump at the 2013 World Championships, Venue ...
Official Video

It took 1.92 to make the final. In the final, six competitors cleared 1.97, world leader and Olympic silver medalist Brigetta Barrett, Olympic gold medalist and defending champion Anna Chicherova, and European indoor champion Ruth Beitia still perfect. But at 2.00, only Barrett and Olympic bronze medalist Svetlana Shkolina made it, both on the first attempt, giving Barrett the lead and leaving Chicherova and Beitia tied for bronze. At 2.03, Shkolina reversed that position with a first attempt clearance. Barrett had no answer.

The answer came in February 2019 when Shkolina was handed a four-year ban for doping, retroactive to 2012, disqualifying her gold medal.[2]

Records

Prior to the competition, the records were as follows:[3]

World record Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 Rome, Italy 30 August 1987
Championship record Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 Rome, Italy 30 August 1987
World leading  Brigetta Barrett (USA) 2.04 Des Moines, United States 22 June 2013
African record  Hestrie Cloete (RSA) 2.06 Paris, France 31 August 2003
Asian record  Marina Aitova (KAZ) 1.99 Athens, Greece 13 July 2009
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Chaunté Howard Lowe (USA) 2.05 Des Moines, United States 26 June 2010
South American record  Solange Witteveen (ARG) 1.96 Oristano, Italy 8 September 1997
European record Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 Rome, Italy 30 August 1987
Oceanian record  Vanessa Browne-Ward (AUS) 1.98 Perth, Australia 12 February 1989
 Alison Inverarity (AUS) Ingolstadt, Germany 17 July 1994

Schedule

More information Date, Time ...

All times are local times (UTC+4)

Results

KEY: QQualified q12 best performers NRNational record PBPersonal best SBSeasonal best

Qualification

Qualification: Qualifying Performance 1.95 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advanced to the final.[4]

More information Rank, Group ...

Final

Silver medalist Ruth Beitia

The final was started at 18:00.[5]

More information Rank, Name ...

References

  1. "Doping bans for 12 Russian athletes including 2012 Olympic champion Ivan Ukhov". BBC Sport. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  2. "Records & Lists – high jump". IAAF. Retrieved 8 August 2013.

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