Athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Women's 10,000 metres

The women's 10,000 metres event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place on 12 August at the Olympic Stadium.[1] The gold medal was won by Ethiopian Almaz Ayana—in only her second 10,000 m race on the track—in a world record time of 29 minutes, 17.45 seconds. London 2012 bronze medallist Vivian Cheruiyot won silver for Kenya, with reigning Olympic champion Tirunesh Dibaba of Ethiopia taking bronze.[2]

Women's 10,000 metres
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Interior view of the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange, where the Women's 10,000m took place.
VenueOlympic Stadium
Date12 August
Competitors37 from 24 nations
Winning time29:17.45 WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Almaz Ayana Ethiopia
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Vivian Cheruiyot Kenya
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Tirunesh Dibaba Ethiopia
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Summary

Ethiopia's Tirunesh Dibaba entered as the defending 2012 Olympic champion and Vivian Cheruiyot of Kenya was the reigning 10,000 m World Champion at that point. However, it was Almaz Ayana who had the season-leading time of 30:07.00, the fastest time recorded in seven years for the distance and also her debut.[3]

At the start of the race the 37-woman field was led by Alice Aprot Nawowuna of Kenya. Nawowuna quickly increased the pace, turning the group of runners into a single file, and after five laps the leading group was reduced to eight: three Kenyans (Nawowuna, Cheruiyot and Betsy Saina), three Ethiopians (Almaz Ayana, Tirunesh Dibaba and Gelete Burka), Kenyan ex-pat Yasemin Can of Turkey and Molly Huddle of the United States. The pace remained high from that point on, unusual for an international championship. Huddle was the first to fall away from the pack, followed by Gelete Burka. With twelve laps remaining, Almaz Ayana suddenly took the lead from Nawowuna, disrupting a leading group that had already begun to lap the race's slower runners.[4]

Almaz Ayana continued the fast pace and even increased it, regularly running under 71 seconds per lap. Cheruiyot was the only other athlete near, though she was still some 15–20 metres behind. Almaz lapped all the runners from tenth downwards and completed the distance in 29:17.45,[4] knocking 14 seconds off Wang Junxia's 22-year-old record (which itself had stood twenty-two seconds faster than any athlete before that point). Cheruiyot was runner-up and less than a second outside of the old world record. Defending champion Tirunesh Dibaba won the bronze with the fourth fastest time ever and Nawowuna was also under half an hour to record the fifth fastest time ever in fourth place.[5][6]

In addition to Almaz Ayana's world and Olympic record time, a total of eight national records were broken at the competition. Molly Huddle's run of 30:13.17 in sixth place was the area record for the North, Central American and Caribbean region and number 17 of all time. In fifteenth place, just 5 weeks short of 43 years old, Jo Pavey set the Masters World Record at 31:33.44. Further down the field, only four of the top twenty athletes did not set personal bests.

The medals for the competition were presented by Mrs. Dagmawit Girmay Berhane, IOC member, and the gifts were presented by Lord Sebastian Coe, President of the International Association of Athletics Federations.

Schedule

All times are Brasília Time (UTC−3).

DateTimeRound
Friday, 12 August 201611:10Finals

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing World and Olympic records were as follows.

World record  Wang Junxia (CHN)29:31.78Beijing, China8 September 1993
Olympic record  Tirunesh Dibaba (ETH)29:54.66Beijing, China15 August 2008
2016 World leading  Almaz Ayana (ETH)30:07.00Hengelo, Netherlands29 June 2016

The following records were established during the competition:

DateEventNameNationalityTimeRecord
12 AugustFinalAlmaz Ayana  Ethiopia29:17.45WR

The following national records were established during the competition:

CountryAthleteRoundTimeNotes
Ethiopia  Almaz Ayana (ETH)Final29:17.45WR, OR, AR
Kenya  Vivian Cheruiyot (KEN)Final29:32.53
United States  Molly Huddle (USA)Final30:13.17AR
Sweden  Sarah Lahti (SWE)Final31:28.43
Burundi  Diane Nukuri (BDI)Final31:28.69
Greece  Alexi Pappas (GRE)Final31:36.16
Kyrgyzstan  Darya Maslova (KGZ)Final31:36.90
Uzbekistan  Sitora Hamidova (UZB)Final31:57.77

Results

Final

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
Almaz Ayana  Ethiopia29:17.45WR,OR,AR
Vivian Cheruiyot  Kenya29:32.53NR
Tirunesh Dibaba  Ethiopia29:42.56PB
4Alice Aprot Nawowuna  Kenya29:53.51PB
5Betsy Saina  Kenya30:07.78PB
6Molly Huddle  United States30:13.17AR
7Yasemin Can  Turkey30:26.41PB
8Gelete Burka  Ethiopia30:26.66PB
9Karoline Bjerkeli Grøvdal  Norway31:14.07PB
10Eloise Wellings  Australia31:14.94PB
11Emily Infeld  United States31:26.94PB
12Sarah Lahti  Sweden31:28.43NR
13Diane Nukuri  Burundi31:28.69NR
14Susan Kuijken  Netherlands31:32.43
15Jo Pavey  Great Britain31:33.44SB, WMR
16Jess Andrews  Great Britain31:35.92PB
17Alexi Pappas  Greece31:36.16NR
18Yuka Takashima  Japan31:36.44
19Darya Maslova  Kyrgyzstan31:36.90NR
20Hanami Sekine  Japan31:44.44
21Dominique Scott  South Africa31:51.47PB
22Natasha Wodak  Canada31:53.14SB
23Alia Saeed Mohammed  United Arab Emirates31:56.74
24Sitora Hamidova  Uzbekistan31:57.77NR
25Lanni Marchant  Canada32:04.21SB
26Carla Salomé Rocha  Portugal32:06.05
27Salome Nyirarukundo  Rwanda32:07.80
28Jip Vastenburg  Netherlands32:08.92
29Trihas Gebre  Spain32:09.67SB
30Veronica Inglese  Italy32:11.67
31Tatiele de Carvalho  Brazil32:38.21
32Brenda Flores  Mexico32:39.08SB
33Marielle Hall  United States32:39.32
34Beth Potter  Great Britain33:04.34
35Marisol Romero  Mexico35:33.03
Ekaterina Tunguskova  UzbekistanDNF
Juliet Chekwel  UgandaDNF

References