World Championships - WCH 2017 Femminile

16th ed. London (GBR)









50km donne

 

Non vogliamo ripercorrere gli eventi che hanno caratterizzato la vigilia di questa nuova prova.

Nella nostra sezione che riporta molti report i altri paesi, i nostri lettori potranno trovare attraverso "Heel and Toe" (AUS) tutti i dettagli che potranno interessare loro.

 

La parità di genere, gli entry standard portati da 4:06:00 a 4:30:00, i diritti acquisiti dai "campioni di Area" lasciano ora spazio ai numeri ed ai nomi.

Eccole le prime storiche partenti di un Campionato Mondiale Individuale che dovranno iniziare l'ultimo giro della loro fatica (48km) in un tempo inferiore ai 4:17:00.

 

 

NAME

COUNTRY

DATE of BIRTH

PERSONAL BEST

SEASON BEST

         

Nair DA ROSA

BRA

22 Mar 80

4:39:28

4:39:28

Shuqing YANG

CHN

30 Aug 96

4:27:24

4:27:24

Hang YIN

CHN

7 Feb 97

4:22:22

4:22:22

Inês HENRIQUES

POR

1 May 80

4:08:26

4:08:26

Kathleen  BURNETT

USA

7 Oct 88

4:26:37

4:26:37

Erin TALCOTT

USA

21 May 78

4:29:33

4:29:33

Susan RANDALL

USA

6 Sep 74

4:54:12

4:54:12

 

 

La storia passata della marcia femminile ci dice che dieci anni fa (21.10.2007) in Italia a Scanzorosciate Monica Svensson (SWE) aveva marciato i 50km in 4:10:59 e che tre anni prima era stata la volta della bellissima Elena Ginko (BLR) in 4:12:16.

 

Riproproniamo di seguito la lista all time

 

 

RESULT

NAME

VENUE

DATE

       

4:08:26

Inês HENRIQUES (POR)

Porto de Mós

15 Jan 17

4:10:59

Monica SVENSSON (SWE)

Scanzorosciate 

21 Oct 07

4:12:16

Elena GINKO (BLR)

Scanzorosciate 

17 Oct 04

4:16:27

Jolanta DUKURE (LAT)

Paralepa

9 Sep 06

4:22:22

Hang YIN (CHN)

Huangshan

5 Mar 17

4:25:22

Brigita VIRBALYTÉ-DIMSIENÉ (LTU)

Villa di Serio

17 Oct 10

4:26:37

Kathleen BURNETT (USA)

Santee, CA

28 Jan 17

4:27:24

Shuqing YANG (CHN)

Huangshan

5 Mar 17

4:28:13

Evaggelía XINOÚ (GRE)

Scanzorosciate

17 Oct 04

4:28:53

Neringa AIDIETYTÉ (LTU)

Ivano-Frankivsk

1 Oct 06

 

 

 

La gara
 
 
10km

 

Dopo 20 minuti di gara in testa è una coppia composta da Ines Henriques (POR) e Hang Yin (CHN).

Passano assieme ai 5km in 24:43.

Seguono altre tre atlete in 26:04 e sono: Nair Da Rosa (BRA), Shuquing Yang (CHN) e Kathleen Burnett (USA).

 
Ma non sono più in sette a marciare: Erin Taylor Talcott (USA) è stata squalificata poco prima dei 45 minuti di gara.
 

Passano ai 10km in 49:22 le due leader, mentre le altre tre atlete seguono in 51:45.
Chiude la fila Susan Randall (USA) in 55:01; se l'andatura sarà questa anche in prospettiva non riuscitarà a portare a termine la gara nel tempo di ite per i 48km di 4:17:00.
 

 

 


20km

 

Passano ai 15km nello stesso ordine dei 10km precedenti con le due leader in 1.13:43 e le altre tre inseguitrici in 1:17:41

 

Ines Henriques (POR) e Hang Yin (CHN)  sono ancora assieme ai 20km in 1:37:59. Seguono Shuquing Yang (CHN) e Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 1:43:19 davanti a Nair Da Rosa (BRA) in 1.45:30.

