1998 World Junior Championships in Athletics – Men's 4 × 400 metres relay
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
The men's 4x400 metres relay event at the 1998 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Annecy, France, at Parc des Sports on 1 and 2 August.[1][2]
Medalists[edit]
Results[edit]
Final[edit]
2 August
Heats[edit]
1 August
Heat 1[edit]
Rank | Nation | Competitors | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States | Tony Berrian Reginald Depass Brian Swarn Andrew Pierce | 3:06.62 | Q |
2 | Australia | Daniel McFarlane Daniel Batman Bryce Barnwell Casey Vincent | 3:06.72 | Q |
3 | Germany | Arne Macher Ruwen Faller Ralf Riester Marc-Alexander Scheer | 3:07.75 | Q |
4 | Greece | Evággelos Moustakidis Anastasios Goúsis Yeóryios Doúpis Periklís Iakovákis | 3:08.54 | Q |
5 | France | Arnaud Ignesta Nicolas Colon Urel Lacroix Fabrice Zircon | 3:12.92 | |
Morocco | Hicham Mihjane Abdelkabir Louraïbi Mohamed Mouhlal Chabib El-Azouizi | DQ | IAAF rule 170.10 | |
Russia | Kirill Sedykh Dmitriy Bogdanov Dmitriy Zhukov Yuriy Borzakovskiy | DQ | IAAF rule 170.10 |
Heat 2[edit]
Rank | Nation | Competitors | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Poland | Przemyslaw Dunaj Maciej Ryszkowski Filip Walotka Michał Węglarski | 3:08.35 | Q |
2 | Jamaica | Collin Thomas Sanjay Ayre Omar Henry Leroy Colquhoun | 3:08.50 | Q |
3 | United Kingdom | David Naismith Adam Buckley Chris Carson Alloy Wilson | 3:08.85 | Q |
4 | Japan | Masayuki Okusako Hirofumi Nakagawa Satoshi Oshikawa Takahiko Yamamura | 3:10.22 | Q |
5 | South Africa | Tshepo Thobelangope Juan Pretorius François Coetzee Mandla Nkosi | 3:10.34 | |
6 | New Zealand | Nicholas O'Brien Michael O'Connor Khamal Ganley Dallas Roberts | 3:14.77 | |
Algeria | Ryad Cheragui Tahar Ghozali Mohamed Bezegrari Said Chabane | DQ |
Participation[edit]
According to an unofficial count, 60 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.
- Algeria (4)
- Australia (5)
- France (4)
- Germany (4)
- Greece (4)
- Jamaica (5)
- Japan (4)
- Morocco (4)
- New Zealand (4)
- Poland (4)
- Russia (4)
- South Africa (4)
- United Kingdom (5)
- United States (5)
References[edit]
- ^ Peters, Lionel; Magnusson, Tomas, WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS WJC - 1998 Annecy FRA Jul 28-Aug 2, WORLD JUNIOR ATHLETICS HISTORY ("WJAH"), archived from the original on 3 December 2013, retrieved 13 June 2015
- ^ IAAF WORLD JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIPS - Eugene 2014 - FACTS & FIGURES (PDF), IAAF, retrieved 13 June 2015