Women's 400 metres
at the 2023 World Championships
VenueNational Athletics Centre
Dates20 August (heats)
21 August (semi-finals)
23 August (final)
Competitors48 from 36 nations
Winning time48.76
Medalists
gold medal    Dominican Republic
silver medal    Poland
bronze medal    Barbados

The women's 400 metres at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest, Hungary from 20 to 23 August 2023.[1]

Summary

The buildup to the event was very hectic, as world leader Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone withdrew just a few weeks before the championships started, citing a minor knee injury. 2019 champion and #3 all time Salwa Eid Naser also withdrew, just days before the heats started. Aside from the withdrawals, some big names also failed to make it past the first round. Defending champion and #6 all time Shaunae Miller-Uibo was not back in full form, as she returned to the track just four months after giving birth to her first child. Another big name that failed to make it to the semi final round was world number three Britton Wilson, who finished last in her opening heat. All of the semi-finalists had sub-50 credentials, six of them broke 50 in the semi final round. That also meant they all had a sub-50 recently in their legs.

In the final, Lieke Klaver was out fast, making up the stagger on Natalia Kaczmarek to her outside down the backstretch. After the half way mark, returning silver medalist Marileidy Paulino began to make up ground on returning bronze medalist Sada Williams to her outside. When Paulino hit the 100 metre start line, she had a step on Klaver and two more on her next pursuers Williams, Rhasidat Adeleke and Kaczmarek. Down the stretch, Klaver was gritting her teeth but was moving backward relative to Kaczmarek, Adeleke and Williams, but Paulino was so far this was clearly a battle just for silver. Kaczmarek emerged as the next best, holding a step on Williams as Adeleke faded. Paulino finished 6 metres up on Kaczmarek with Williams taking a second bronze in a row.

Paulino's 48.76 National Record makes her the eleventh fastest in history. Only the three medalists were able to break 50 in the final.

Records

Before the competition records were as follows:[2]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Marita Koch (GDR) 47.60 Canberra, Australia 6 October 1985
Championship record  Jarmila Kratochvílová (TCH) 47.99 Helsinki, Finland 10 August 1983
World Leading  Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (USA) 48.74 Eugene, United States 8 July 2023
African Record  Falilat Ogunkoya (NGR) 49.10 Atlanta, United States 29 July 1996
Asian Record  Salwa Eid Naser (BHR) 48.14 Doha, Qatar 3 October 2019
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Shaunae Miller-Uibo (BAH) 48.36 Tokyo, Japan 6 August 2021
South American Record  Ximena Restrepo (COL) 49.64 Barcelona, Spain 5 August 1992
European Record  Marita Koch (GDR) 47.60 Canberra, Australia 6 October 1985
Oceanian record  Cathy Freeman (AUS) 48.63 Atlanta, United States 29 July 1996

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 51.00.[3]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+2), was as follows:[1]

