2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's 60 metres hurdles

The men's 60 metres hurdles at the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships took place on March 19 and 20, 2016.[1][2]

Men's 60 metres hurdles
at the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships
VenueOregon Convention Center
DatesMarch 19 (heats)
March 20 (final)
Competitors27 from 21 nations
Winning time7.41
Medalists
    Jamaica
    France
    France
Video on YouTube Official Video

In the heats, Pascal Martinot-Lagarde was impressive, running a tenth of a second faster than his nearest rival. Slightly slower in the semi-final, Omar McLeod and Jarret Eaton essentially equalled Martinot-Lagarde.

In the final, McLeod had a fantastic start, gaining half a metre by the first hurdle. He never lost that gap and won standing up. Eaton was also out fast, still dominated by McLeod but ahead of the rest, but the tall Martinot-Lagarde was gaining inches over each hurdle, with his teammate Dimitri Bascou doing very much the same. They were three abreast over the final hurdle but Martinot-Lagarde's momentum put him ahead, diving over the line with Bascou just edging out Eaton, a metre ahead of the next best finishers. For the second World Championships in a row, Martinot-Lagarde led a French 2-3 sweep of the silver and bronze medals.

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 2 (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.[3]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
14Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.48Q
22Omar McLeod Jamaica7.58Q
23Dimitri Bascou France7.58Q
41Eddie Lovett United States Virgin Islands7.63Q, SB
51Jarret Eaton United States7.66Q
64Spencer Adams United States7.68Q
74Shane Brathwaite Barbados7.68Q
82Yordan O'Farrill Cuba7.69Q
83Yidiel Contreras Spain7.69Q
104Mikel Thomas Trinidad and Tobago7.72q
111Balázs Baji Hungary7.73Q
122Andreas Martinsen Denmark7.74Q
132Lawrence Clarke Great Britain7.74q
143Xie Wenjun People's Republic of China7.74Q
143Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece7.74Q
163Fábio dos Santos Brazil7.76q
171Antonio Alkana South Africa7.76PB
184Jhoanis Portilla Cuba7.77
194Serhiy Kopanayko Ukraine7.77
202Maksim Lynsha Belarus7.77
212Dominik Bochenek Poland7.86
222Brahian Peña  Switzerland7.87
231Martin Vogel Germany7.91
241Artem Shamatryn Ukraine7.95
252João Vitor de Oliveira Brazil7.99
263Moussa Dembele Senegal7.99
274Namataiki Tevenino French Polynesia8.84
3Amir Shaker IraqDNS

Semifinals

Qualification: First 4 (Q) qualified directly for the final.[4]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.52Q
22Omar McLeod Jamaica7.52Q
31Jarret Eaton United States7.52Q, SB
42Dimitri Bascou France7.63Q
51Shane Brathwaite Barbados7.64Q, PB
62Balázs Baji Hungary7.64Q
72Spencer Adams United States7.65Q
82Yordan O'Farrill Cuba7.67
92Lawrence Clarke Great Britain7.69
101Eddie Lovett United States Virgin Islands7.69Q
111Yidiel Contreras Spain7.71
122Mikel Thomas Trinidad and Tobago7.72
132Andreas Martinsen Denmark7.75
141Fábio dos Santos Brazil7.76
151Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece7.79
161Xie Wenjun People's Republic of China7.90

Final

The race was started on March 20 at 14:40.[5]

The three medalists during the final
RankLaneNameNationalityTimeNotes
5Omar McLeod Jamaica7.41WL
4Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France7.46SB
6Dimitri Bascou France7.48
43Jarret Eaton United States7.50SB
51Spencer Adams United States7.64
67Balázs Baji Hungary7.65
72Eddie Lovett United States Virgin Islands7.75
88Shane Brathwaite Barbados7.88

References

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