Sports
Doha Worlds: India finish 58th as US top medal tally
Doha, Oct 7
India ended its campaign at the 2019 IAAF World Athletics Championships here at the 58th spot in the medal tally which saw US finishing at the top.
While the 27-member Indian contingent was not expected to win any medals at the 10-day event which ended on Sunday, it produced three finalists in the mixed 4x400m relay, men's 3,000m steeplechase and women's javelin throw.
Out of these, steeplechaser Avinash Sable and the mixed 4x400m team secured quotas for 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. Javelin thrower Annu Rani finished eighth and thus missed out on qualification.
24-year-old Avinash clocked 8:21:37 minutes in the final race of the men's 3000m steeplechase event and finished at the 13th spot to secure the Olympic quota.
In the 4x400m relay event, the Indian quartet of Muhammed Anas, V.K. Vismaya, Jisna Mathew and Tom Nirmal Noah clocked 3 minute 15.77 seconds in the final race to finish seventh in the field of eight countries. Before that, the Indian team had finished third in its heat and seventh overall to qualify for the finals, which had ensured them a berth for next year's Tokyo Olympics berth.
US collected a total of 29 medals to reinforce its dominance of world athletics, with most of its 14 gold, 11 silver and four bronze medals coming from track events. US was followed by Kenya (5 golds), Jamaica (3 golds) and China (3 golds).
Speaking after the final evening session, IAAF President Sebastian Coe noted that six championship records had been set during the course of the event, 43 countries had won medals, and athletes from 68 different nations had achieved at least one top-eight placing.
"The world's athletes have put on the best show in the history of the IAAF World Athletics Championships, according to the competition performance rankings which are used as an objective measure of the quality of international competition," Coe was quoted as saying by IAAF.org.
"We are proud of the fact we reach more countries than any other sport," added Coe. "Just look at the breadth and depth - 43 countries on the medals table and 86 national records set. We want our athletes to experience different cultures and different conditions. It's what makes our sport so accessible."
While the 27-member Indian contingent was not expected to win any medals at the 10-day event which ended on Sunday, it produced three finalists in the mixed 4x400m relay, men's 3,000m steeplechase and women's javelin throw.
Out of these, steeplechaser Avinash Sable and the mixed 4x400m team secured quotas for 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games. Javelin thrower Annu Rani finished eighth and thus missed out on qualification.
24-year-old Avinash clocked 8:21:37 minutes in the final race of the men's 3000m steeplechase event and finished at the 13th spot to secure the Olympic quota.
In the 4x400m relay event, the Indian quartet of Muhammed Anas, V.K. Vismaya, Jisna Mathew and Tom Nirmal Noah clocked 3 minute 15.77 seconds in the final race to finish seventh in the field of eight countries. Before that, the Indian team had finished third in its heat and seventh overall to qualify for the finals, which had ensured them a berth for next year's Tokyo Olympics berth.
US collected a total of 29 medals to reinforce its dominance of world athletics, with most of its 14 gold, 11 silver and four bronze medals coming from track events. US was followed by Kenya (5 golds), Jamaica (3 golds) and China (3 golds).
Speaking after the final evening session, IAAF President Sebastian Coe noted that six championship records had been set during the course of the event, 43 countries had won medals, and athletes from 68 different nations had achieved at least one top-eight placing.
"The world's athletes have put on the best show in the history of the IAAF World Athletics Championships, according to the competition performance rankings which are used as an objective measure of the quality of international competition," Coe was quoted as saying by IAAF.org.
"We are proud of the fact we reach more countries than any other sport," added Coe. "Just look at the breadth and depth - 43 countries on the medals table and 86 national records set. We want our athletes to experience different cultures and different conditions. It's what makes our sport so accessible."
20 minutes ago
Huma Qureshi says 'my biggest strength was taken away from me' on 'Baby Do Die Do'
21 minutes ago
David Beckham on 27 years of marital bliss with Victoria: Our proudest achievement is our family
21 minutes ago
Shruti Haasan reveals Sridevi is her all-time favourite Tamil actress
22 minutes ago
When Vidya Balan revealed how her mother reacted to her doing 'Hum Paanch'
50 minutes ago
'Cape Verde proved they're a great team': Scaloni after FIFA WC thriller
2 hours ago
Pakistan serving as China's strategic defence gateway to Middle East, wider region: Report
2 hours ago
Trump praises Usha Vance on children's podcast
2 hours ago
Khamenei's farewell: Iranian Speaker Ghalibaf, FM Araghchi break down in tears
2 hours ago
Trump honours Rushmore's four Presidents during 250 years of independence speech
2 hours ago
Trump defines 'what it means to be an American'
2 hours ago
Trump says US culture and national identity under attack
2 hours ago
"Celebrate our shared commitment to We the People": Indian consulate in New York on America's 250th anniversary
2 hours ago
"Magnificent": Trump welcomes lavish diamond-encrusted "Freedom 250" ring by Antwerp Centre
