| Final 21:10 | Dist. | SO | 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. |  | 1. Natalya Sadova |   Russia | 67.02 | 7. | 64.78 | 64.81 | X | 65.33 | 67.02 | 66.68 |  | 2. Anastasía Kelesídou |   Greece | 66.68 | 10. | 62.77 | X | 66.68 | 63.71 | 66.09 | 61.59 |  | 3. Věra Cechlová |   Czechia | 66.08 | 2. | 63.02 | 66.08 | X | 62.81 | 63.21 | 64.84 |  | 4. Yelna Antonova |   Ukraine | 65.75 | 4. | 59.88 | 64.11 | X | 63.61 | 60.37 | 65.75 |  | 5. Nicoleta Grasu |   Romania | 64.92 | 1. | 62.01 | 62.21 | 63.48 | 61.58 | 61.93 | 64.92 |  | 6. Beatrice Faumuiná |   New Zealand | 63.45 | 5. | X | 62.45 | X | 63.45 | 62.99 | X |  | 7. Katerína Vóggoli |   Greece | 62.37 | 9. | 60.66 | 61.44 | X | 62.37 | 62.32 | 61.84 |  | 8. Yanfeng Li |   China | 61.05 | 12. | 60.67 | 57.36 | 61.05 |  | 9. Joanna Wisniewska |   Poland | 60.74 |   | 58.33 | 60.74 | 59.95 |  | 10.Stiliani Tsikouna |   Greece | 59.48 |   | 59.48 | 57.76 | X |  | -. Yania Ferrales |   Cuba | NM |   | X | X | X |  | DQ.Irina Yatchenko |   Belarus | 66.17 |   | 59.98 | 61.67 | 66.17 | 65.46 | 63.08 | 65.54 |   
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|   |  | Venue: Athens Olympic Stadium, Marousi. Capp.: 72,000. |  | Quota: 42 competitors from 28 nations. |   
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                                                                            The only country with more than one finalist was Greece, and all three          
of their athletes qualified. Vóggoli, the Greek Champion, and Sadova            
were the slight favourites. It was Sadova who led the field after the first     
round, with 64.79. Cechlová took the lead in round two with 66.08, but          
was overtaken in the next stanza by Ukraine’s Irina Yatchenko (66.17)         
and Kelesídou (66.68) to the delight of the home crowd. Sadova went             
from fourth to first in the penultimate round with 67.02, and backed it         
up with her final cast of 66.68. Each of the medallists had been medal          
winners previously, Sadova in 1996, while Kelesídou and Yatchenko               
had occupied the same positions in 2000.                                        
It was only after the Games that it was revealed Sadova was to be               
stripped of her other global title – the 2001 World Championship gold         
– because of a positive test for caffeine. Then in 2006 she was caught        
again and suspended for two years. The second doping postscript came            
when a re-analysis of the sample of Yatchenko revealed a banned sub-            
stance. The sample had been frozen in 2004 and in 2012 subjected to             
analytical methods which were not available in 2004. The IOC stripped           
her of her bronze medal in December 2012 and later upgraded all those           
below her. Věra Cechlová (née Pospíšilová) (CZE) was the main beni-             
ficiary and received her bronze medal in August 2013. “The medal is           
as precious for me as if I had won it at the stadium,” she said.              
 
                                       |
 |   |  | Mark 62.00m. 7 Athletes oassed the Mark and 5 Best were added to Final. |   
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