Athletics at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's 20 kilometres walk

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Athletics at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's 20 kilometres walk

The men's 20 kilometres race walk at the 2024 Summer Olympics was held in Paris, France, on 1 August 2024. It was the eighteenth time that the event was contested at the Summer Olympics.

Quick Facts Men's 20 kilometres walk at the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad, Venue ...
Men's 20 kilometres walk
at the Games of the XXXIII Olympiad
The second chase group passes by the Eiffel Tower during the race
VenuePont d'Iéna and Champ de Mars road course, Paris[1]
Date
  • 1 August 2024
Competitors49 from 25 nations
Medalists
Brian Pintado  Ecuador
Caio Bonfim  Brazil
Álvaro Martín  Spain
 2020
2028 
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Summary

Summarize
Perspective

This was the first athletics event of this Olympics. Returning silver medalist Koki Ikeda made himself the favorite by walking within 15 seconds of countrymate Yusuke Suzuki's nine-year-old world record at the Japanese National Championships in February. Returning champion Massimo Stano had technically the third fastest time of the year, losing on the finish line to Zhang Jun a few weeks later. But the form chart was upset in May when returning bronze medalist Toshikazu Yamanishi, who did not even make the Japanese team, led double reigning World Champion Álvaro Martín, Caio Bonfim and Brian Pintado to beat both Ikeda and Zhang at the Gran Premio Cantones de A Coruña de Marcha in Spain.[2]

49 walkers took the line with Bonfim charging off to a quick lead and a 4:00 lap of camera time, but after getting two yellow paddles he slowed and the peloton pulled him back over the second lap. The pack stayed together throughout the race with about half the field still in contact by the halfway point. Over the next few laps, more and more fell off the back, down to a dozen by 15 laps. As they moved into the last few laps, Stano, Martín, Bonfim, Pintado and Ikeda appeared at the front of the pack. Ikeda was the first to fall back as lap times dropped into the low 3:50's. The 18th lap was 3:45, separating the first four, several seconds back, only Evan Dunfee was able to keep up. Another 3:47 lap and Stano wasn't able to match the eventual medalists in a virtual tie at the bell. Pintado hit the gas, immediately separating from the other two, leaving them to battle for silver.[3] He picked up two yellow paddles for contact, but since it was the final lap, those judges wouldn't have another opportunity to see him.[4] Pintado's 3:31 was the fastest lap in the race by ten seconds. As Pintado accelerated, Bonfim tried to go with him and gained a couple of steps on Martín. Martín was never able to recover those steps conceding silver to pick up the Spanish flag as he crossed the finish line.

Pintado's victory comes 28 years after Jefferson Pérez won the first gold medal for Ecuador in this same event. In sixth place, 20 year old Misgana Wakuma set a new national record for Ethiopia.

Background

The men's 20 kilometres race walk has been present on the Olympic athletics programme since 1956.

More information Record, Athlete (Nation) ...
Global records before the 2024 Summer Olympics
Record Athlete (Nation) Time Location Date
World record  Yusuke Suzuki (JPN) 1:16.36[5] Nomi, Japan 15 March 2015
Olympic record  Chen Ding (CHN) 1:18.46 London, Great Britain 4 August 2012
World leading  Koki Ikeda (JPN) 1:16.51[6] Kobe, Japan 18 February 2024
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More information Area Record, Athlete (Nation) ...
Area records before the 2024 Summer Olympics[7]
Area Record Athlete (Nation) Time
Africa (records)  Samuel Gathimba (KEN) 1:18.23
Asia (records)  Yusuke Suzuki (JPN) 1:16.36 WR
Europe (records)  Yohann Diniz (FRA) 1:17.02
North, Central America
and Caribbean
(records)
 Julio Martínez (GUA) 1:17.46
Oceania (records)  Nathan Deakes (AUS) 1:17.33
South America (records)  Jefferson Pérez (ECU) 1:17.21
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Qualification

For the men's 20 kilometres race walk event, the qualification period was between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024. 48 athletes were able to qualify for the event, with a maximum of three athletes per nation, by walking the entry standard of 1:20.10 seconds or faster or by their World Athletics Ranking for this event.[8]

Results

Summarize
Perspective

The event took place on 1 August, starting at 07:30 (UTC+2) in the morning.[1] It had 20 one-kilometer laps around a road course at the Pont d'Iéna and Champ de Mars.

More information Rank, Athlete ...
RankAthleteNationTimeTime behindNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Brian Pintado Ecuador1:18:55
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Caio Bonfim Brazil1:19:09+0:14~~
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Álvaro Martín Spain1:19:11+0:16
4Massimo Stano Italy1:19:12+0:17
5Evan Dunfee Canada1:19:16+0:21
6Misgana Wakuma Ethiopia1:19:31+0:36~ NR
7Koki Ikeda Japan1:19:41+0:46
8Yuta Koga Japan1:19:50+0:55~~
9Aurélien Quinion France1:19:56+1:01PB
10Zhang Jun China1:19:56+1:01~~
11Declan Tingay Australia1:19:56+1:01~ SB
12Rhydian Cowley Australia1:20:04+1:09
13Noel Chama Mexico1:20:19+1:24
14Ricardo Ortiz Mexico1:20:27+1:32
15David Hurtado Ecuador1:20:30+1:35
16Callum Wilkinson Great Britain1:20:31+1:36
17Paul McGrath Spain1:20:32+1:37
18Ryo Hamanishi Japan1:20:33+1:38~
19Christopher Linke Germany1:20:35+1:40
20Francesco Fortunato Italy1:20:38+1:43~
21Perseus Karlström Sweden1:21:05+2:10
22Samuel Gathimba Kenya1:21:26+2:31~ SB
23Leo Köpp Germany1:21:36+2:41
24Gabriel Bordier France1:21:40+2:45
25Jordy Jiménez Ecuador1:21:44+2:49
26Luis Henry Campos Peru1:22:00+3:05SB
27Artur Brzozowski Poland1:22:11+3:16~
28Max Batista Brazil1:22:16+3:21~
29Maher Ben Hlima Poland1:22:34+3:39
30Vikash Singh India1:22:36+3:41
31Li Yandong China1:22:46+3:51~
32Aku Partanen Finland1:22:56+4:01>
33Diego García Spain1:23:10+4:15
34Dominik Černý Slovakia1:23:25+4:30
35Kyle Swan Australia1:23:32+4:37
36Wang Zhaozhao China1:23:40+4:45~
37Paramjeet Singh Bisht India1:23:48+4:53~
38José Alejandro Barrondo Guatemala1:24:17+5:22~
39Matheus Corrêa Brazil1:24:25+5:30~>~
40Ihor Hlavan Ukraine1:24:52+5:57~>~
41Riccardo Orsoni Italy1:25:08+6:13>
42Choe Byeong-kwang South Korea1:26:15+7:20~
43Érick Barrondo Guatemala1:26:19+7:24~~~
44Máté Helebrandt Hungary1:27:17+8:22~~
45Salih Korkmaz Turkey1:29:05+10:10SB
46Bence Venyercsán Hungary1:29:14+10:19~~>
César Rodríguez PeruDNF~~
Akshdeep Singh India
Jose Luis Doctor MexicoDSQ~~~~
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[9]

References

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