Athletics at the 2010 Commonwealth Games

Summary

The athletics competition at the 2010 Commonwealth Games was held in New Delhi, India between 6 and 14 October. The track and field events took place between 6–12 October at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium while the marathon contests were held on a street course running through the city on 14 October.[1]

Athletics at the XIX Commonwealth Games
Dates6–12, 14 October 2010
Host cityDelhi, India India
VenueJawaharlal Nehru Stadium
Events46 (+6 disabled)
Participation845 athletes from
61 nations
Records set-


A total of 46 athletics events were contested, which made it the sport with the second greatest number of medals on offer after the aquatics competition. The programme was almost identical to that of the 2006 edition, with the sole exception being the men's 50 km race walk, which was dropped. As in 2006, three men's and three women's disability athletics events were contested alongside the open competition.[2]

Each of the Commonwealth Games Associations could send a maximum of three participants per event and a team of six for relay events.[3] Kenya topped the medal table, with eleven gold medals and 29 medals in total. This was the first time that the nation achieved the feat, beating the typically dominant nations Australia (eleven golds, but 20 overall) and England (seven golds, 26 medals).[4] Canada and Jamaica rounded out the top five while hosts India enjoyed their greatest ever haul at the Games, taking home two golds and twelve medals altogether.

Four failed doping tests have so far been announced: Nigerian Oludamola Osayomi was stripped of the women's 100 m title, and her compatriot Samuel Okon, a 110 m hurdler, was also disqualified. Both athletes tested positive for methylhexanamine. Rani Yadav, India's representative in the women's 20 km walk, was the third athlete to fail a test as 19-Norandrosterone was detected in her sample.[5] Osayomi's 100 m stripped gold initially went to Sally Pearson of Australia but a delay in the appeals process saw Pearson disqualified for a false start some time after the race.[6] Folashade Abugan of Nigeria tested positive for Testosterone prohormone following the final of the women's 400 metres. She was disqualified from the 400 metres and the Nigerian team, of which she was a member, were disqualified from the women's 4 x 400 metres relay where they had originally placed second.[7]

Preparation edit

A test event for the competition was scheduled in late July: the Asian All-Star Athletics Meet featured a number of prominent Asian athletes and demonstrated the stadium's readiness for games usage.[8][9]

Many of the most prominent athletes from the Commonwealth were absent from the competition. Caster Semenya, Commonwealth champion Christine Ohuruogu, and Olympic medallist Lisa Dobriskey were among the athletes missing due to injury, but others including Usain Bolt, David Rudisha and Shelly-Ann Fraser opted to miss the competition out of choice – all ten of the year's fastest Commonwealth men's 100 m runners (including defending champion Asafa Powell) were not present.[10] Further to this, two reigning world champions (English jumper Phillips Idowu and Australian thrower Dani Samuels) declared themselves out of the running on grounds of the security and accommodation conditions in Delhi. The competition's late scheduling within the track and field season was a primary factor in many athlete withdrawals.[11]

In spite of this, a number of Olympic champions and other prominent names were selected to compete, including Australian Olympic/World champion Steve Hooker and New Zealand's Olympic/World Champion Valerie Adams, top Kenyan runners Nancy Langat, Vivian Cheruiyot and Ezekiel Kemboi, Bahamian high jumper Donald Thomas, and South Africa's Commonwealth champions L.J. van Zyl and Sunette Viljoen.[10] Former world record holder Steve Cram emphasised the Games' role in developing younger athletes: "That's what it was for me, at 17 years old I went to the Commonwealth Games because Coe and Ovett didn't go. Nobody at the time was telling me it was bad that Coe and Ovett weren't there."[11]

The stadium's track and field was damaged during the opening ceremony and major works – including the re-laying of the tarmac on the track and grass on the infield – took place in the 24 hours leading up to the first day of athletics events at the stadium.[12] Three training venues were allocated for the athletics events: the Commonwealth Games Village 2010, Thyagaraj Sports Complex and the Delhi University sports complex.