 

 

30km

 

Le due leader passano ai 25km in 2:02:18 and un'andatura di record mondiale.

Il passaggio ai 30km è di 2:26:35 per Ines Henriques (POR) che ha staccato di 4" per Hang Yin (CHN) che passa in 2:26:39. 

Seguono Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 2:34:22, Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 2:34:43 e Nair Da Rosa (2:41:18)

 

 

40km

 

Ines Henriques (POR) passa ai 35km in 2:50:52 mentre Hang Yin (CHN) che passa in 2:51:42. 

Il passaggio ai 40km è di 3:15:14 per Ines Henriques (POR) che viaggia verso il nuovo record mondiale mentre Hang Yin (CHN) passa in 3.17:04. 

Seguono Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 3:26:31, Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 3:27:10, Nair Da Rosa (BRA) in 3:38:47 e Susan Randall (USA) in 3:57:40.

 

 

Ultimi 10 km

 
Ai 45km: Ines Henriques (POR) passa in 3:39:56, Hang Yin (CHN) passa in 3:43:07.
 
Negli ultimi 5km la portoghese capisce che il suo record mondiale è alla portata e non si lascia perdere l'occasione.
Vince in 4:05:56 
Secondo posto per Hang Yin (CHN)  in 4:08:58.
Terzo posto per Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 4:20:49 
Quarto posto per Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 4:21:51
 
Non si classificano Nair Da Rosa (BRA) e Susan Randall (USA) che non passano ai 48km in meno di 4:17:00.
 
 

 

 

20km donne

 

 

Sulla linea di partenza sono in 59 in rappresentanza di 36 paesi. Sono questi i numeri iniziali della 20km. 

Si riparte da Rio de Janeiro, ma senza Liu Hong (CHN), con una battaglia per le medaglie che dovrebbe essere un revival dei Giochi Olimpici con valori in campo leggermente modificati.

Staremo a vedere.

 

 

La gara
 
 
5km
 

Passano assieme in 22:22  gruppo di quasi 20 atlete guidato da Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA).

 

10km

 

Passano in testa al gruppo Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA), Na Wang (CHN), Sandra Lorena Arenas (COL), Ana Cabecinha (POR), Klavdia Afanasieva (ANA) e Kimberly Garcia (PER) in 44:10

 

15km

 

Nel gruppo di testa restano in cinque Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA), e passano in 1:05:33

 

Ultimi 5 km

 

Come spesso accade negli ultimi km si decide tutto.
Qualche polemica lascerà a qualcuno l'amaro in bocca, ma tutto questo fa parte del giudizio umano che rispetto a quello elettronico lascia a volte spazio a diversità di opinioni. Ecco perchè forse veramente è giunto il momento di dire "le solette prima di tutto". 
 
L'ultimo cambio di velocità vede Antonella Palmisano (ITA) impreparata a reagire e le altre tre a giocarsi, nel bene e nel male, le tre medaglie, fino al giro di boa di Buckingham Palace, quando appare sul tabellone delle squalifche la terza red card per Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN). 
 
La Cinese non si ferma e scivola via, costringendo il Giudice Capo a fermarla a non più di 80m dall'arrivo mostrandole una seconda paletta rossa. 
La vittoria arride a Yang Jiayu (CHN) che vince con il tempo di 1:26:18.
Argento per Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX) in 1:26:19
Bronzo per Antonella Palmisano (ITA) in 1:26:36 (personal best).
Quarto posto per Erica De Sena (BRA) in 1:26:59.
 

 

Le altre italiane

 

Eleonora Anna Giorgi: 14° in 1:30:34

Valentina Trapletti: 15° in 1:30:35

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
(English version)
 
 
 
 
50km women
 
 
 
We do not want to rethink the events that marked the eve of this new race.
 
In our section that reports activity of many other countries, our readers can find through Heel and Toe (AUS) all the details they may be interested in.
 
 
 
Gender parity, entry standard from 4:06:00 to 4:30:00, rights acquired by "Area Champions" now leave room for numbers and names.
 
