2011 World Championships in Athletics – Men's shot put

David Storl celebrating the announcement of his winning put at Daegu
Events at the
2011 World Championships
Track events
100 m   men   women
200 m men women
400 m men women
800 m men women
1500 m men women
5000 m men women
10,000 m men women
100 m hurdles women
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men women
3000 m
steeplechase
men women
4 × 100 m relay men women
4 × 400 m relay men women
Road events
Marathon men women
20 km walk men women
50 km walk men
Field events
Long jump men women
Triple jump men women
High jump men women
Pole vault men women
Shot put men women
Discus throw men women
Javelin throw men women
Hammer throw men women
Combined events
Heptathlon women
Decathlon men

The Men's shot put event at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Daegu Stadium on September 1 and 2.

David Storl made a major improvement to achieve a new personal best of 21.50, leading the qualifying round by 45 cm (a foot and a half).

2007 Champion, Reese Hoffa, took the early lead and held it until Storl threw a new personal best of 21.60 in the second round. Andrei Mikhnevich put a 21.40 in the third round to get close to Storl. In the fourth round, world leader, Dylan Armstrong, took the lead with a 21.64, which held up as the leader until the final throw of the competition, when Storl threw a third personal best of 21.78 to win.

In 2013, it was revealed that Andrei Mikhnevich tested positive for a prohibited substance at the 2005 World Championships. Since this was his second offense, he was given a lifetime ban and all his results from August 2005 and on were annulled. [1]

Medalists

GoldSilverBronze
David Storl
 Germany
Dylan Armstrong
 Canada
Christian Cantwell
 United States

Records

Prior to the competition, the established records were as follows.

World record  Randy Barnes (USA) 23.12 Westwood, United States 20 May 1990
Championship record  Werner Günthör (SUI) 22.23 Rome, Italy 29 August 1987
World Leading  Dylan Armstrong (CAN) 22.21 Calgary, Canada 25 June 2011
African record  Janus Robberts (RSA) 21.97 Eugene, United States 2 June 2001
Asian record  Sultan Abdulmajeed Al-Hebshi (KSA) 21.13 Doha, Qatar 8 May 2009
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Randy Barnes (USA) 23.12 Westwood, United States 20 May 1990
South American record  Marco Antonio Verni (CHI) 21.14 Santiago, Chile 29 July 2004
European record  Ulf Timmermann (GDR) 23.06 Chania, Greece 22 May 1988
Oceanian record  Scott Martin (AUS) 21.26 Melbourne, Australia 21 February 2008

Qualification standards

A standard B standard
20.50 20.00

Schedule

Date Time Round
September 1, 2011 10:00 Qualification
September 2, 2011 19:00 Final

Results

Qualification

Qualification: Qualifying Performance 20.60 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advance to the final.

Rank Group Athlete Nationality #1 #2 #3 Result Notes
1 A David Storl  Germany x 21.50 21.50 Q, PB
2 B Dylan Armstrong  Canada 20.52 21.05 21.05 Q
3 B Reese Hoffa  United States 20.96 20.96 Q
4 A Ryan Whiting  United States 20.40 20.77 20.77 Q
5 B Christian Cantwell  United States 20.55 20.73 20.73 Q
6 A Tomasz Majewski  Poland 20.73 20.73 Q
7 A Ralf Bartels  Germany 20.45 x 20.04 20.45 q
8 B Marco Fortes  Portugal 19.83 20.32 20.02 20.32 q
9 B Carlos Véliz  Cuba 20.24 19.79 x 20.24 q
10 A Adam Nelson  United States 20.23 x x 20.23 q
11 A Asmir Kolašinac  Serbia 19.58 20.08 20.14 20.14 q
12 B Marco Schmidt  Germany 20.06 19.96 x 20.06
13 B Lajos Kürthy  Hungary 19.92 19.76 20.02 20.02
14 B Maksim Sidorov  Russia 18.56 19.95 x 19.95
15 B Pavel Lyzhyn  Belarus 19.91 x x 19.91
16 A Kim Christensen  Denmark 19.02 19.40 19.74 19.74
17 B Hamza Alić  Bosnia and Herzegovina 19.70 x x 19.70
18 B Chang Ming-Huang  Chinese Taipei 19.60 x 18.98 19.60
19 A Jan Marcell  Czech Republic 19.51 x 19.46 19.51
20 A Germán Lauro  Argentina 19.50 19.45 x 19.50
21 A Andriy Semenov  Ukraine x x 19.45 19.45
22 A Om Prakash Singh  India 19.29 19.06 x 19.29
23 B Amin Nikfar  Iran 18.69 18.95 19.18 19.18
24 B Milan Jotanović  Serbia 18.39 x 18.21 18.39
25 A Borja Vivas  Spain 18.37 x 18.22 18.37
26 A Hwang In-Sung  South Korea 17.75 17.62 x 17.75
27 A Andrei Mikhnevich  Belarus 20.79 20.79 DQ

Final

Rank Athlete Nationality #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 Result Notes
1st, gold medalist(s) David Storl  Germany x 21.60 20.82 x x 21.78 21.78 PB
2nd, silver medalist(s) Dylan Armstrong  Canada 20.79 20.58 20.82 21.64 21.40 x 21.64
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Christian Cantwell  United States 20.50 20.73 20.83 x 21.36 x 21.36
4 Reese Hoffa  United States 20.90 20.99 20.97 20.84 x x 20.99
5 Marco Fortes  Portugal 20.59 x 19.36 20.83 20.25 20.04 20.83
6 Ryan Whiting  United States x 20.48 20.66 20.75 x x 20.75
7 Adam Nelson  United States 20.29 20.14 19.73 x 20.02 x 20.29
8 Tomasz Majewski  Poland x 20.03 20.18 20.18
9 Ralf Bartels  Germany 20.03 20.14 20.12 20.14
10 Asmir Kolašinac  Serbia 19.84 x 19.77 19.84
11 Carlos Véliz  Cuba 19.70 x x 19.70
12 Andrei Mikhnevich  Belarus 20.45 20.49 21.40 20.72 20.64 21.37 21.40 DQ

References

  1. "Andrei MIKHNEVICH (BLR) – results annulled from August 2005". IAAF. 31 July 2013. Retrieved 4 April 2014.

External links

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