Women's 20 kilometres walk
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
VenueThe Mall
Date11 August 2012
Competitors61 from 33 nations
Winning time1:25:16
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Qieyang Shijie  China
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Liu Hong  China
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Lü Xiuzhi  China

The women's 20 kilometres walk at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom, was held on 11 August[1] on a route along The Mall and Constitution Hill.[2]

Summary

From the start of the race, defending champion Olga Kaniskina took the lead, and only Liu Hong would go with her. The two opened up a big gap with a chase pack of a Guatemalan, the other two Russians, and the other two Chinese. By the end of 8 km, the pack began to lose walkers, Mirna Ortíz and Johanna Jackson were disqualified, and Liu began to lose contact with Kaniskina, who was leading on her own. Shortly after the halfway mark, the pack was down to Elena Lashmanova and Anisya Kirdyapkina leading Xiuzhi Lu and Qieyang Shijie. An hour into the race Lu began to lose contact, allowing Lashmanova, Kirdyapkina and Qieyang to chase and pass Liu. By 14 km Kaniskina had a 33-second lead. Almost unnoticeably, the gap between Kaniskina and the chasers had come down to 24 seconds at 16 km, with Kirdyapkina and then Liu struggling to stay with the group. After another 2 km lap at 18 km, the gap was down to 17 seconds, still seemingly insurmountable with just one lap to go. With Kaniskina looking strong, the gap kept falling. Kaniskina started to show the strain, and as the pass became inevitable, she began the most pronounced arm swing trying to find a last bit of speed, but it wasn't enough. Less than 200 metres from the finish, Lashmanova went by Kaniskina and on to the gold carpet. Lashmanova finished with a 1:25:02 world record. A broken Kaniskina finished 7 seconds back, just a second slower than the previous world record. Qieyang happily finished another 7 seconds later for bronze. After the finish, Kaniskina was barely able to walk, while a fresh Lashmanova celebrated her victory.[3]

Later, both the original top two athletes, Lashmanova and Kaniskina, and the original fifth place holder, who was also Russian, were disqualified for doping violations, and their results were annulled. After the medal reallocation, the Chinese gained a podium sweep, with the gold medal for Shenjie Qieyang, silver for Liu Hong, and bronze for Lü Xiuzhi.[4] The medal reallocation ceremony was held at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Stadium on 4 October 2023 after all the events of the Asian Games ended on that day.

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

World record  Vera Sokolova (RUS) 1:25:08 Sochi, Russia 26 February 2011
Olympic record  Olga Kaniskina (RUS) 1:26:31 Beijing, China 21 August 2008
2012 World leading  Elmira Alembekova (RUS) 1:25:27 Sochi, Russia 18 February 2012

The following records were established during the competition:

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
11 AugustFinalQieyang Shenjie China1:25:16OR WL

Elena Lashmanova's performance in the final was initially considered a world record, but was later rescinded retroactively due to a doping violation.[5]

