2.2 Servicios de la Red inalámbrica
2.2.1 Administración centralizada
1, Lawrence Johnson USA 5.95
2, Tye Harvey USA 5.90
3, Romain Mesnil FRA 5.85
4, Alex Averbukh ISR 5.70
5, Pavel Gerasimov RUS 5.70
6, Montxu Miranda ESP 5.70
7, Okkert Brits RSA 5.60
8, Stepán Janácek CZE 5.60
=9, Michael Stolle & Nuno Fernándes POR 5.45
At the previous weekend’s US Indoor Championships, Johnson had set a national record of 5.96. In Lisbon, he started confidently with a first- time success at his opening height of 5.70. He passed 5.80, a height which only Mesnil and Harvey cleared. At 5.85, Averbukh and Miranda both went out, having gambled after two earlier failures at 5.80. Mesnil and Johnson each went clear first time. Harvey failed twice, but was assured a medal. For his third attempt, the second-string American went for 5.90. He made it, whereas Mesnil failed once and Johnson passed again. The Frenchman allowed the bar to be raised to 5.95 for his second and third attempts. He missed both, and two the Americans also failed on their first two tries. If Johnson were to fail a third time, the gold would be Harvey’s. In fact, he just made it, where- as Harvey failed. The US therefore claimed a 1-2.
Birmingham 2003
Final (Mar 15)1, Tim Lobinger GER 5.80
2, Michael Stolle GER 5.75
3, Rens Blom NED 5.75
4, Vasiliy Gorshkov RUS 5.70
5, Derek Miles USA 5.70
6, Viktor Chistiakov AUS 5.60
7, Romain Mesnil FRA 5.60
8, Giuseppe Gibilisco ITA 5.40
The experienced Lobinger won his first world title with no failures, either in the qualifying round or at 5.60, 5.75 or 5.80 in the final. Two other men attempted 5.80, Blom and Stolle, but each retired. Blom had set a Dutch record at 5.75, then had to stop after two goes at 5.80 with injury. Stolle missed once at 5.80 then tried for 5.85, only to injure himself with an awkward landing. Lobinger came very near to clearing 5.85 on his last attempt.
Qualifying round (5.65 or top 8 to final) (Mar 14) Group A qualifier: Chistiakov 5.60
Non-qualifiers: Patrik Kristiansson SWE 5.60; Alex Averbukh ISR 5.40; Paul
Burgess AUS, Okkert Brits RSA, Dmitriy Kuptsov RUS & Oscar Janson SWE NH
Group B qualifiers: Mesnil, Lobinger, Blom, Gorshkov, Gibilisco, Miles & Stolle
5.65
Non-qualifiers: Adam Ptácek CZE 5.55; Stepán Janácek CZE & Jeremy Scott
USA 5.55; Piotr Buciarski DEN 5.40
Budapest 2004
Final (Mar 7)1, Igor Pavlov RUS 5.80
2, Adam Ptácek CZE 5.70
3, Denys Yurchenko UKR 5.70
4, Patrik Kristiansson SWE 5.70
5, Tim Lobinger GER 5.70
6, Giuseppe Gibilisco ITA 5.60
7, Romain Mesnil FRA 5.60
Rens Blom NED NH
The qualifying standard was unprecedented with 13 men at 5.65 or bet- ter and the 1995 bronze medallists Brits finding 5.70 insufficient for a place in the eight-man final. Pavlov, the only man to clear the auto- matic qualifying height of 5.75, was dominant in the final, clearing 5.80 on his first attempt then coming close to 5.85. No-one else got higher than 5.70 though Yurchenko was near to 5.80.
