Events at the 1993 World Championships | ||
---|---|---|
Track events | ||
100 m | men | women |
200 m | men | women |
400 m | men | women |
800 m | men | women |
1500 m | men | women |
3000 m | women | |
5000 m | men | |
10,000 m | men | women |
100 m hurdles | women | |
110 m hurdles | men | |
400 m hurdles | men | women |
3000 m steeplechase | men | |
4 × 100 m relay | men | women |
4 × 400 m relay | men | women |
Road events | ||
Marathon | men | women |
10 km walk | women | |
20 km walk | men | |
50 km walk | men | |
Field events | ||
High jump | men | women |
Pole vault | men | |
Long jump | men | women |
Triple jump | men | women |
Shot put | men | women |
Discus throw | men | women |
Hammer throw | men | |
Javelin throw | men | women |
Combined events | ||
Heptathlon | women | |
Decathlon | men | |
These are the official results of the Women's High Jump event at the 1993 IAAF World Championships in Stuttgart, Germany. There were a total number of 38 participating athletes, with two qualifying groups and the final held on Saturday August 21, 1993. The qualification mark was set at 1.93 metres.
Qualification Round | |
---|---|
Group A | Group B |
19.08.1993 – 10:20h | 19.08.1993 – 10:20h |
Final Round | |
21.08.1993 – 16:40h |
Q | automatic qualification |
q | qualification by rank |
DNS | did not start |
NM | no mark |
WR | world record |
AR | area record |
NR | national record |
PB | personal best |
SB | season best |
Rank | Name | Nationality | 1.75 | 1.80 | 1.85 | 1.88 | 1.91 | 1.94 | 1.97 | 1.99 | 2.01 | 2.05 | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ioamnet Quintero | Cuba | – | – | o | – | o | o | xxo | xo | – | xxx | 1.99 | ||
Silvia Costa | Cuba | – | – | o | – | o | o | o | xx– | x | 1.97 | |||
Sigrid Kirchmann | Austria | – | – | o | o | o | o | xo | xx- | x | 1.97 | NR | ||
4 | Alina Astafei | Romania | – | – | o | – | o | o | xxx | 1.94 | ||||
4 | Yelena Gulyayeva | Russia | – | – | o | o | o | o | xxx | 1.94 | ||||
6 | Antonella Bevilacqua | Italy | – | o | o | o | o | xxo | xxx | 1.94 | ||||
7 | Tanya Hughes | United States | – | o | o | o | o | xxx | 1.91 | |||||
8 | Valentīna Gotovska | Latvia | – | o | xxo | xo | o | xxx | 1.91 | |||||
9 | Katarzyna Majchrzak | Poland | 1.88 | |||||||||||
9 | Hanne Haugland | Norway | 1.88 | |||||||||||
11 | Svetlana Zalevskaya | Kazakhstan | 1.88 | |||||||||||
11 | Yelena Topchina | Russia | 1.88 | |||||||||||
11 | Britta Bilač | Slovenia | 1.88 | |||||||||||
Heike Henkel | Germany | DNS |
The high jump is a track and field event in which competitors must jump unaided over a horizontal bar placed at measured heights without dislodging it. In its modern, most-practiced format, a bar is placed between two standards with a crash mat for landing. Since ancient times, competitors have successively improved their technique until developing the universally preferred Fosbury Flop, in which athletes run towards the bar and leap head first with their back to the bar.
Athletics is a sport that includes athletic contests based on running, jumping, and throwing skills. The name used in North America is derived from where the sport takes place, a running track and a grass field for the throwing and some of the jumping events. Track and field is categorized under the umbrella sport of athletics, which also includes road running, cross country running and racewalking. In British English the term athletics is synonymous with American track and field and includes all jumping events. Outside of Canada and the United States, athletics is the official term for this sport with 'track' and 'field' events being subgroups of athletics events.
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