Medal summary edit

Men edit

 
Moses Ndiema Kipsiro, men's 5000 metres and 10000 metres champion
 
Dylan Armstrong, men's shot put champion
 
Andy Turner won the men's 110 m hurdles
 
Dai Greene won the men's 400 metre hurdles
 
XIX Commonwealth Games-2010 Delhi Winners of (Pole Vault Men's), Steve Hooker of Australia (Gold), Steven Lewis of England (Silver) and Max Eaves of England (Bronze), during the medal ceremony of the event
 
Men's Decathlon winners: Nelson Adjetey Jami of Canada (Gold), Brent Newdick of New Zealand (Silver) and Martin Brockman of England (Bronze)
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Lerone Clarke
  Jamaica
10.12 Mark Lewis-Francis
  England
10.20 Aaron Armstrong
  Trinidad and Tobago
10.24
200 metres
details
Leon Baptiste
  England
20.45 Lansford Spence
  Jamaica
20.49 Christian Malcolm
  Wales
20.52
400 metres
details
Mark Mutai
  Kenya
45.44 Sean Wroe
  Australia
45.46 Ramon Miller
  Bahamas
45.55
800 metres
details
Boaz Kiplagat Lalang
  Kenya
1:46.60 Richard Kiplagat
  Kenya
1:46.95 Abraham Kiplagat
  Kenya
1:47.37
1500 metres
details
Silas Kiplagat
  Kenya
3:41:78 James Magut
  Kenya
3:42:27 Nick Willis
  New Zealand
3:42:38
5000 metres
details
Moses Ndiema Kipsiro
  Uganda
13:31.25 Eliud Kipchoge
  Kenya
13:31.32 Mark Kiptoo
  Kenya
13:32.58
10,000 metres
details
Moses Ndiema Kipsiro
  Uganda
27:57.39 Daniel Lemashon Salel
  Kenya
27:57.57 Joseph Kiptoo Birech
  Kenya
27:58.58
110 metres hurdles
details
Andy Turner
  England
13.38 William Sharman
  England
13.50 Lawrence Clarke
  England
13.70
400 metres hurdles
details
Dai Greene
  Wales
48.52 L. J. van Zyl
  South Africa
48.63 Rhys Williams
  Wales
49.19
3000 metres steeplechase
details
Richard Mateelong
  Kenya
8:16.39 Ezekiel Kemboi
  Kenya
8:18.47 Brimin Kipruto
  Kenya
8:19.65
4×100 metres relay
details
  England (ENG)
Ryan Scott
Leon Baptiste
Marlon Devonish
Mark Lewis-Francis
38.74   Jamaica (JAM)
Lerone Clarke
Lansford Spence
Rasheed Dwyer
Remaldo Rose
Steve Slowly*
38.79   India (IND)
Rahamatulla Molla
Suresh Sathya
Shameer Naseema Manzile
Md Abdul Najeeb Qureshi
38.89
4×400 metres relay
details
  Australia (AUS)
Joel Milburn
Kevin Moore
Brendan Cole
Sean Wroe
Ben Offereins*
3:03.30   Kenya (KEN)
Vincent Koskei
Vincent Kiilo
Anderson Mutegi
Mark Mutai
3:03.84   England (ENG)
Conrad Williams
Nick Leavey
Richard Yates
Robert Tobin
David Hughes*
Graham Hedman*
3:03.97
Marathon
details
John Kelai
  Kenya
2:14:35 Michael Shelley
  Australia
2:15:28 Amos Tirop Matui
  Kenya
2:15:58
20 kilometres walk
details
Jared Tallent
  Australia
1:22:18 Luke Adams
  Australia
1:22:41 Harminder Singh
  India
1:23:27
High jump
details
Donald Thomas
  Bahamas
2.32 m Trevor Barry
  Bahamas
2.29 m Kabelo Kgosiemang
  Botswana
2.26 m
Pole vault
details
Steven Hooker
  Australia
5.60 m Steven Lewis
  England
5.60 m Max Eaves
  England
5.40 m
Long jump
details
Fabrice Lapierre
  Australia
8.30 m Greg Rutherford
  England
8.22 m Ignisious Gaisah
  Ghana
8.12 m
Triple jump
details
Tosin Oke
  Nigeria
17.16 m Hugo Mamba
  Cameroon
17.14 m Renjith Maheswary
  India
17.07 m
Shot put
details
Dylan Armstrong
  Canada
21.02 m GR Dorian Scott
  Jamaica
20.19 m Dale Stevenson
  Australia
19.99 m
Discus throw
details
Benn Harradine
  Australia
65.45 m Vikas Gowda
  India
63.69 m Carl Myerscough
  England
60.64 m
Hammer throw
details
Chris Harmse
  South Africa
73.12 m Alex Smith
  England
72.95 m Mike Floyd
  England
69.34 m
Javelin throw
details
Jarrod Bannister
  Australia
81.71 m Stuart Farquhar
  New Zealand
78.15 m Kashinath Naik
  India
74.29 m
Decathlon
details
Jamie Adjetey-Nelson
  Canada
8070 Brent Newdick
  New Zealand
7899 Martin Brockman
  England
7712

