2009 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 20 kilometres walk

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The men's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics was held throughout the city of Berlin on August 15, beginning and ending at the Brandenburg Gate.

Medalists

More information Gold, Silver ...
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Records

World record  Vladimir Kanaykin (RUS) 1:17:16 Saransk, Russia 29 September 2007
Championship record  Jefferson Pérez (ECU) 1:17:21 Paris, France 23 August 2003
World Leading  Valeriy Borchin (RUS) 1:17:38 Adler, Russia 28 February 2009
African record  Hatem Ghoula (TUN) 1:19:02 Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany 10 May 1997
Asian record  Zhu Hongjun (CHN) 1:17:41 Cixi, China 23 April 2005
North American record  Julio René Martínez (GUA) 1:17:46 Eisenhüttenstadt, Germany 8 May 1999
South American record  Jefferson Pérez (ECU) 1:17:21 Paris, France 23 August 2003
European record  Vladimir Kanaykin (RUS) 1:17:16 Saransk, Russia 29 September 2007
Oceanian record  Nathan Deakes (AUS) 1:17:33 Cixi, China 23 April 2005

Qualification standards

More information A Time, B Time ...
A Time B Time
1:22:30 1:24:20
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Schedule

More information Date, Time ...
Date Time Round
August 15, 200913:00Final
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Competition notes

With the 2007 champion and 2008 Olympic silver medallist Jefferson Pérez having retired, the reigning Olympic champion Valeriy Borchin was regarded as strong favourite. He had recorded the world-leading time prior to the tournament and had been undefeated that season. The Olympic third and fourth-place finishers, Jared Tallent and Wang Hao, were regarded as the strongest challengers to Borchin. Italians Giorgio Rubino and Ivano Brugnetti were singled out as medal contenders, while former world record holder and three-time World silver medallist Paquillo Fernández was seen as being past his peak.[1]

Borchin prevailed and was first to cross the line at the Brandenburg gate, with a winning time of 1:18:41. Chinese athlete Hao improved upon his previous best to take the silver medal while Mexican Eder Sánchez produced a season's best performance for the bronze medal. The veteran competitor Paquillo Fernández withdrew from the race before the halfway mark.[2]

Despite becoming the reigning World and Olympic champion, Borchin stated that he needed to achieve much more to match the achievements of his sporting heroes Jefferson Pérez and Robert Korzeniowski.[3]

Results

The medals of some of the athletics world championship events in 2009 were re-awarded 24 March 2016 as a result of doping disqualifications. Among these reallocations were the medals of the 20 km walk, which saw the Italian Giorgio Rubino, who originally finished fourth, awarded the bronze medal.

This allowed Italy to enter the medal table, with another bronze medal awarded to Antonietta Di Martino in 2019.[4]

Valeriy Borchin won the competition but was later disqualified for doping
Wang Hao set a new personal best to take the silver (later upgraded to gold)
Eder Sánchez took the bronze (later upgraded to silver), his first World Championships medal
2008 Olympic medallist Jared Tallent only managed fifth place
More information Rank, Athlete ...
RankAthleteNationalityTimeNotes
1Valeriy Borchin Russia1:18:41DQ (doping)
1st place, gold medalist(s)Wang Hao China1:19:06PB
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Eder Sánchez Mexico1:19:22SB
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Giorgio Rubino Italy1:19:50
4Luis Fernando López Colombia1:20:03NR
5Jared Tallent Australia1:20:27
6Erik Tysse Norway1:20:38
7Jesús Sánchez Mexico1:20:52PB
8Matej Tóth Slovakia1:21:13
9João Vieira Portugal1:21:43SB
10Koichiro Morioka Japan1:21:48
11Li Jianbo China1:21:54
12Zhu Yafei China1:21:56
13André Höhne Germany1:21:59
14Robert Heffernan Ireland1:22:09SB
15José Ignacio Díaz Spain1:22:12SB
16Andrey Krivov Russia1:22:19
17Luke Adams Australia1:22:37
18Hassanine Sebei Tunisia1:22:52
19Babubhai Panucha India1:23:06NR
20Jean-Jacques Nkouloukidi Italy1:23:07SB
21Dzianis Simanovich Belarus1:23:36
22Rolando Saquipay Ecuador1:23:51SB
23Juan Manuel Molina Spain1:24:00
24Park Chil-Sung South Korea1:24:01
25Artur Brzozowski Poland1:24:17
26Sérgio Vieira Portugal1:24:32
27Pedro Daniel Gómez Mexico1:24:39
28Yerko Araya Chile1:24:49
29Isamu Fujisawa Japan1:25:12
30Petr Trofimov Russia1:26:02
31David Kimutai Kenya1:26:35
32Ruslan Dmytrenko Ukraine1:27:01
33Kim Hyun-Sub South Korea1:27:08
34Predrag Filipović Serbia1:27:44
35Pavel Chihuan Peru1:27:54
36Rustam Kuvatov Kazakhstan1:28:47SB
37Jakub Jelonek Poland1:28:59
38Andrés Chocho Ecuador1:29:14
39Juan Manuel Cano Argentina1:29:20SB
40Allan Segura Costa Rica1:29:52
41Yusuke Suzuki Japan1:30:21
42Byun Youngjun South Korea1:30:35
43Mauricio Arteaga Ecuador1:32:25
44Vilius Mikelionis Lithuania1:32:53
Adam Rutter AustraliaDQ
Moacir Zimmermann BrazilDQ
José Alessandro Bagio BrazilDNF
Paquillo Fernández SpainDNF
Ivano Brugnetti ItalyDNF
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Key: DNF = Did not finish, DQ = Disqualified, NR = National record, PB = Personal best, SB = Seasonal best

References

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