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The United States entered as the defending Olympic champions while Jamaica was the reigning world champions from 2015, having defeated the Americans there.Great Britain entered with the fastest time recorded that year (3:25.05 minutes), which it had achieved to win the 2016 European title.
Women's 4 × 400 metres relay ... Video on YouTube Official Video. ... qualified for the final. [4] [5] Rank Heat Lane Nation Athletes Time
The 4 × 400 metres relay at the World Championships in Athletics has been contested by both men and women since the inaugural edition in 1983. The competition features three formats in relation to gender: men, women, and mixed. The 2019 edition added in the mixed competition. The format utilizes one set of heats qualifying the top 8 into a final.
The women's 4 × 400 metres relay was a two-round track event of the 2023 World Athletics Championships held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest. Seventeen national relay teams participated in the two heats that took place on 26 August 2023. Nine teams qualified for the final, the last track race of the championships, on 27 August 2023.
The women's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2004 Summer Olympics as part of the athletics program was held at the Athens Olympic Stadium from August 27 to 28. The sixteen teams competed in a two-heat qualifying round in which the first three teams from each heat, together with the next two fastest teams, were given a place in the final race.
The women's 4 × 400 metres relay races at the 2000 Summer Olympics as part of the athletics program were held on Friday, 29 September and Saturday, 30 September. [1] The first two in each heat and the next 2 fastest overall advanced to the final.
Rank Heat Nation Athletes Time Notes 1 2 Ireland Sophie Becker, Rhasidat Adeleke, Phil Healy, Sharlene Mawdsley: 3:24.38 Q, OG*, NR 2 4 United States Quanera Hayes, Bailey Lear, Na'Asha Robinson, Alexis Holmes
The women's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2019 World Athletics Championships was held at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar, from 5 to 6 October 2019. [1] In the final the Jamaican team were initially disqualified, but were reinstated as the bronze medallists upon appeal.