Men's high jump
at the 2022 World Championships
VenueHayward Field
Dates15 July (qualification)
18 July (final)
Competitors32 from 22 nations
Winning height2.37
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 

The men's high jump at the 2022 World Athletics Championships was held at the Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, on 15 and 18 July.[1]

Summary

Eleven athletes cleared 2.28m, so it turned out a clean round to 2.25m was good enough to get 13 (12 plus ties) into the final. In the final ten survived 2.27m, only five got over 2.30m. Defending champion, co-Olympic Champion Mutaz Essa Barshim, Woo Sang-hyeok and Shelby McEwen all had perfect rounds going and thus were tied for first place. Co-Olympic Champion Gianmarco Tamberi cleared on his last attempt to hold on to the fifth spot. At 2.33m Woo missed, Andriy Protsenko made it on his first attempt to take the lead, for the 30 seconds it took for Barshim to be called and also clear, with a clean round, to take the lead back. Tamberi cleared on his second attempt to take over third place while McEwen missed twice and saved his last remaining attempt for the next height. At 2.35m, Woo and Protsenko missed, Barshim remained perfect and McEwen bowed out. Woo made it on his second attempt to keep the competition alive, Protsenko and Tamberi missed. Protsenko elected to save his final attempt for 2.37m, Tamberi missed and was out. At 2.37 m (7 ft 9+14 in), Woo then Protsenko missed, leaving Protsenko with the bronze. Barshim cleared it again leaving Woo no other choices but to pass. And after Woo missed at 2.39m made the calculated gamble. If Woo made his final attempt, Barshim could lose gold at the last second, or at least be pressured to make one of the top 10 jumps in history (which he has done on 5 occasions). Woo failed, taking silver. A perfect round and gold already in hand, Barshim took one attempt at 2.42m and called it a day.

Preview

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  Ilya Ivanyuk (ANA) 2.34 m Moscow, Russia 7 June 2022
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

Qualification standard

The standard to automatically qualify for entry was 2.33 m, with a qualification period from 28 June 2021 to 26 June 2022, for a quota number of 32 athletes.[3]

Only 6 high jumpers reached 2.33 m during the qualification period (2021-2022), indoors and outdoors (Barshim, Tamberi, Woo, Starc, Harrison and McEwen). 2 jumpers were selected by finishing position at designated competitions (Ferreira and Kerr, area champions). The final entries were made by completing to 32 athletes, including the defending world champion Mutaz Essa Barshim (wild card), and the Diamond League winner Gianmarco Tamberi, (wild card), both defending Olympic Champions in Tokyo 2020.

Neither the 2022 world leader, Ilya Ivanyuk, nor Russian or Belarusian athletes, as Maksim Nedasekau, 3rd in Ranking, were admitted, even under ANA status.

Naoto Tobe, qualified by ranking, withdrawn.[3] Even if regularly entered, Brandon Starc preferred to focus on the following 2022 Commonwealth Games.

World athletics ranking

Before the 2022 World Championships:

  1. Gianmarco Tamberi ITA 1404 points, High Jump [incl. High Jump indoor]
  2. Woo Sang-hyeok KOR 1376 pts High Jump [High Jump ind.]
  3. Maksim Nedasekau BLR 1354 pts High Jump
  4. Django Lovett CAN 1334 pts High Jump
  5. Ilya Ivanyuk ANA 1318 pts High Jump
  6. JuVaughn Harrison USA 1305 pts High Jump [High Jump ind.]
  7. Mikhail Akimenko RUS 1295 pts High Jump [High Jump ind.]
  8. Andriy Protsenko UKR 1294 pts High Jump
  9. Hamish Kerr NZL 1292 pts High Jump [High Jump ind.]
  10. Brandon Starc AUS 1291 pts High Jump
  11. Shelby McEwen USA 1270 pts High Jump
  12. Norbert Kobielski POL 1261 pts High Jump [High Jump ind.]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC-7), is as follows:[4]

Date Time Round
15 July10:10Qualification
18 July17:45Final

Results

Qualification taking the L

Qualification: 2.30 m (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q).[5] Only 29 athletes are entered on the quota number of 32: Brandon Starc[6] and defending South American champion Fernando Ferreira did not finally enter.

