Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Women's pole vault

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Women's pole vault
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
Venue Stadium Australia
Date23 – 25 September
Competitors29 from 19 nations
Winning height4.60 OR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Stacy Dragila Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Silver medal icon.svg Tatiana Grigorieva Flag of Australia.svg  Australia
Bronze medal icon.svg Vala Flosadóttir Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland
2004  

The official results of the Women's Pole Vault at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia, held on Monday 25 September 2000. There were a total number of 30 participating athletes in this event, which made its Olympic debut. The qualifying round was held on Saturday 23 September 2000, with the qualifying height set at 4.35 metres. [1]

While the pole vault had been a standard Olympic event for a century, dating back to the first revival in 1896, this was the first time the event had been held for women. [2] [3]

The favorite coming into the event was world champion and world record holder Stacy Dragila, [4] [5] but the home favorite was Soviet transplant Australian Tatiana Grigorieva. [6] At 4.55m these were the only two athletes still in the competition. Vala Flosadóttir, who had held the lead with a clean record to 4.50m, took the bronze medal, and set the National record while taking the only women's Olympic medal for Iceland to date. [7] With Dragila's 4 misses in the competition, including one at 4.55m, Grigorieva had the lead. At 4.60m, Dragila reversed that with a clean clearance on her first attempt. Grigorieva was unable to match that and strategically moved to 4.65m, 2 cm higher than the world record Dragila had set in Sacramento in qualifying to the Olympics, to try to take the win. Neither competitor was able to clear 4.65m, Dragila took the gold and the Olympic record. [8] [9]

Schedule

All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 23 September 200018:00Qualification
Monday, 25 September 200018:00Final

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing World record was as follows. As this was a new event in the Olympics, no previous Olympic record existed.

World recordFlag of the United States.svg  Stacy Dragila  (USA)4.63 m Sacramento, United States 23 July 2000
Olympic recordNew Olympic event

The following record(s) were established during the competition:

DateRoundNameNationalityResultRecord
25 SeptemberFinal Stacy Dragila Flag of the United States.svg  United States 4.60 m OR

Results

Key

Qualifying round

Rule: Qualifying standard 4.35 (Q) or at least best 12 qualified (q).

RankGroupNameNationality4.004.154.254.30ResultNotes
1B Vala Flosadóttir Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland oooo4.30q
B Kellie Suttle Flag of the United States.svg  United States oooo4.30q
A Tatiana Grigorieva Flag of Australia.svg  Australia ooo4.30q
A Daniela Bártová Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic ooo4.30q
A Nicole Rieger-Humbert Flag of Germany.svg  Germany oo4.30q
A Anzhela Balakhonova Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine o4.30q
7B Shuying Gao Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China ooxoo4.30q
B Elmarie Gerryts Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa ooxoo4.30q
B Yvonne Buschbaum Flag of Germany.svg  Germany xooo4.30q
A Marie Rasmussen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark oxooo4.30q, NR
11A Stacy Dragila Flag of the United States.svg  United States ooxo4.30q
12A Monika Pyrek Flag of Poland.svg  Poland ooxxoxo4.30q
13B Doris Auer Flag of Austria.svg  Austria oxxoxxo4.30q
14B Melissa Mueller Flag of the United States.svg  United States oooxxx4.25
15B Emma George Flag of Australia.svg  Australia oxxoxxx4.25
B María del Mar Sánchez Flag of Spain.svg  Spain ooxxoxxx4.25
17A Caroline Ammel Flag of France.svg  France ooxxx4.15
18B Marie Poissonnier Flag of France.svg  France xooxxx4.15
A Alejandra García Flag of Argentina (1861-2010).svg  Argentina xooxxx4.15
20A Janine Whitlock Flag of the United Kingdom (3-2).svg  Great Britain xxooxxx4.15
21B Déborah Gyurcsek Flag of Uruguay.svg  Uruguay oxxoxxx4.15
22B Pavla Hamáčková Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic oxxx4.00
A Þórey Edda Elísdóttir Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland oxxx4.00
B Yelena Belyakova Flag of Russia.svg  Russia xxx NM
A Svetlana Feofanova Flag of Russia.svg  Russia xxx NM
A Zsuzsanna Szabo Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary xxx NM
B Katalin Donáth Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary xxx NM
B Thaila Iakovidou Flag of Greece.svg  Greece xxx NM
A Yelena Isinbayeva Flag of Russia.svg  Russia xxx NM
A Tanya Koleva Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria xxx NM

Final

RankNameNationality4.004.154.254.354.404.454.504.554.604.65ResultNotes
Gold medal icon.svg Stacy Dragila Flag of the United States.svg  United States ooxooxxoxooxxx4.60 OR
Silver medal icon.svg Tatiana Grigorieva Flag of Australia.svg  Australia xoooooxoox–xx4.55 PB
Bronze medal icon.svg Vala Flosadóttir Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland oooooooxxx4.50 NR
4 Daniela Bártová Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic ooxxoxxooxxx4.50
5 Nicole Humbert Flag of Germany.svg  Germany xxoxxoxxoxxoxxx4.45
6 Yvonne Buschbaum Flag of Germany.svg  Germany xooxoxxx4.40
7 Monika Pyrek Flag of Poland.svg  Poland xoxxoooxoxxx4.40 NR
8 Marie Rasmussen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark ooooxxx4.35 NR
9 Doris Auer Flag of Austria.svg  Austria oxxx4.25
10 Gao Shuying Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China ooxxx4.15
11 Kellie Suttle Flag of the United States.svg  United States oxxx4.00
Anzhela Balakhonova Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine xxx NM
Elmarie Gerryts Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa xx– NM

See also

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References

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  6. "Only two years after arriving in Australia, Tatiana Grigorieva competed at Sydney 2000". SBS News. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
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