* Athletes who participated in the heats only and received medals.

Men's para-sport edit

Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres (T46)
details
Simon Patmore
  Australia
11.14 Samkelo Radebe
  South Africa
11.25 Ayuba Abdullahi
  Nigeria
11.37
1500 metres (T54)
details
Kurt Fearnley
  Australia
3:19.86 Richard Colman
  Australia
3:20.90 Josh Cassidy
  Canada
3:21.14
Shot put (F32/34/52)
details
Kyle Pettey
  Canada
1021
(11.44 m)
Dan West
  England
969
(10.78 m)
Hamish MacDonald
  Australia
889
(9.92 m)

Women edit

 
Grace Momanyi of Kenya won the women's 10000 metres
 
Donald Thomas was the victor in the men's highjump
 
Steve Hooker of Australia won the men's pole vault
 
Winners of Discus (Women's) Krishna Poonia of India (Gold), Harwant Kaur of India (Silver) and Seema Antil of India (Bronze) during the medal presentation ceremony
 
XIX Commonwealth Games-2010 Delhi (Women's) Athletics Long Jump Alice Falaiye of Canada (Gold), Prajusha Maliakkal of India (Silver) and Tabia Charles of Canada (Bronze), during the medal presentation ceremony
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres
details
Natasha Mayers
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
11.37 Katherine Endacott
  England
11.44 Delphine Atangana
  Cameroon
11.48
200 metres
details
Cydonie Mothersille
  Cayman Islands
22.89 Abiodun Oyepitan
  England
23.26 Adrienne Power
  Canada
23.52
400 metres
details
Amantle Montsho
  Botswana
50.10 GR Aliann Pompey
  Guyana
51.65 Christine Amertil
  Bahamas
51.96
800 metres
details
Nancy Langat
  Kenya
2:00.01 Nikki Hamblin
  New Zealand
2:00.05 Diane Cummins
  Canada
2:00.13
1500 metres
details
Nancy Langat
  Kenya
4:05.26 GR Nikki Hamblin
  New Zealand
4:05.97 Stephanie Twell
  Scotland
4:06.15
5000 metres
details
Vivian Cheruiyot
  Kenya
15:55.12 Sylvia Kibet
  Kenya
15:55.61 Ines Chenonge
  Kenya
16:02.47
10,000 metres
details
Grace Momanyi
  Kenya
32:34.11 Doris Changeywo
  Kenya
32:36.97 Kavita Raut
  India
33:05.28
100 metres hurdles
details
Sally Pearson
  Australia
12.67 Angela Whyte
  Canada
12.98 Andrea Miller
  New Zealand
13.25
400 metres hurdles
details
Muizat Ajoke Odumosu
  Nigeria
55.28 Eilidh Child
  Scotland
55.62 Nickiesha Wilson
  Jamaica
56.06
3000 metres steeplechase
details
Milcah Chemos Cheywa
  Kenya
9:40.96 Mercy Wanjiru Njoroge
  Kenya
9:41.54 Gladys Jerotich Kipkemoi
  Kenya
9:52.51
4×100 metres relay
details
  England (ENG)
Katherine Endacott
Montell Douglas
Laura Turner
Abiodun Oyepitan
44.19   Ghana (GHA)
