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2019 World Athletics Championships – Men's triple jump

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The men's triple jump at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha from 27 to 29 September 2019.[1]

Quick Facts Men's triple jump at the 2019 World Championships, Venue ...
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Summary

On the second jump of the competition, Will Claye took the lead with a 17.61m. Two jumpers later, Cristian Nápoles went 17.36m, then Pedro Pablo Pichardo, now jumping for Portugal, jumped 17.49m. That held through the round. In the second round, Claye improved to 17.72m and Nápoles improved to 17.38m before Hugues Fabrice Zango bounded into contention with a 17.46m African record. After two rounds, defending everything Christian Taylor had not landed a legal jump. Faced with do or die, Taylor made 17.42m to be allowed to continue in the competition. After Claye improved to 17.74m and Pichardo improved to 17.62m, Taylor's fourth attempt of 17.86m put him into the lead. In the fifth round, Zango improved the African record to 17.56m but still wasn't on the podium, while Taylor produced the capper 17.92 m (58 ft 9+12 in). The only one to improve in the final round was Zango, his third African record of the competition was yet another 10 cm improvement to 17.66 to snatch the bronze medal.

Since 2011 the triple jump story remains virtually the same, Taylor in first, his former University of Florida teammate, Claye slightly behind.

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Records

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Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

World record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR) 18.29 m Gothenburg, Sweden 7 August 1995
Championship record
World Leading  Will Claye (USA) 18.14 m Long Beach, United States 29 June 2019
African Record  Tarik Bouguetaïb (MAR) 17.37 m Khémisset, Morocco 14 July 2007
Asian Record  Li Yanxi (CHN) 17.59 m Jinan, China 26 October 2009
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Christian Taylor (USA) 18.21 m Beijing, China 27 August 2015
South American Record  Jadel Gregório (BRA) 17.90 m Belém, Brazil 20 May 2007
European Record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR) 18.29 m Gothenburg, Sweden 7 August 1995
Oceanian record  Kenneth Lorraway (AUS) 17.46 m London, Great Britain 7 August 1982

The following records were set at the competition:

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Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 16.95 m.[3]

Schedule

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

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Results

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Qualification

Qualification: Qualifying Performance 17.10 (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q) advanced to the final.[5][6]

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Final

The final was started on 29 September at 21:46.[7]

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References

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