1989 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's 3000 metres walk

Medalists

GoldSilverBronze
Kerry Saxby
 Australia
Beate Anders
 East Germany
Ileana Salvador
 Italy

Results

Heats

First 2 of each heat (Q) and next 6 fastest (q) qualified for the final.[1]

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Nadezhda Ryashkina Soviet Union12:20.28Q, PB
21Beate Anders East Germany12:22.22Q
31María Reyes Sobrino Spain12:27.82q, NR
41Ann Peel Canada12:36.46q, AR
52Ileana Salvador Italy12:41.12Q
62Kerry Saxby Australia12:41.55Q
72Anikó Szebenszky Hungary12:45.93q
81Andrea Alföldi Hungary12:47.70q
92Olga Sánchez Spain12:50.87q
102Dana Vavřačová Czechoslovakia12:52.01q
112Teresa Vaill United States12:52.39
121Bev Hayman Australia13:06.61PB
131Andrea Brückmann West Germany13:21.72
2Alison Baker CanadaDQ
2Valeria Todorova BulgariaDQ

Final

[2]

RankNameNationalityTimeNotes
Kerry Saxby Australia12:01.65WR, CR
Beate Anders East Germany12:07.73
Ileana Salvador Italy12:11.33NR
4Nadezhda Ryashkina Soviet Union12:12.98PB
5Anikó Szebenszky Hungary12:27.20NR
6Andrea Alföldi Hungary12:31.66PB
7Ann Peel Canada12:32.34AR
8Olga Sánchez Spain12:34.02WJR
9Dana Vavřačová Czechoslovakia12:40.51
María Reyes Sobrino SpainDQ
gollark: I'm sure you'd like to think so.
gollark: It's simple. The initial python bit detects strings which are UTTERLY spacious, and then (in an oddly obfuscated way) ensures that each character in one string exists at least once in the other. Then, it calls the C bit with - due to odd pythonous scoping - the string without the index where they were found to match. The C bit actually does the same thing, calling back into Python afterward. If there is ever an *unmatched* character, it returns false.
gollark: But I posted mine earlier. Four of them, even.
gollark: Except mine, naturally.
gollark: Everyone knows quicksort is better.

References

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