Rosina Amenebede
Elizabeth Amolofo
Beatrice Gyaman
Janet Amponsah
45.24   India (IND)
Geetha Saati
Srabani Nanda
P. K. Priya
H. M. Jyothi
45.25
4×400 metres relay
details
  India (IND)
Manjeet Kaur
Sini Jose
Ashwini Akkunji
Mandeep Kaur
Jauna Murmu*
Chitra Soman*
3:27.77   England (ENG)
Kelly Massey
Vicki Barr
Meghan Beesley
Nadine Okyere
Joice Maduaka*
3:29.51   Canada (CAN)
Amonn Nelson
Adrienne Power
Vicki Tolton
Carline Muir
Ruky Abdulai*,
3:30.20
Marathon
details
Irene Jerotich
  Kenya
2:34:32 Irene Mogake
  Kenya
2:34:43 Lisa Weightman
  Australia
2:35:25
20 kilometres walk
details
Johanna Jackson
  England
1:34:22 Claire Tallent
  Australia
1:36:55 Grace Njue
  Kenya
1:37:49
High jump
details
Nicole Forrester
  Canada
1.91 m Sheree Francis
  Jamaica
1.88 m Levern Spencer
  Saint Lucia
1.88 m
Pole vault
details
Alana Boyd
  Australia
4.40 m Marianna Zachariadi
  Cyprus
4.40 m Kate Dennison
  England
Carly Dockendorf
  Canada
Kelsie Hendry
  Canada
4.25 m
Long jump
details
Alice Falaiye
  Canada
6.50 m Prajusha Maliakkal
  India
6.47 m Tabia Charles
  Canada
6.44 m
Triple jump
details
Trecia-Kaye Smith
  Jamaica
14.19 m Ayanna Alexander
  Trinidad and Tobago
13.91 m Tabia Charles
  Canada
13.84 m
Shot put
details
Valerie Adams
  New Zealand
20.47 m GR Cleopatra Borel-Brown
  Trinidad and Tobago
19.03 m Margaret Satupai
  Samoa
16.43 m
Discus throw
details
Krishna Poonia
  India
61.51 m Harwant Kaur
  India
60.16 m Seema Antil
  India
58.46 m
Hammer throw
details
Sultana Frizell
  Canada
68.57 m GR Carys Parry
  Wales
64.93 m Zoe Derham
  England
64.04 m
Javelin throw
details
Sunette Viljoen
  South Africa
62.34 m GR Kim Mickle
  Australia
60.90 m Justine Robbeson
  South Africa
60.03 m
Heptathlon
details
Louise Hazel
  England
6156 Jessica Zelinka
  Canada
6100 Grace Clements
  England
5819

* Athletes who participated in the heats only and received medals.

Women's para-sport edit

 
XIX Commonwealth Games-2010 Delhi Winners of 100m (Women's T37) Hart Katrina of England (Gold), Mcloughlin Jenny of Wales (Silver) and Benson Johanna of Namibia (Bronze)
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 metres (T37)
details
Katrina Hart
  England
14.36 Jenny McLoughlin
  Wales
14.68 Johanna Benson
  Namibia
14.81
1500 metres (T54)
details
Diane Roy
  Canada
3:53.95 Chineme Obeta
  Nigeria
4:09.29 Anita Fordjour
  Ghana
4:18.83
Shot put (F32–34/52/53)
details
Louise Ellery
  Australia
1110 (6.17 m) Jess Hamill
  New Zealand
979 (7.17 m) Gemma Prescott
  England
952 (5.54 m)