Date Time Round
20 August9:35Heats
21 August21:12Semi-finals
23 August21:35Final

Results

Heats

The first 3 athletes in each heat (Q) and the next 6 fastest (q) qualify for the semi-finals.[4]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
16Marileidy Paulino Dominican Republic (DOM)49.90Q
21Natalia Kaczmarek Poland (POL)50.02Q
31Cynthia Bolingo Belgium (BEL)50.29Q, SB
41Candice McLeod Jamaica (JAM)50.37Q
54Nickisha Pryce Jamaica (JAM)50.38Q
62Lieke Klaver Netherlands (NED)50.52Q
76Victoria Ohuruogu Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)50.60Q
83Sada Williams Barbados (BAR)50.78Q
95Rhasidat Adeleke Ireland (IRL)50.80Q
102Ama Pipi Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)50.81Q
112Lynna Irby-Jackson United States (USA)50.81Q
124Roxana Gómez Cuba (CUB)50.86Q
136Talitha Diggs United States (USA)50.87Q
146Lada Vondrová Czech Republic (CZE)50.92q, PB
152Susanne Walli Austria (AUT)51.00q
166Modesta Justė Morauskaitė Lithuania (LTU)51.06q, SB
174Gabby Scott Puerto Rico (PUR)51.07Q, SB
181Sharlene Mawdsley Ireland (IRL)51.17q, PB
195Andrea Miklós Romania (ROM)51.24Q
206Charokee Young Jamaica (JAM)51.24q
212Evelis Aguilar Colombia (COL)51.27q, PB
225Tereza Petržilková Czech Republic (CZE)51.30Q
235Henriette Jæger Norway (NOR)51.33
244Martina Weil Chile (CHI)51.35
251Gunta Vaičule Latvia (LAT)51.36SB
265Aliyah Abrams Guyana (GUY)51.44
275Helena Ponette Belgium (BEL)51.52PB
281Alice Mangione Italy (ITA)51.57
293Paola Morán Mexico (MEX)51.59Q
304Grace Konrad Canada (CAN)51.60PB
313Zenéy van der Walt South Africa (RSA)51.76Q
323Cátia Azevedo Portugal (POR)51.93
333Amandine Brossier France (FRA)51.98SB
343Imaobong Nse Uko Nigeria (NGR)52.24
352Kyra Constantine Canada (CAN)52.28
361Miranda Charlene Coetzee South Africa (RSA)52.30
373Shaunae Miller-Uibo Bahamas (BAH)52.65
384Gulia Senn Switzerland (SUI)52.66
391Kateryna Karpiuk Ukraine (UKR)52.66
404Fanni Rapai Hungary (HUN)52.73PB
415Mette Baas Finland (FIN)52.74
422Nicole Caicedo Ecuador (ECU)52.82
433Rosie Elliott New Zealand (NZL)52.88
44 6 Tiffani Marinho  Brazil (BRA) 53.12
45 6 Marlie Viljoen  South Africa (RSA) 53.73
46 4 Britton Wilson  United States (USA) 53.87
47 5 Tabata Vitorino  Brazil (BRA) 54.15
48 2 Janet Richard  Malta (MLT) 54.50

Semi-finals

The first 2 athletes in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualify for the final.[5]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
13Natalia Kaczmarek Poland (POL)49.50Q
21Marileidy Paulino Dominican Republic (DOM)49.54Q
33Sada Williams Barbados (BAR)49.58Q, NR
41Rhasidat Adeleke Ireland (IRL)49.87Q
52Lieke Klaver Netherlands (NED)49.87Q
61Cynthia Bolingo Belgium (BEL)49.96q, NR
71Candice McLeod Jamaica (JAM)50.62q
83Lynna Irby-Jackson United States (USA)50.71
93Victoria Ohuruogu Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)50.74
103Andrea Miklós Romania (ROM)50.77
112Talitha Diggs United States (USA)50.86Q
121Evelis Aguilar Colombia (COL)51.07PB
132Roxana Gómez Cuba (CUB)51.07
142Ama Pipi Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)51.17
152Nickisha Pryce Jamaica (JAM)51.24
163Charokee Young Jamaica (JAM)51.40
171Paola Morán Mexico (MEX)51.46
183Susanne Walli Austria (AUT)51.50
191Lada Vondrová Czech Republic (CZE)51.50
202Gabby Scott Puerto Rico (PUR)51.52
211Zenéy van der Walt South Africa (RSA)51.54
222Sharlene Mawdsley Ireland (IRL)51.78
233Tereza Petržilková Czech Republic (CZE)51.94
242Modesta Justė Morauskaitė Lithuania (LTU)52.15

Final

The final was held on Wednesday 23rd August 2023.[6][7]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Marileidy Paulino Dominican Republic (DOM)48.76NR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Natalia Kaczmarek Poland (POL)49.57
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Sada Williams Barbados (BAR)49.60
4Rhasidat Adeleke Ireland (IRL)50.13
5Cynthia Bolingo Belgium (BEL)50.33
6Lieke Klaver Netherlands (NED)50.33
7Candice McLeod Jamaica (JAM)51.08
8Talitha Diggs United States (USA)51.25

References

  1. 1 2 "Timetable - Budapest 23 - World Athletics Championship - Women 400 Metres". World Athletics. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
  2. "400 Metres Women − Records". World Athletics. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  3. "Qualification system published for World Athletics Championships Budapest 23" (PDF). World Athletics. worldathletics.org. August 19, 2022. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
  4. "Summary - 400 Metres Women - Round 1" (PDF). World Athletics. August 20, 2023. Retrieved August 20, 2023.
  5. "Summary - 400 Metres Women - Semi-finals" (PDF). World Athletics. August 21, 2023. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  6. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/athletics/world-championships-outdoor/results
  7. "Results 400 Metres Women - Final" (PDF). World Athletics. August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 28, 2023.
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