Qualifying round (5.75 or top 8 to final) (Mar 6)
Group A qualifiers: Pavlov 5.75; Ptácek, Lobinger & Yurchenko 5.70
Non-qualifiers: Dmitri Markov AUS, Oscar Janson SWE 5.65; Alex Averbukh ISR,
Daichi Sawano JPN, Jeff Hartwig USA 5.55; Ilian Efremov BUL & Jerome Clavier FRA 5.45; Kim Yoo-Suk KOR NH
Group B qualifiers: Blom, Gibilisco, Mesnil, Kristiansson 5.70
Non-qualifiers: Okkert Brits RSA 5.70; Aleksandr Korchmyd UKR, Björn Otto GER
& Toby Stevenson USA 5.55; Piotr Buciarski DEN, Pavel Gerasimov RUS & Paul Burgess AUS 5.45; Matti Mononen FIN 5.30
Moscow 2006
Final (Mar 12)1, Brad Walker USA 5.80
2, Alhaji Jeng SWE 5.70
3, Tim Lobinger GER 5.60
=4, Alex Averbukh ISR 5.50
Fabian Schulze GER 5.50
Giovanni Lanaro MEX 5.50
Denys Yurchenko UKR NH
Jeff Hartwig USA NH
After 10 men cleared 5.65 in the qualifying round – including two who were eliminated after not clearing that height first time – just three were able to jump as high as 5.60 in the final. Until he made his last-ditch clearance at 5.80, Walker trailed Jeng, the Swede of Gambian extrac- tion, who had reached 5.80 without a miss. For the third time in a row 5.80 had been the winning height (only Bubka’s winning height in 1985 was lower), while the 5.60 jumped by 2003 winner Lobinger was the lowest-ever height for the bronze medal.
Qualifying round (5.70 or top 8 to final) (Mar 11)
Qualifiers: Hartwig, Walker, Yurchenko & Averbukh 5.70; Lobinger, Schulze, Lanaro, Jeng 5.65
Non-Qualifiers: Daichi Sawano JPN & Przemysław Czerwinski POL 5.65; Kevin
Rans BEL 5.60; Igor Pavlov RUS & Dmitry Starodubtsev RUS 5.55; Jérôme Clavier FRA, Maksym Mazuryk UKR, Spas Bukhalov BUL & Laurens Looije NED 5.45; Romain Mesnil FRA, Giuseppe Gibilisco ITA & Liu Feiliang CHN NH
Valencia 2008
Final (Mar 9)1, Yevgeniy Lukyanenko RUS 5.90
2, Brad Walker USA 5.85
3, Steven Hooker AUS 5.80
4, Jérôme Clavier FRA 5.75
5, Tim Lobinger GER 5.70
6, Maksym Mazuryk UKR 5.70
7, Alhaji Jeng SWE 5.70
8, Derek Miles USA 5.60
Seven men cleared 5.70 in the qualifying round, with Jeng the only man with a 5.65 clearance to qualify. Favourites to battle out for the gold medal were the indoor leader Lukyanenko (5.85), and Hooker, who had cleared 6.00 outdoors in January. By the time the bar was raised to 5.85 in the final two of the medallists had been determined, as both Lukyanenko and Hooker had no misses through 5.80. Clavier was in third place, thanks to his 5.75 clearance. Reigning champion Walker then set an indoor personal best of 5.85 to move into the lead.
Lukyanenko responded with a second time clearance, while Hooker missed once, then moved up to 5.90, which he also failed. Meanwhile Lukyanenko cleared 5.90 first time to take the gold medal. Former champion Lobinger was fifth, which along with Thomas Blaschek in the 60m hurdles was the best position achieved by a German in Valencia.
Qualifying round (5.70 or top 8 to final) (Mar 8)
Qualifiers: Lobinger, Walker, Clavier, Miles, Hooker, Mazuryk & Lukyanenko 5.70;
Jeng 5.65
Non-qualifiers: Giovanni Lanaro MEX & Daichi Sawano JPN 5.65; Pavel
Gerasimov RUS, Liu Feiliang CHN & Renaud Lavillenie FRA 5.55; Leonid Andreyev UZB, Steven Lewis GBR & Denys Yurchenko UKR 5.35; Fábio Gomes da Silva BRA, Fabian Schulze GER, Jesper Fritz SWE, Spas Bukhalov BUL NH
Doha 2010
Final (Mar 13)1, Steven Hooker AUS 6.01
2, Malte Mohr GER 5.70
3, Alexander Straub GER 5.65
=4, Konstadínos Filippídis GRE 5.65
Derek Miles USA 5.65
=6, Michal Balner CZE 5.45
Steven Lewis GBR 5.45
Dmitry Starodubtsev RUS 5.45
9, Łukasz Michalski POL 5.45
A height of 5.70, reached by 15 of the entrants, was not required to make the final, as just nine men made 5.60. Two 5.80+ men – Lavillenie and Czerwinski – were among the non-qualifiers. Hooker – the Olympic, World and Commonwealth Champion – had a habit of winning titles in dramatic fashion, but here required just one jump at 5.70 to ensure victory. He then cleared 5.80 first time, and then broke the championship record with his final attempt at 6.01, was cleared without touching. He went on to attempt an outright world record of 6.16. Hooker’s winning margin of 31cm was the biggest in any global championship since Frank Foss’s Olympic win by 39cm in 1920.
