Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics


The athletics competitions at the 2012 Olympic Games in London were held during the last 10 days of the Games, on 3–12 August. Track and field events took place at the Olympic Stadium in east London. The road events, however, started and finished on The Mall in central London.
Over 2,000 athletes from 201 nations competed in 47 events in total, with both men and women having a very similar schedule of events. Men competed in 24 events and women in 23, of which 21 were the same for both. The women's schedule lacked the 50 km race walk and included 100 m hurdles and heptathlon as opposed to the men's 110 m hurdles and decathlon. The youngest participant in the athletics competition was Andorran 15-year-old Cristina Llovera while the oldest was 46-year-old Ukrainian Oleksandr Dryhol. South African Oscar Pistorius became the first amputee sprinter to compete at the Olympics.

Competition schedule

The venue for the track and field events was the Olympic Stadium while the walks and the marathons started and finished on The Mall. In the tables below, M stands for morning and A for afternoon.

Medal summary

Medal table

Note: Three competitors tied for bronze in the men's high jump event.

Men

World and Olympic records

A total of four world records in athletics and eleven Olympic records were broken during the competition. This was fewer than were set at the Beijing Olympics but greater than the number set at the 2004 Games in Athens.
China's Chen Ding was the first Olympic record breaker, improving the men's 20 km walk record. All three Olympic walk records were broken in London as Sergey Kirdyapkin bettered the Olympic 50 km walk time and Elena Lashmanova set a new world record in the women's 20 km walk.
Usain Bolt was the first track athlete to improve an Olympic record as he defended his 100 m title with a run of 9.63 s. He later joined the Jamaican 4 × 100 metres relay team to set a world record time of 36.84 s. The women's 4 × 100 metres relay event also saw a world record: an American team of Tianna Madison, Allyson Felix, Bianca Knight and Carmelita Jeter ran 40.82 seconds to take half a second off a record which had stood for nearly 27 years. Further women's Olympic records were set by Ethiopia's Tiki Gelana in the marathon and Sally Pearson in the 100 metres hurdles.
David Rudisha improved his own 800 metres world record to 1:40.91 minutes, becoming the first man to break that record at the Olympics since Ralph Doubell did so at the 1968 Games. Renaud Lavillenie was the only man to break a field event record, as he cleared an Olympic best of 5.97 m to win the pole vault competition.
EventDateNameNationalityResultType
Men's 100 metres5 AugustUsain Bolt9.63OR
Men's 800 metres9 AugustDavid Rudisha1:40.91WR OR
Men's 4 × 100 metres relay11 AugustNesta Carter
Michael Frater
Yohan Blake
Usain Bolt
36.84WR OR
Men's 20 kilometres walk4 AugustChen Ding1:18:46OR
Men's 50 kilometres walk11 AugustJared Tallent3:36:53OR
Men's 50 kilometres walk11 AugustSergey Kirdyapkin3:35:59OR
Men's pole vault10 AugustRenaud Lavillenie5.97 mOR
Women's 100 metres hurdles7 AugustSally Pearson12.35OR
Women's marathon5 AugustTiki Gelana2:23:07OR
Women's 20 kilometres walk11 AugustElena Lashmanova1:25:02WR OR
Women's 4 × 100 metres relay10 AugustTianna Madison
Allyson Felix
Bianca Knight
Carmelita Jeter
40.82WR OR
Women's hammer throw10 AugustTatyana Lysenko78.18 mOR

Doping

Prior to the Olympic competition, several prominent athletes were ruled out of the competition due to failed tests. World indoor medallists Dimitrios Chondrokoukis, Debbie Dunn, and Mariem Alaoui Selsouli were withdrawn from their Olympic teams in July for doping, as was 2004 Olympic medallist Zoltán Kővágó. At the Olympic competition, Tameka Williams admitted to taking a banned stimulant and was removed from the games. Ivan Tsikhan did not compete in the hammer throw as a re-test of his sample from the 2004 Athens Olympics, where he won silver, was positive. Hassan Hirt, Amine Laâlou, Marina Marghieva, Diego Palomeque, and defending 50 km walk champion Alex Schwazer were also suspended before taking part in their events.
Syrian hurdler Ghfran Almouhamad became the first track-and-field athlete to be suspended following a positive in-competition doping sample. Nadzeya Astapchuk was stripped of the women's shot put title after her sample came back positive for the banned anabolic agent metenolone. Karin Melis Mey was withdrawn before the long jump final when an earlier failed doping test was confirmed.
Multiple medalists were found guilty of doping after the Olympics. Russia has the most medals stripped.