Here are the first historic champions of a World Championships Individual that will have to start their last lap of their effort (48km) in a time less than 4:17:00.
 
 
 

NAME

COUNTRY

DATE of BIRTH

PERSONAL BEST

SEASON BEST

         

Nair DA ROSA

BRA

22 Mar 80

4:39:28

4:39:28

Shuqing YANG

CHN

30 Aug 96

4:27:24

4:27:24

Hang YIN

CHN

7 Feb 97

4:22:22

4:22:22

Inês HENRIQUES

POR

1 May 80

4:08:26

4:08:26

Kathleen  BURNETT

USA

7 Oct 88

4:26:37

4:26:37

Erin TALCOTT

USA

21 May 78

4:29:33

4:29:33

Susan RANDALL

USA

6 Sep 74

4:54:12

4:54:12

 

 

 

The past history of the women's race walk tells us that ten years ago (October 21, 2007) in Scanzorosciate, Italy  Monica Svensson (SWE) had walked 50km in 4:10:59 and three years earlier was the turn of the beautiful Elena Ginko (BLR) in 4:12:16.
 
 
 
Below the all time list

 


RESULT

NAME

VENUE

DATE

       

4:08:26

Inês HENRIQUES (POR)

Porto de Mós

15 Jan 17

4:10:59

Monica SVENSSON (SWE)

Scanzorosciate 

21 Oct 07

4:12:16

Elena GINKO (BLR)

Scanzorosciate 

17 Oct 04

4:16:27

Jolanta DUKURE (LAT)

Paralepa

9 Sep 06

4:22:22

Hang YIN (CHN)

Huangshan

5 Mar 17

4:25:22

Brigita VIRBALYTÉ-DIMSIENÉ (LTU)

Villa di Serio

17 Oct 10

4:26:37

Kathleen BURNETT (USA)

Santee, CA

28 Jan 17

4:27:24

Shuqing YANG (CHN)

Huangshan

5 Mar 17

4:28:13

Evaggelía XINOÚ (GRE)

Scanzorosciate

17 Oct 04

4:28:53

Neringa AIDIETYTÉ (LTU)

Ivano-Frankivsk

1 Oct 06

 

 

 

 
 
The race
 
 
10km

 

After 20 minutes of race is leading a pair composed of Ines Henriques (POR) and Hang Yin (CHN).

They pass together at 5km in 24:43.

 
Other three athletes followes in 26:04 and are: Nair Da Rosa (BRA), Shuquing Yang (CHN) and Kathleen Burnett (USA).
 
 
But there are no longer in seven to walk: Erin Taylor Talcott (USA) was disqualified just before the 45-minute race.
 
The two leaders pass at 10km in 49:22, while the other three athletes follow at 51:45.
Closes Susan Randall (USA) in 55:01, if the pace is going to be this in perspective she will not be able to finish the race in the time requested for 48km (4:17:00).
 
 
 
20km
 
 
They pass at 15km in the same order of the previous 10km with the two leaders in 1:13: 43 and the other three followers in 1:17:41.
 

Ines Henriques (POR) and Hang Yin (CHN)  are together at 20km in 1:37:59.  Shuquing Yang (CHN) and Kathleen Burnett (USA) follows in 1:43:19 in front of Nair Da Rosa (BRA) in 1.45:30.

 
 
 
30km

 

The two leaders pass at 25km in 2:02:18 on world record pace.

Split time at 30km isi 2:26:35 for Ines Henriques (POR) who pass 4" in front of Hang Yin (CHN) passing in 2:26:39. 
 
Follows Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 2:34:22, Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 2:34:43 e Nair Da Rosa (2:41:18)
 
 
40km

 

Ines Henriques (POR) pass aT 35km in 2:50:52 while Hang Yin (CHN) pass in 2:51:42. 

Split time at 40km is 3:15:14 for Ines Henriques (POR) walking for the new world record while Hang Yin (CHN) pass in 3.17:04. 

They follows Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 3:26:31, Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 3:27:10, Nair Da Rosa (BRA) in 3:38:47 and Susan Randall (USA) in 3:57:40.