Qualifying round (5.75 or top 8 to final) (Mar 12)
Qualifiers: Hooker, Balner, Filippídis, Miles, Mohr, Starodubtsev, Straub, Michalski
& Lewis 5.60
Non-qualifiers: Renaud Lavillenie FRA, Giuseppe Gibilisco ITA, Kim Yoo-Suk
KOR, Aleksandr Gripich RUS, Maksym Mazuryk UKR& Tim Mack USA 5.45; Yang Yansheng CHN, Spas Bukhalov BUL & Damiel Dossévi FRA 5.30; Kevin Rans BEL DQ (r40.8) (5.45)
POLE VAULT Multiple Medallists:
4 Sergey Bubka URS/UKR 85-1, 87-1, 91-1, 95-1 2 Thierry Vigneron FRA 85-2, 87-3
Rodion Gataullin URS/RUS 89-1, 93-1 Grigoriy Yegorov URS/KAZ 89-2, 93-2 Jean Galfione FRA 93-3, 99-1 Igor Potapovich KAZ 95-2, 97-1 Lawrence Johnson USA 97-2, 01-1 Tim Lobinger GER 03-1, 06-3
Brad Walker USA 06-1, 08-2
Steve Hooker AUS 08-3, 10-1
Most Finals:
5 Javier García ESP 89-8, 91-7, 93-10=, 95-7=, 97-8= Lobinger 97-5, 03-1, 04-5, 06-3, 08-5 4 Bubka
Potapovich 93-9, 95-2, 97-1, 99-4= Romain Mesnil FRA 99-6=, 01-3, 03-7, 04-7
Most Appearances:
6 García 87-11, 89-8, 91-7, 93-10=, 95-7=, 97-8=
Lobinger 95-18Q, 97-5, 03-1, 04-5, 06-3, 08-5
5 Okkert Brits RSA 95-3=, 97-6, 01-7, 03-nh/Q, 04- 9Q
Mesnil 99-6=, 01-3, 03-7, 04-7, 06-nh/Q
POLE VAULT Multiple Medallists:
4 Sergey Bubka URS/UKR 85-1, 87-1, 91-1, 95-1 2 Thierry Vigneron FRA 85-2, 87-3
Rodion Gataullin URS/RUS 89-1, 93-1 Grigoriy Yegorov URS/KAZ 89-2, 93-2 Jean Galfione FRA 93-3, 99-1 Igor Potapovich KAZ 95-2, 97-1 Lawrence Johnson USA 97-2, 01-1 Tim Lobinger GER 03-1, 06-3
Brad Walker USA 06-1, 08-2
Steve Hooker AUS 08-3, 10-1
Most Finals:
5 Javier García ESP 89-8, 91-7, 93-10=, 95-7=, 97-8= Lobinger 97-5, 03-1, 04-5, 06-3, 08-5 4 Bubka
Potapovich 93-9, 95-2, 97-1, 99-4= Romain Mesnil FRA 99-6=, 01-3, 03-7, 04-7
Most Appearances:
6 García 87-11, 89-8, 91-7, 93-10=, 95-7=, 97-8=
Lobinger 95-18Q, 97-5, 03-1, 04-5, 06-3, 08-5
5 Okkert Brits RSA 95-3=, 97-6, 01-7, 03-nh/Q, 04- 9Q
Mesnil 99-6=, 01-3, 03-7, 04-7, 06-nh/Q I S T A N B U L 2 0 1 2 ★ P A S T R E S U L T S / W O R L D I N D O O R M E N ʼ S P V