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2019 World Athletics Championships – Men's high jump

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The men's high jump at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha from 1 to 4 October.[1]

Quick facts Men's high jump at the 2019 World Championships, Venue ...
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Summary

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When Qatari officials put together the bid to host these championships, Doha born Mutaz Essa Barshim was a 23 year old already with a World Junior Championship, Olympic bronze and World Championship silver to his name. Qatari officials could see the potential. This was the day they were waiting for, when a now 28 year old was jumping at home. Now there was a bonus, he was defending champion.

The finals pared down to 7 over 2.30m. At 2.33m, Mikhail Akimenko got over on his first attempt to maintain a clean round and Maksim Nedasekau also was over on his first attempt. Shudder, Barshim, who had a clean series going so far, missed along with five others (veteran Gianmarco Tamberi saved attempts after missing 2.30m once). On the second attempt, everyone missed again. Tamberi eliminated, that trend started the third round of attempts as Luis Zayas and Michael Mason missed and were eliminated. Then it was Barshim's last attempt. He got over it and sighs of relief could be heard all over Qatar. Next up, Brandon Starc missed, then Ilya Ivanyuk also made it to leave four over 2.33m, with Akimenko holding the advantage.

Moving up to 2.35m, Nedasekau missed, then Barshim, Akimenko and Ivanyuk all made it on their first attempts. Akimenko still had a clean series. With three earlier misses, vs two each for Barshim and Ivanyuk, Nedasekau could see he was off the podium and passed. At 2.37 m (7 ft 9+14 in), Nedasekau missed. Next up, on his first attempt, Barshim made it, and no else was able to clear the height.

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Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

World record  Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.45 m Salamanca, Spain 27 July 1993
Championship record  Bohdan Bondarenko (UKR) 2.41 m Moscow, Russia 15 August 2013
World Leading  Maksim Nedasekau (BLR) 2.35 m Minsk, Belarus 9 September 2019
African Record  Jacques Freitag (RSA) 2.38 m Oudtshoorn, South Africa 5 March 2005
Asian Record  Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.43 m Brussels, Belgium 5 September 2014
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.45 m Salamanca, Spain 27 July 1993
South American Record  Gilmar Mayo (COL) 2.33 m Pereira, Colombia 17 October 1994
European Record  Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) 2.42 m Stockholm, Sweden 30 June 1987
Oceanian record  Tim Forsyth (AUS) 2.36 m Melbourne, Australia 2 March 1997
 Brandon Starc (AUS) Eberstadt, Germany 26 August 2018
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Qualification standard

The standard to automatically qualify for entry was 2.30 m.[3] for a quota number of 32 athletes.

Only 24 high jumpers reached 2.30 m during the qualification period (2018-2019), indoors and outdoors. The final entries were made by completing to 31 athletes, including the defending world champion Mutaz Essa Barshim (wild card, only 2.27 m before the competition) and 1 Best country athlete, Lee Hup Wei.

The qualifiers with less than 2.30 m are:

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+3), was as follows:[4]

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Results

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Qualification

Qualification: 2.31 m (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q).[5][6]

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Final

The final was started on 4 October at 20:15.[7]

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References

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