Women's high jump
at the 2023 World Championships
VenueNational Athletics Centre
Dates25 August (qualification)
27 August (final)
Winning height2.01
Medalists
gold medal    Ukraine
silver medal    Australia
bronze medal    Australia

The women's high jump at the 2023 World Athletics Championships was held at the National Athletics Centre in Budapest on 25 and 27 August 2023.

Summary

In the qualifying round, 19 women cleared 1.89m. That was too many to take to the final, so they went up to 1.92m. Only eight were able to clear 1.92m, so they counted back to the next tie-breaker at 1.89m, with a clean round and one miss at 1.89m being the difference. Had they not cleared 1.92m, two women would not have been in the final. Still, 15 advanced.

In the final, eight managed to clear 1.94m. Defending champion Eleanor Patterson, Lamara Distin, and Iryna Gerashchenko still had a clean card. At 1.97m, returning silver medalist Yaroslava Mahuchikh and 2023 world leader Nicola Olyslagers cleared on their first attempts to move into a tie for the lead. Patterson and Morgan Lake took all three attempts to get over, with Patterson holding the advantage based on her previous perfect series. At 1.99m, Patterson and Mahuchikh got over on their first attempts, with Mahuchikh holding the advantage. Lake missed her second. When Olyslagers made her second, Lake passed to try to make one heroic jump at 2.01m. She didn't make it and was out of the medals. Mahuchikh was able to make 2.01 on her second attempt to confirm her gold, while neither of the Australian women could, meaning that Patterson won silver and Olyslagers won bronze. Mahuchikh went on to make three attempts at a new Ukrainian record of 2.07m.

Records

Before the competition, records were as follows:[1]

Record Athlete & Nat. Perf. Location Date
World record  Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 m Rome, Italy 30 August 1987
Championship record
World Leading  Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) 2.02 m Lausanne, Switzerland 29 June 2023
African Record  Hestrie Cloete (RSA) 2.06 m Saint-Denis, France 31 August 2003
Asian Record  Nadezhda Dubovitskaya (KAZ) 2.00 m Almaty, Kazakhstan 8 June 2021
North, Central American and Caribbean record  Chaunte Lowe (USA) 2.05 m Des Moines, United States 26 June 2010
South American Record  Solange Witteveen (ARG) 1.96 m Oristano, Italy 8 September 1997
European Record  Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 m Rome, Italy 30 August 1987
Oceanian record  Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) 2.02 m Lausanne, Switzerland 29 June 2023

Qualification standard

The standard to qualify automatically for entry was 1.97 m.[2]

Schedule

The event schedule, in local time (UTC+2), was as follows:

Date Time Round
25 August10:20Qualification
27 August20:05Final

Results

Qualification

Qualification: 1.94 m (Q) or at least 12 best performers (q).[3]

RankGroupNameNationality1.751.801.851.891.921.94MarkNotes
1AEleanor Patterson Australia (AUS)ooo1.92q
1AYaroslava Mahuchikh Ukraine (UKR)oo1.92q
3ALamara Distin Jamaica (JAM)ooxoo1.92q
4AMorgan Lake Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)xxooo1.92q
5BVashti Cunningham United States (USA)oxoxxoo1.92q
6BNicola Olyslagers Australia (AUS)ooxo1.92q
7AAngelina Topić Serbia (SRB)oooxxo1.92q
8AElena Kulichenko Cyprus (CYP)ooxoxxoxxo1.92q, PB
9BIryna Gerashchenko Ukraine (UKR)oooxxx1.89q
9BLia Apostolovski Slovenia (SLO)oooxxx1.89q
11BNadezhda Dubovitskaya Kazakhstan (KAZ)xoooxxx1.89q
12BChristina Honsel Germany (GER)oooxoxxx1.89q
12BSolène Gicquel France (FRA)oooxoxxx1.89q
12AElla Junnila Finland (FIN)ooxoxxx1.89q
12ANawal Meniker France (FRA)ooxoxxx1.89q
16BElisabeth Pihela Estonia (EST)oxoxoxxx1.89
17BMerel Maes Belgium (BEL)oooxxoxxx1.89
17BTatiana Gusin Greece (GRE)oooxxoxxx1.89
17AYuliia Levchenko Ukraine (UKR)ooxxoxxx1.89
20AAirinė Palšytė Lithuania (LTU)oooxxx1.85
20BDaniela Stanciu Romania (ROM)ooxxx1.85
20BMichaela Hrubá Czech Republic (CZE)oooxxx1.85
23AJohanna Göring Germany (GER)ooxoxxx1.85
23BYuliya Chumachenko Ukraine (UKR)oxoxxx1.85
25AKristina Ovchinnikova Kazakhstan (KAZ)oxoxoxxx1.85
25BMarija Vuković Montenegro (MNE)xoxoxxx1.85
27AValdileia Martins Brazil (BRA)ooxxoxxx1.85
28BKimberly Williamson Jamaica (JAM)xoxxoxxoxxx1.85
29AErin Shaw Australia (AUS)ooxxx1.80
29BSafina Sadullayeva Uzbekistan (UZB)oxxx1.80
29BYelizaveta Matveyeva Kazakhstan (KAZ)ooxxx1.80
32BHeta Tuuri Finland (FIN)xooxxx1.80
33AFédra Fekete Hungary (HUN)oxoxxx1.80
34APanagiota Dosi Greece (GRE)oxxoxxx1.80
AJana Koščak Croatia (CRO)DNS

Final

The final was started on 27 August at 20:00.[4]

RankNameNationality1.851.901.941.971.992.012.07MarkNotes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Yaroslava Mahuchikh Ukraine (UKR)oxoooxoxxx2.01
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Eleanor Patterson Australia (AUS)oooxxooxxx1.99SB
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Nicola Olyslagers Australia (AUS)oxooxoxxx1.99
4Morgan Lake Great Britain & N.I. (GBR)ooxxoxxoxx-x1.97
5Lamara Distin Jamaica (JAM)oooxxx1.94
5Iryna Gerashchenko Ukraine (UKR)oooxxx1.94
7Angelina Topić Serbia (SRB)ooxoxxx1.94
8Christina Honsel Germany (GER)oxxoxoxxx1.94
9Lia Apostolovski Slovenia (SLO)ooxxx1.90SB
9Nadezhda Dubovitskaya Kazakhstan (KAZ)ooxxx1.90
11Vashti Cunningham United States (USA)xxooxxx1.90
12Nawal Meniker France (FRA)oxoxxx1.90
13Ella Junnila Finland (FIN)oxxoxxx1.90
13Elena Kulichenko Cyprus (CYP)oxxoxxx1.90
15Solène Gicquel France (FRA)xoxxx1.85

References

  1. "High Jump Women − Records". IAAF. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  2. "World Athletics Championships Budapest 23 - Qualification System and Entry Standards - August 2022" (PDF). iaaf.org. 19 August 2022.
  3. Qualification results
  4. Final Results
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