 
 
Last 10 km
 
 
At 45km: Ines Henriques (POR) passes in 3:39:56, Hang Yin (CHN) passes in 3:43:07.
 
In the last 5km, the Portuguese understands that his world record is on the go, and he does not miss the opportunity.
She wins in 4:05:56
Second place to Hang Yin (CHN) in 4:08:58.
Third place to Shuqing Yang (CHN) in 4:20:49
Fourth place to Kathleen Burnett (USA) in 4:21:51
 
They do not rank Nair Da Rosa (BRA) and Susan Randall (USA) who do not pass to 48km in less than 4:17:00.
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

(from IAAF web-site by Pauyl Warburton)

 

Ines Henriques breezed home to become the first women’s world 50km race walk champion – and at the same time pocketed a handsome $160,000 for her win and world record* of 4:05:56.

The Portuguese took the plunge into the longer distance in February to set the initial mark of 4:08:26, but easily reset that by more than two minutes to take gold from China’s Yin Hang on a hot Sunday morning as the seven women rubbed shoulders with the men’s race that took place at the same time.

Rewind to May and the European Cup in Podebrady, and Henriques was in tears after being disqualified at 20 kilometres.

This time it was all beams and smiles as she took the finishing line, and after this win, there will surely be others making the switch up in distance as all four finishers earned excellent prize money. In the case of Yin and teammate Yang Shuqing, it was also silver and bronze in that order.

The only other race walker to make it to the end was Kathleen Burnett from the USA who set an area record, as well as claiming $15,000 for fourth and beating the time limit.

On their ground-breaking performance, the leading women started out at a decent lick with Henriques partnered by Yin at about 4:10:00 pace, with four others already more than a minute behind by eight kilometres.

Fate then dealt a savage blow on the race walker who did more than any other to get an equal footing with the men.

Erin Talcott-Taylor championed the cause for inclusion at the long event, but was a brought to a halt at 10 kilometres when the dreaded red disc of disqualification was brandished at her.

At the sharp end, the two leaders were a kilometre ahead of the rest ahead by halfway gained in 2:02:18 and on for a rewrite of the previous best mark.

Henriques looked the more comfortable as the toil told on the bobbing head of Yin, and a gap slowly but surely started to appear.

At 30 kilometres it was only four seconds, but over the next 20 minutes it extended beyond 40, and as a race, the Portuguese had it sewn up.

She eventually crossed the line a comfortable winner in 4:05:56 while Yin set an Asian record of 4:08:58 in second place. Yang took bronze with a PB of 4:20:49 while USA's Kate Burnett set a North American record of 4:21:51 in fourth.

The remainder was something of a procession, but spare a thought for Brazil’s Nair Da Rosa who missed the cut-off point deemed to be 4:17:00 going into the last two-kilometre loop and had to step off the road.

Next time, it’s almost certain seven women will be five times that number with the medals and prize money on offer.

 

Paul Warburton for the IAAF

 

 

 

20km women

 

 

On the starting line there are 59 athletes representing 36 Countries. These are the starting numbers of 20km women.

 
It starts from Rio de Janeiro, but without Liu Hong (CHN), with a battle for medals that should be a revival of the Olympic Games with slightly modified field values.
 
We'll see.

 

 

The race
 
 
5km
 
 
They pass together at 5km in 22:22, with nearly 20 athletes led by Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA).
 
 
 
10km
 
 
The leading group is guided by Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA), Na Wang (CHN), Sandra Lorena Arenas Ana Cabecinha (POR), Klavdia Afanasieva (ANA) and Kimberly Garcia (PER) at 44:10.

 

15km

 
 
In the lead group there are five Antonella Palmisano (ITA), Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX), Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN), Wang Jiayu (CHN), Erica de Sena (BRA), and they pass in 1:05:33
 
 
 
Last 5 km
 
 
 
As often happens in the last km, everything is decided.
Some controversy leaves somebody bitter in the mouth, but this is part of the human judgment that, compared to the electronic one, sometimes leaves room for diversity of opinions. That's why maybe the time has come to say "insoles first".
 
