Open water swimming at the 2009 World Aquatics Championships – Men's 10 km
Men's 10 km at the 2009 World Aquatics Championships | |
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Location | Rome |
Dates | 22 July |
Competitors | 48 from 27 nations |
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The men's 10K (10 kilometer) race at the 2009 World Championships occurred on Wednesday, July 22 at Ostia Beach in Rome, Italy. In total, 48 males from 27 countries were entered in the race.[1]
Results
Rank | Swimmer | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas Lurz | Germany | 1:52:06.9 | |
Andrew Gemmell | USA | 1:52:08.3 | |
Fran Crippen | USA | 1:52:10.7 | |
4 | Valerio Cleri | Italy | 1:52:11.4 |
5 | Brian Ryckeman | Belgium | 1:52:13.1 |
6 | Spyridon Gianniotis | Greece | 1:52:13.6 |
7 | Francisco Jose Hervas | Spain | 1:52:14.7 |
8 | Trent Grimsey | Australia | 1:52:14.8 |
9 | Mazen Metwaly | Egypt | 1:52:14.9 |
10 | Evgeny Drattsev | Russia | 1:52:15.0 |
11 | Luis Escobar | Mexico | 1:52:18.0 |
12 | Jakub Fitchl | Czech Republic | 1:52:24.0 |
13 | Csaba Gercsák | Hungary | 1:52:28.0 |
14 | Arseniy Lavrentyev | Portugal | 1:52:28.2 |
15 | Diego Nogueira Montero | Spain | 1:52:37.1 |
16 | Antonios Fokaidis | Greece | 1:52:41.3 |
17 | Daniel Fogg | Great Britain | 1:52:44.3 |
18 | Sergey Bolshakov | Russia | 1:52:44.5 |
19 | Ivan Lopez | Mexico | 1:52:45.9 |
20 | Julien Codeville | France | 1:52:47.2 |
21 | Rhys Mainstone | Australia | 1:52:50.2 |
22 | Allan do Carmo | Brazil | 1:52:52.2 |
23 | Chad Ho | South Africa | 1:53:13.1 |
24 | Bertrand Venturi | France | 1:53:14.5 |
25 | Adel El-Behary | Egypt | 1:53:52.1 |
26 | Simon Tobin-Daignault | Canada | 1:53:53.9 |
27 | Christian Reichert | Germany | 1:54:09.9 |
28 | Michael Dmitriev | Israel | 1:54:29.6 |
29 | Petar Stoychev | Bulgaria | 1:54:50.8 |
30 | Jan Posmourny | Czech Republic | 1:55:17.4 |
31 | Ventsislav Aydarski | Bulgaria | 1:55:53.5 |
32 | Simone Ercoli | Italy | 1:56:46.3 |
33 | Daniel Viegas | Spain | 1:58:21.3 |
34 | Craig Hamilton | Great Britain | 1:58:55.7 |
35 | Kurt Niehaus | Costa Rica | 1:59:25.0 |
36 | Ivan Enderica | Ecuador | 1:59:29.4 |
37 | Philippe Dubreuil | Canada | 1:59:38.9 |
38 | Marcelo Romanelli Soares | Brazil | 2:00:42.2 |
39 | Esteban Enderica | Ecuador | 2:01:48.8 |
40 | Josip Soldo | Croatia | 2:08:07.2 |
41 | Tomislav Soldo | Croatia | 2:12:19.8 |
42 | Juan Prem Biere | Guatemala | 2:20:48.2 |
-- | Elgun Babayev | Azerbaijan | DNF |
-- | Ruslan Bolshakov | Azerbaijan | DNF |
-- | Angel Moreira | Venezuela | DNF |
-- | Igor Chervynskiy | Ukraine | DQ |
-- | Igor Snitko | Ukraine | DQ |
-- | Yvan Hernandez | Venezuela | DQ |
Key: DNF = Did not finish, DQ = Disqualified
Protest over finish
Due to a protest about the race finish, results from the race were delayed a day, until after a meeting on Thursday, July 23, 2009.[2] At issue was the USA's Fran Crippen's finish approach.[3][4]
On July 23, 2009, it was decided that Crippen's finish approach was legal and he was awarded the bronze medal.
See also
- Open water swimming at the 2007 World Aquatics Championships – Men's 10 km
- Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics
References
- ^ 2009 Worlds results: Men's 10K Archived 2009-08-06 at the Wayback Machine published by OmegaTiming.com, official timer of the 2009 Worlds. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
- ^ PR56 - Open Water Swimming – 10km Men (FINA Press Release 2009-56); published 2009-07-22, retrieved 2009-07-22.
- ^ Lurz wins again, taking 10K open water race by Andrew Dampf, the Associated Press. Published 2009-07-22; retrieved 2009-07-22.
- ^ FINA World Championships, Open Water: Thomas Lurz Wins Men's 10K; U.S. Finishes 2-3; Finish Under Protest by Steven Munatones. Published by Swimming World Magazine online on 2009-07-22, retrieved 2009-07-22.