From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The men's 4 × 100 metres relay event at the 2017 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Bydgoszcz, Poland, at Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak Stadium on 16 July.
*Athletes who ran in heats only
The final
16 July[1]
Qualification rule: First 3 in each heat (Q) and the next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.
Rank |
Heat |
Nation |
Athletes |
Time |
Notes
|
1 |
2 |
Germany |
Roger Gurski, Kai Köllmann, Deniz Almas, Daniel Hoffmann |
38.91 |
Q
|
2 |
2 |
France |
Amaury Golitin, Gautier Dautremer, Hachim Maaroufou, Marvin René |
39.36 |
Q
|
3 |
1 |
Great Britain |
Theo Etienne, Kyle de Escofet, Reuben Arthur, Ojie Edoburun |
39.45 |
Q
|
4 |
2 |
Portugal |
José Lopes, Rafael Jorge, Ricardo Pereira, Ricardo Ribeiro |
39.55 |
Q
|
5 |
1 |
Italy |
Luca Antonio Cassano, Jacopo Spanò, Lodovico Cortelazzo, Hillary Wanderson Polanco Rijo |
39.69 |
Q
|
6 |
1 |
Finland |
Willem Kajander, Oskari Lehtonen, Samuli Samuelsson, Aleksi Lehto |
39.78 |
Q
|
7 |
1 |
Poland |
Artur Wasilewski, Przemysław Adamski, Dominik Kopeć, Karol Kwiatkowski |
39.96 |
q
|
8 |
2 |
Hungary |
Zsolt Pázmándi, Bence Boros, Péter Balogh, Richárd Köcse |
40.04 |
q
|
9 |
1 |
Romania |
Ioan Pitigoi, Ioan Andrei Melnicescu, Gabriel Petre, Petre Rezmives |
40.09 |
|
10 |
2 |
Denmark |
Sebastian Ree Pedersen, Frederik Schou-Nielsen, Kojo Musah, Kristoffer Hari |
40.12 |
|
11 |
1 |
Turkey |
Ertan Özkan, Fatih Aktaş, Abdülkadir Gögalp, Aykut Ay |
40.49 |
|
|
1 |
Sweden |
Emil von Barth, Austin Hamilton, Felix Svensson, Jakob Lindbom |
DNF |
|
|
2 |
Ukraine |
Roman Kravtsov, Danylo Kurta, Yuriy Storozh, Oleksandr Sokolov |
DQ |
R170.7[2]
|
|
2 |
Czech Republic |
Dominik Záleský, Jáchym Procházka, Jiří Kubeš, Vojtěch Kolarčík |
DQ |
R162.7[3]
|
The winning German team
16 July[4]
Rank |
Lane |
Nation |
Athletes |
Time |
Notes
|
 |
5 |
Germany |
Roger Gurski, Kai Köllmann, Philipp Trutenat, Daniel Hoffmann |
39.11 |
|
 |
6 |
Great Britain |
Theo Etienne, Kyle de Escofet, Reuben Arthur, Ojie Edoburun |
39.11 |
|
 |
8 |
Finland |
Willem Kajander, Oskari Lehtonen, Samuli Samuelsson, Aleksi Lehto |
39.70 |
|
4 |
4 |
France |
Amaury Golitin, Gautier Dautremer, Hachim Maaroufou, Marvin René |
39.86 |
|
5 |
9 |
Portugal |
José Lopes, Rafael Jorge, Ricardo Pereira, Ricardo Ribeiro |
39.88 |
|
6 |
2 |
Poland |
Karol Kwiatkowski, Przemysław Adamski, Dominik Kopeć, Eryk Hampel |
40.11 |
|
7 |
3 |
Hungary |
Zsolt Pázmándi, Bence Boros, Péter Balogh, Richárd Köcse |
50.97 |
|
|
7 |
Italy |
Luca Antonio Cassano, Jacopo Spanò, Andrea Federici, Hillary Wanderson Polanco Rijo |
DQ |
R170.7[2]
|
|
---|
- 1997:
Great Britain (Money, Devonish, Henthorn, Golding, Baillie†)
- 1999:
Great Britain (Malcolm, Henthorn, Stewart, Findlay)
- 2001:
Poland (Kondratowicz, Chyła, Płacheta, Rogowski)
- 2003:
Great Britain (Edgar, Lambert, Chin, Grant, Abeyie†)
- 2005:
France (Kankarafou, M'Barke, De Lépine, Alerte)
- 2007:
Great Britain (Scott, Pickering, Fifton, Ellington)
- 2009:
Great Britain (Scott, Sandeman, Pierre, Yearwood)
- 2011:
Italy (Tumi, Basciani, Manenti, Obou)
- 2013:
Great Britain (Tobais, Talbot, Walker-Khan, Gemili, Bolarinwa†, Osewa†)
- 2015:
France (Anouman, Zézé, Romain, Dutamby, Chalus†)
- 2017:
Germany (Roger Gurski, Köllmann, Trutenat, Hoffmann, Almas†)
- 2019:
Germany (Kranz, Schulte, Almas, Trutenat)
- 2021:
Germany (Wolf, Brandner, Skupin-Alfa, Hartmann)
- 2023:
Italy (Marek, Melluzzo, Ricci, Tardioli, Ulisse†)
|
† denotes athletes who took part in heats only |