The last change of speed saw Antonella Palmisano (ITA) unprepared to react and the other three to play in good and evil the three medals, up to Buckingham Palace's turn around when the third red card against Lyu Xiuzhi (CHN) is posted on the Posting Board.
 
The Chinese does not stop and slide away, forcing the Chief Judge to stop her at about 80m to go, displaying a second red paddle.
The victory smile on Yang Jiayu (CHN) who wins in 1:26:18.
Silver to Maria Guadalupe Gonzalez (MEX) in 1:26:19
Bronze to Antonella Palmisano (ITA) in 1:26:36 (personal best).
Fourth place to Erica De Sena (BRA) in 1:26:59.
 
 
 
The other italian

 

Eleonora Anna Giorgi: 14th in 1:30:34

Valentina Trapletti: 15th in 1:30:35

 

 


 

 

(dal sito web della IAAF by Paul Warburton)

 

A dramatic last 100 metres saw leader Lyu Xiuzhi disqualified, leaving Chinese team-mate Yang Jiayu to take gold in the women’s 20km race walk.

The chief judge’s red card was flashed in front of Lyu with seconds left, but it was so quick, and caught in the moment, she made for the line regardless only to discover her finish had already been recorded.

A cracking race came down to just four when the afterburners were lit at 16 kilometres, and the order of medals was still undecided with the line in sight.

Lyu and Yan put the hammer down to forge a tiny gap between them and Maria Guadalupe González, but the Mexican is made of strong stuff as demonstrated winning a silver at the 2016 Olympics and gold at last year’s IAAF Walking Team Challenge.

Even with the pain etched on her face, González strove to get level with Yang and Lyu until the judge’s intervention decided the order of things. 

Italy’s Antonella Palmisano was dropped with two kilometres to go, but alone to the line, she found to her joyous surprise a bronze medal awaited her.

Erica de Sena from Brazil had the race of her life to claim fourth and a South American area record after hanging on to the leaders for all but the last three kilometres. 

Sandra Arenas furthered the continent’s cause by snatching a Colombian national record for fifth.

Ana Cabecinha from Portugal was a fine sixth with Kimberly Garcia from emerging Peru claiming a Peruvian national record for seventh.

From the gun, a large group of 20 formed at the front with Palmisano nudging just ahead of Gonzales and Lyu towing the rest to 22:22 at five kilometres.

It was a lot faster than last year’s Olympic Games when it was also hot. And unsurprisingly, it told shortly after six kilometres when that score of competitors became a mere 10 vying for the medals. 

Right at the back, neutral athlete Klavdiia Afanaseva was straining to hang on as the elastic binding all started to stretch.

But it was clear where the medals were going with the rest of the field trailing by more than 50 metres.

Halfway saw the clock stopped at 44:10 for the leaders, but Cabecinha and Afanaseva had dropped off by a vital few yards.

Peru’s Kimberley Garcia was next to suffer, and by 12 kilometres the lead group was cut to six, with Palmisano and Gonzales joined de Sena Arenas and the Chinese pair.

Arenas was unable to respond to a shift up though the gears that brought 1:05:33 for 15 kilometres, and when all was laid on the line, it became a terrific sprint to further excite a large crowd spread all along The Mall.

In the end, gold went to the same country that it did in 2015, only this time it was a new success for China to champion.

Yang had already recorded sub 1:27:00 in 2017 to underline her pedigree, and although the dynasty that was former champion Liu Hong appears over, the production line from a major walking force just keeps on turning out the goods.

There is a footnote for all new mothers wondering if they should get back into sport.

Less than two months after giving birth to her first child, a delighted Claire Tallent was out on The Mall recording 1:33:05 for 43rd, amazing given the circumstances.

At the finish, she went over to husband Jared, former Olympic and world champion but forced out of these Championships with a hamstring injury, and collected baby Harvey to show off to the TV cameras and spectators on the course.

It seems there are other prizes worth having besides medals and money.

 

Paul Warburton for the IAAF