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
11 August 201217:00Final

Results

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes[6]
1st place, gold medalist(s)Qieyang Shijie China1:25:16OR, AR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Liu Hong China1:26:00
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Lü Xiuzhi China1:27:10
4Elisa Rigaudo Italy1:27:36SB
5Beatriz Pascual Spain1:27:56SB
6Ana Cabecinha Portugal1:28:03SB
7María Vasco Spain1:28:14SB
8Masumi Fuchise Japan1:28:41SB
9María José Poves Spain1:29:36
10Olive Loughnane Ireland1:29:39SB
11Eleonora Giorgi Italy1:29:48PB
12Inês Henriques Portugal1:29:54SB
13Nadiya Borovska Ukraine1:30:03PB
14Regan Lamble Australia1:30:08PB
15Mayumi Kawasaki Japan1:30:20SB
16Melanie Seeger Germany1:30:44SB
17Laura Reynolds Ireland1:31:02PB
18Kristina Saltanovic Lithuania1:31:04SB
19Agnieszka Szwarnóg Poland1:31:14
20Agnieszka Dygacz Poland1:31:28SB
21Agnese Pastare Latvia1:31:54SB
22Hanna Drabenia Belarus1:31:58PB
23Brigita Virbalyte Lithuania1:31:58
24Olha Iakovenko Ukraine1:32:07PB
25Beki Lee Australia1:32:14PB
26Maria Michta United States1:32:27PB
27Monica Equihua Mexico1:32:28PB
28Jamy Franco Guatemala1:33:18
29Sandra Arenas Colombia1:33:21
30Claudia Balderrama Bolivia1:33:28PB
31Ingrid Hernandez Colombia1:33:34PB
32Lucie Pelantova Czech Republic1:33:35
33Nguyen Thi Thanh Phuc Vietnam1:33:36NR
34Kumi Otoshi Japan1:33:50
35Claudia Stef Romania1:33:56
36Neringa Aidietyte Lithuania1:34:01
37Yadira Guaman Ecuador1:34:47PB
38Viktória Madarász Hungary1:34:48
39Ayman Kozhakhmetova Kazakhstan1:35:00
40Arabelly Orjuela Colombia1:35:05
41Despina Zapounidou Greece1:35:19
42Paulina Buziak Poland1:35:23
43Mayra Herrera Guatemala1:35:33
44Nastassia Yatsevich Belarus1:35:41
45Vera Santos Portugal1:35:51
46Paola Perez Ecuador1:37:05
47Rachel Seaman Canada1:37:36
48Maria Czakova Slovakia1:37:43
49Anne Halkivaha Finland1:38:49
50Milangela Rosales Venezuela1:42:46
Sabine Krantz GermanyDNF
Sholpan Kozhakhmetova KazakhstanDNF
Johanna Jackson Great BritainDQ
Jeon Yeong-Eun South KoreaDQ
Mirna Ortiz GuatemalaDQ
Claire Tallent AustraliaDQ
DSQ[5]Elena Lashmanova Russia1:25:02Doping
DSQ[7]Olga Kaniskina Russia1:25:09 Doping
DSQ[8]Anisya Kirdyapkina Russia1:26:26Doping
DSQ[9]Semiha Mutlu Turkey1:35:33Doping
DSQ[10]Olena Shumkina Ukraine1:36:42Doping
  • On 24 March 2016, the Court of Arbitration for Sport has issued a decision that all competitive results obtained by Olga Kaniskina from 15 August 2009 to 15 October 2012 are disqualified for doping.[11] The medals and places were reallocated.[12] Anisya Kirdyapkina was also disqualified for doping.[8]
  • On 21 March 2022, the Athletics Integrity Unit has issued a 2-year ban for Elena Lashmanova, starting from 9 March 2021, and also disqualified her results from 18 February 2012, to 3 January 2014.[5]

References

  1. "2012 Summer Olympics Results - Athletics". ESPN.
  2. "Olympic Documents - Athletes, Olympic Games, IOC and More" (PDF). 29 July 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  3. "OLYMPIC GAMESm LONDON (OLYMPIC STADIUM), 27 JUL - 12 AUG 2012". World Athletics.
  4. "20 Kilometres Race Walk women|The XXX Olympic Games". World Athletics. Retrieved 2022-05-31.
  5. 1 2 3 "Lashmanova stripped of Olympic and world titles". Athletics Weekly.
  6. "20km walk women results". Athletics – London 2012 Olympics. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  7. "The XXX Olympic Games". World Athletics.
  8. 1 2 "Russian race walker Kirdyapkina banned for doping". Associated Press. 2019-02-07.
  9. "Doping Irregularities at the Olympics". Olympedia.com. Retrieved 5 Oct 2023. Retroactively stripped of all her results from 2011 to 2013 for irregularities on her Athlete Biological Passport
  10. "Ukrainian race walker Olena Shumkina banned for doping". AP News.
  11. The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) Upholds Six Appeals Filed by the IAAF Against Russian Athlete.
  12. "Medals, Diplomas and Medallist Pins Reallocation" (PDF). stillmed.olympic.org.
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