RankGroupNameNationality2.172.212.252.282.30MarkNotes
1AWoo Sang-hyeok South Korea (KOR)oooo2.28q
1ADjango Lovett Canada (CAN)oooo2.28q, =SB
1AAndriy Protsenko Ukraine (UKR)oooo2.28q
1AMutaz Essa Barshim Qatar (QAT)ooo2.28q
5BLuis Enrique Zayas Cuba (CUB)oxooo2.28q
6ATomohiro Shinno Japan (JPN)oxoxoo2.28q
7BJuVaughn Harrison United States (USA)oooxo2.28q
8BYonathan Kapitolnik Israel (ISR)oxooxo2.28q
9AShelby McEwen United States (USA)oooxxo2.28q
9BJoel Baden Australia (AUS)oooxxo2.28q, SB
11BGianmarco Tamberi Italy (ITA)ooxxoxxo2.28q
12BEdgar Rivera Mexico (MEX)oooxxx2.25q
12BMateusz Przybylko Germany (GER)oooxxx2.25q
14BHamish Kerr New Zealand (NZL)oxooxxx2.25
15BOleh Doroshchuk Ukraine (UKR)ooxoxxx2.25
16AMarco Fassinotti Italy (ITA)xoxoxoxxx2.25
17AThomas Carmoy Belgium (BEL)oxoxxoxxx2.25
18BThiago Moura Brazil (BRA)oxxoxxoxxx2.25
19ATobias Potye Germany (GER)ooxxx2.21
19BRyoichi Akamatsu Japan (JPN)ooxxx2.21
21ACarlos Layoy Argentina (ARG)oxoxxx2.21=SB
22ALoïc Gasch Switzerland (SUI)xoxoxxx2.21
23BDonald Thomas Bahamas (BAH)oxxoxxx2.21
23BJoel Clarke-Khan Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)oxxoxxx2.21
25BDarius Carbin United States (USA)oxxx2.17
26AYual Reath Australia (AUS)xxoxxx2.17
ANauraj Singh Randhawa Malaysia (MAS)xxxNM
ANorbert Kobielski Poland (POL)xrNM
AMajd Eddin Ghazal Syria (SYR)DNS

Final

The final started on 18 July at 17:45.[7][8]

RankNameNationality2.192.242.272.302.332.352.372.392.42MarkNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Mutaz Essa Barshim Qatar (QAT)oooooox2.37WL
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Woo Sang-hyeok South Korea (KOR)ooooxxoxox-xx2.35=NR
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Andriy Protsenko Ukraine (UKR)xooxxoooxx-x2.33SB
4Gianmarco Tamberi Italy (ITA)oooxxoxoxxx2.33SB
5Shelby McEwen United States (USA)ooooxx-x2.30
6Django Lovett Canada (CAN)oooxxx2.27
6Luis Enrique Zayas Cuba (CUB)oooxxx2.27
8Tomohiro Shinno Japan (JPN)xoxooxxx2.27
9JuVaughn Harrison United States (USA)ooxxoxxx2.27
10Joel Baden Australia (AUS)oxoxoxxx2.27
11Yonathan Kapitolnik Israel (ISR)ooxxx2.24
12Mateusz Przybylko Germany (GER)oxxoxxx2.24
13Edgar Rivera Mexico (MEX)xoxxx2.19

References

  1. High Jump Men − Preview, IAAF, 9 July 2022
  2. "High Jump Men − Records". IAAF. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  3. 1 2 "Road To | World Athletics". www.worldathletics.org.
  4. "High Jump Men − Timetable". WA. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
  5. "Qualification start list" (PDF).
  6. "Starc withdraws from World Athletics Championships". www.athletics.com.au.
  7. Final Start List
  8. RESULTS High Jump Men - Final
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