Games statistics edit

At the competition Amantle Montsho (Botswana) and Cydonie Mothersill (Cayman Islands) all won the first ever Commonwealth gold medals for their respective countries. Natasha Mayers (St. Vincent and Grenadines), won the first gold medal ever by a female for her country. The number of medal sweeps in the athletics (6) was at an all-time high for the competition: Kenya took all top three spaces in four events, England beat all in the men's hurdles while hosts India completed a 1–2–3 in the women's discus.[13]

Medal table edit

  *   Host nation (India)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Kenya1110829
2  Australia116320
3  England791026
4  Canada72817
5  Jamaica2417
6  India*23712
7  Nigeria2316
8  South Africa2215
9  Uganda2002
10  New Zealand1528
11  Wales1225
12  Bahamas1113
13  Botswana1012
14  Cayman Islands1001
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines1001
16  Trinidad and Tobago0213
17  Ghana0123
18  Cameroon0112
  Scotland0112
20  Cyprus0101
21  Guyana0011
  Namibia0011
  Saint Lucia0011
  Samoa0011
Totals (24 entries)525354159

Participating nations edit

61 Nations competed leaving 11 that did not.

References edit

  1. ^ 2010 CWG - Athletics. 2010 Commonwealth Games. Retrieved on 2010-10-05.
  2. ^ CWG - Para-sport. 2010 Commonwealth Games. Retrieved on 2010-10-05.
  3. ^ 2010 Commonwealth Games Athletics events. 2010 Commonwealth Games (2010-07-24).
  4. ^ Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-14) Double marathon triumph for Kenya ends athletics programme at Commonwealth Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  5. ^ Bull, Andy (2010-10-13). Commonwealth Games 2010: Indian athlete tests positive for drugs. The Guardian. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
  6. ^ 'Communication blunder' sees Pearson stripped of gold. BBC Sport (2010-08-04). Retrieved on 2010-10-09.
  7. ^ "Third Nigerian fails drugs test". 15 October 2010.
  8. ^ Tough fight awaits in 29-30 July Asian All-Star Meet. Times of India (2010-07-21). Retrieved on 2010-07-21.
  9. ^ Locals provide the highlights as Asian All-Star meeting tests Commonwealth Games track. IAAF (2010-07-31). Retrieved on 2010-10-04.
  10. ^ a b Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-05). Kenya looking to dethrone England and Australia in Delhi – Commonwealth Games preview. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-04.
  11. ^ a b Jones, Phil (2010-10-02). Commonwealth Games 2010: Time for new athletics heroes. BBC Sport. Retrieved on 2010-10-05.
  12. ^ Commonwealth Games 2010: Stadium in race to be ready . BBC Sport (2010-10-05). Retrieved on 2010-10-05.
  13. ^ Statistics of the Games . 2010 Commonwealth Games. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.
Day reports
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-07). Kipsiro upsets Kipchoge - Commonwealth Games Day One. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-10.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-08). Clarke and Oludamola take 100m crowns, Armstrong dominates Shot Put in Delhi – Commonwealth Games Day Two. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-10.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-09). Langat breaks Games 1500m record, Turner leads high hurdles sweep for England in Delhi – Commonwealth Games Day Three. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-10.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-10). Two more gold for Kenya, Adams dominates Shot Put - Commonwealth Games Day Four. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-10.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-11). Kenyan men sweep 800m, two medals for India in Delhi - Commonwealth Games, Day Five. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-14.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-12). India sweeps women's Discus Throw, Langat and Kipsiro complete doubles – Commonwealth Games Day Six. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-14.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-13). Women's relay team crowns Indian glory - Commonwealth Games, Day Seven. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-14.
  • Rowbottom, Mike (2010-10-14) Double marathon triumph for Kenya ends athletics programme at Commonwealth Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-10-15.

External links edit

  • Competition schedule