2009 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 4 × 400 metres relay


The men's 4 x 400 metres relay at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics was held at the Olympic Stadium on August 22 and August 23.
Britain's Conrad Williams looked to be leading the stagger on the first leg, but a late rush by Arismendy Peguero had the Dominican Republic making the handoff even, while USA put hurdler Angelo Taylor on the first leg, so they started with a slight deficit. Jeremy Wariner had won the previous two world championships in the open 400 metres, but lost his title a few days earlier. He had something to prove, flying through the turn, Wariner put the USA into the lead by the break. After he passed Yon Soriano on the inside, Soriano accelerated to challenge Wariner for the pole position. Warner held the pole, behind Soriano, Ben Offereins was able to sneak Australia into third while Michael Bingham was being challenged by Piotr Klimczak for Poland. Bingham was able to get around Thomas and then Soriano, putting Great Britain into a solid second place by the straightaway, but Wariner was running away from the pack. Soriano paid for his exuberance and slowed down the home stretch as all the other teams passed him by the exchange. Warner had opened up a 15-metre gap, the USA had completed their exchange before the other teams arrived. Because of the change in positions, Bingham had to cross in front of several teams to make their exchange, and Kévin Borlée ran Belgium from last to fourth on the straight. Kerron Clement for USA and far behind him Robert Tobin for Great Britain had clear sailing, behind them Australia and Belgium came out of the exchange best. Tobin ran conservatively down the backstretch while Tristan Thomas accelerated to go around him on the turn. Coming off the turn, Tobin regained second position and was gaining on Clement. USA had new world champion LaShawn Merritt on the anchor he immediately started widening the gap on Martyn Rooney for Britain. Australia's Sean Wroe had a significant gap on Belgium, while Yannick Fonsat brought France from dead last to almost even with Belgium at the exchange. As Merritt kept widening the gap, Wroe was gaining on Rooney coming off the turn Wroe was perfectly positioned to punch for the silver medal position, but Rooney held him off, looking back to be sure he was holding clear. USA finished with a 25-metre lead.

Medalists

* Runners who participated in the heats only and received medals.

Records

Prior to the competition, the following records were as follows.
World record
Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Butch Reynolds, Michael Johnson
2:54.29Stuttgart, Germany22 August 1993
Championship record
Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Butch Reynolds, Michael Johnson
2:54.29Stuttgart, Germany22 August 1993
World Leading
Andrae Williams, Michael Mathieu, Nathaniel McKinney, Chris Brown
3:00.29Philadelphia, United States25 April 2009
African Record
Clement Chukwu, Jude Monye, Enefiok Udo-Obong, Sunday Bada
2:58.68Sydney, Australia30 September 2000
Asian Record
Koji Ito, Jun Osakada, Shigekazu Ōmori, Shunji Karube
3:00.76Atlanta, United States3 August 1996
North American Record
Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Butch Reynolds, Michael Johnson
2:54.29Stuttgart, Germany22 August 1993
South American record
Cleverson da Silva, Claudinei da Silva, Eronilde de Araújo, Sanderlei Parrela
2:58.56Winnipeg, Canada30 July 1999
European Record
Iwan Thomas, Jamie Baulch, Roger Black, Mark Richardson
2:56.60Atlanta, United States3 August 1996
Oceanian Record
Darren Clark, Rick Mitchell, Gary Minihan, Bruce Frayne
2:59.70Los Angeles, United States11 August 1984

No new world or championship record was set during this competition.

Qualification standards

Schedule

Results

Heats

Qualification: First 3 of each heat plus the 2 fastest times advance to the [|final].
RankHeatNationAthletesTimeNotes
1Lionel Larry, Kerron Clement, Bershawn Jackson, Angelo Taylor3:01.40Q
1Leslie Djhone, Teddy Venel, Yannick Fonsat, Yoann Décimus3:01.65Q, SB
1Conrad Williams, Robert Tobin, Dai Greene, Martyn Rooney3:01.91Q
1Joel Milburn, Tristan Thomas, Ben Offereins, Sean Wroe3:02.04q, SB
2Antoine Gillet, Cédric Van Branteghem, Nils Duerinck, Kévin Borlée3:02.13Q, SB
1Saul Weigopwa, Noah Akwu, Amaechi Morton, Bola Gee Lawal3:02.36q
2Gustavo Cuesta, Arismendy Peguero, Yoel Tapia, Félix Sánchez3:02.76Q
1Maksim Dyldin, Valentin Kruglyakov, Konstantin Svechkar, Aleksandr Derevyagin3:02.78
2Piotr Klimczak, Marcin Marciniszyn, Rafał Wieruszewski, Jan Ciepiela3:03.23Q, SB
102Martin Grothkopp, Kamghe Gaba, Eric Krüger, Ruwen Faller3:03.52
112Leford Green, Ricardo Chambers, Isa Phillips, Jermaine Gonzales3:04.45
122Ofentse Mogawane, Jacob Mothsodi Ramokoka, Sibusiso Sishi, Pieter Smith3:07.88
2Ramon Miller, Avard Moncur, LaToy Williams, Nathaniel McKinneyDQ

Key: DQ = Disqualified, Q = qualification by place in heat, q = qualification by overall place, SB = Seasonal best

Final

RankLaneNationCompetitorsTimeNotes
4Angelo Taylor, Jeremy Wariner, Kerron Clement, LaShawn Merritt2:57.86WL
7Conrad Williams, Michael Bingham, Robert Tobin, Martyn Rooney3:00.53SB
2John Steffensen, Ben Offereins, Tristan Thomas, Sean Wroe3:00.90SB
45Antoine Gillet, Kévin Borlée, Nils Duerinck, Cedric van Branteghem3:01.88SB
58Marcin Marciniszyn, Piotr Klimczak, Kacper Kozłowski, Jan Ciepiela3:02.23SB
66Arismendy Peguero, Yon Soriano, Yoel Tapia, Félix Sánchez3:02.47
73Leslie Djhone, Teddy Venel, Yannick Fonsat, Yoann Décimus3:02.65
81Saul Welgopwa, Noah Akwu, Amaechi Morton, Bola Gee Lawal3:02.73

Key: SB = Seasonal best, WL = World leading