Athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's javelin throw

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Women's javelin throw
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Venue Olympic Stadium
Date16–18 August 2016
Competitors31 from 19 nations
Winning distance66.18 m NR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Sara Kolak Civil ensign of Croatia.svg  Croatia
Silver medal icon.svg Sunette Viljoen Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa
Bronze medal icon.svg Barbora Špotáková Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic
  2012
2020  
Official Video Highlights TV-icon-2.svg
Official Video Highlights

The women's javelin throw competition at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil was held at the Olympic Stadium on 16–18 August. [1] Each athlete received three throws in the qualifying round. All who achieved the qualifying distance progressed to the final. Each finalist was allowed three throws in last round, with the top eight athletes after that point being given three further attempts.

Summary

In the qualifying round, Maria Andrejczyk threw a Polish national record 67.11m, moving her to the # 16 thrower of all time. Of course, several women on that same list also qualified for the final, including world record holder and 2016 non-Russian world leader Barbora Špotáková. Vera Rebrik had thrown 67.30 in February, but Russia was on suspension.

Flor Ruiz started the final round with a 61.54 m. Two throws later Tatsiana Khaladovich raised the stakes to 62.68 m. Two throws later Andrejczyk displaced Ruiz with a 61.92. Sunette Viljoen moved on top with a 64.92 m. Near the top of the second round, Kathryn Mitchell almost matched it with a 64.36 to move into silver position. 2015 World silver medalist Lü Huihui moved into bronze position with a 63.50 m that lasted until the end of the round when two-time defending champion Špotáková moved into the bronze position with a 63.73 m. Khaladovich came back in the third round with a 64.60 m to move into the silver spot. After the field dropped off returning bronze medalist Linda Stahl, 21 year old Sara Kolak threw 66.18 m (217 ft 1 in) to rocket from sixth to first. As second thrower in the fifth round, Andrejczyk threw 64.78 m to leapfrog from seventh to bronze medal position. That only lasted a few throwers until Špotáková threw 2 cm further.

For Kolak, whose previous medal collection included the bronze medal from the 2016 European Championships, it was a new Croatian National Record, beating the 64.30 m she set in qualifying, which beat the 63.50 she threw winning the European bronze. Prior to 2016, her best was still the national record, but was a 57.79 from 2013, improving 8.39 m (27 ft 6 in) in just 5 months. Kolak moved into the #20 position on the all-time list.

The following evening the medals were presented by Li Lingwei, IOC member, China and Alberto Juantorena, Vice President of the IAAF.

Schedule

All times are Brasília Time (UTC−3).

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 16 August 201620:35Qualifications
Thursday, 18 August 201621:10Finals

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing world record, Olympic record, and world leading mark were as follows:

World recordFlag of the Czech Republic.svg  Barbora Špotáková  (CZE)72.28 m Stuttgart, Germany13 September 2008
Olympic recordFlag of Cuba.svg  Osleidys Menéndez  (CUB)71.53 m Athens, Greece27 August 2004
World leadingFlag of Russia.svg  Vera Rebrik  (RUS)67.30 m Sochi, Russia19 February 2016

The following national records were established during the competition:

CountryAthleteRoundDistanceNotes
Poland Flag of Poland.svg  Maria Andrejczyk  (POL)Qualifying67.11 m
Croatia Civil ensign of Croatia.svg  Sara Kolak  (CRO)Qualifying64.30 m
Final66.18 m

Results

Qualifying round

Qualification rule: qualification standard 63.00m (Q) or at least best 12 qualified (q).

RankGroupNameNationality#1#2#3ResultNotes
1B Maria Andrejczyk Flag of Poland.svg  Poland 67.1167.11 Q, NR
2B Barbora Špotáková Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 62.5064.6564.65 Q
3A Sara Kolak Civil ensign of Croatia.svg  Croatia 55.6855.8664.3064.30 Q, NR
4B Linda Stahl Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 63.9563.95 Q
5A Tatsiana Khaladovich Flag of Belarus.svg  Belarus 63.7863.78 Q
6A Sunette Viljoen Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 63.5463.54 Q
7A Lü Huihui Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 63.2863.28 Q
8B Madara Palameika Flag of Latvia (3-2).svg  Latvia 63.0363.03 Q
9A Flor Ruiz Flag of Colombia.svg  Colombia 62.3259.8959.9962.32 q
10A Christina Obergföll Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 57.7562.18x62.18 q
11A Christin Hussong Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 56.1955.5862.1762.17 q
12B Kathryn Mitchell Flag of Australia.svg  Australia x60.0561.6361.63 q
13B Kara Winger Flag of the United States.svg  United States 61.0257.3460.5461.02
14A Sinta Ozoliņa-Kovala Flag of Latvia (3-2).svg  Latvia 60.9258.08x60.92
15B Li Lingwei Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 60.9159.3057.8760.91
16A Elizabeth Gleadle Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 59.1860.2858.7460.28
17B Kateryna Derun Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 60.0254.86x60.02
18A Martina Ratej Civil Ensign of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia 59.7658.15x59.76
19A Hanna Hatsko-Fedusova Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 58.90x58.3858.90
20B Liina Laasma Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia 58.0656.2156.6258.06
21B Yuki Ebihara Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 53.7555.8957.6857.68
22A Kim Mickle Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 57.20x55.9357.20
23A Liu Shiying Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 57.1655.60x57.16
24B Mathilde Andraud Flag of France.svg  France 56.6156.0156.1356.61
25A Maggie Malone Flag of the United States.svg  United States 56.47x46.8756.47
26B Tatsiana Korzh Flag of Belarus.svg  Belarus 49.4153.5456.1656.16
27A Brittany Borman Flag of the United States.svg  United States 54.1556.0452.7356.04
28B Kelsey-Lee Roberts Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 44.7555.0455.2555.25
29A Yulenmis Aguilar Flag of Cuba (3-2).svg  Cuba 54.84x54.9454.94
30B Ásdís Hjálmsdóttir Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland x54.92x54.92
31B Sanni Utriainen Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 53.42x52.4553.42

Final

RankAthleteNationality#1#2#3#4#5#6ResultNotes
Gold medal icon.svg Sara Kolak Civil ensign of Croatia.svg  Croatia 60.8962.9563.0066.18x59.4266.18 NR
Silver medal icon.svg Sunette Viljoen Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 64.9261.04x63.00xx64.92
Bronze medal icon.svg Barbora Špotáková Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 60.1663.73x61.2564.80x64.80
4 Maria Andrejczyk Flag of Poland.svg  Poland 61.9259.2560.2359.3164.7863.6964.78
5 Tatsiana Khaladovich Flag of Belarus.svg  Belarus 62.6860.2464.6060.4963.5264.2464.60
6 Kathryn Mitchell Flag of Australia.svg  Australia x64.36xx62.2063.0264.36
7 Lü Huihui Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 60.3263.5059.5664.04x56.9664.04 SB
8 Christina Obergföll Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 60.1762.28xxx62.9262.92
9 Flor Ruiz Flag of Colombia.svg  Colombia 61.5458.4659.61did not advance61.54
10 Madara Palameika Flag of Latvia (3-2).svg  Latvia xx60.14did not advance60.14
11 Linda Stahl Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 58.48x59.71did not advance59.71
12 Christin Hussong Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 54.9954.4757.70did not advance57.70

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References

  1. Women's Javelin Throw - Standings Archived 2016-08-26 at the Wayback Machine rio2016.com Retrieved on 2016-08-19