Athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's 400 metres

The men's 400 metres sprint event at the 1952 Olympic Games took place between July 24 and July 25.[1] Seventy-one athletes from 35 nations competed.[2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by George Rhoden of Jamaica, the second consecutive title in the event by a Jamaican. Herb McKenley repeated his silver medal performance from 1948, becoming the second man to win two medals in the event (after Guy Butler of Great Britain in 1920 and 1924).

Men's 400 metres
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
VenueOlympic Stadium
DatesJuly 24 (heats and quarterfinals)
July 25 (semifinals and final)
Competitors71 from 35 nations
Winning time46.09 OR
Medalists
George Rhoden
 Jamaica
Herb McKenley
 Jamaica
Ollie Matson
 United States
Video on YouTube amateur film

Summary

In only their second Olympics, the Jamaican team came with the top runners including the world record holder George Rhoden and returning gold and silver medalists, Arthur Wint and Herb McKenley, respectively. In the final, Rhoden on the far outside in lane 7 was unable to see the competitors staggered behind him. Alone he went out hard. The stagger behind him in lane 6, Ollie Matson, who like Rhoden trained in San Francisco, stayed in Rhoden's shadow, trying to match pace. On the inside, in lane 3, defending champion Went also went out hard, quickly making up the stagger on Karl-Friedrich Haas to his outside. Down the backstretch and through the final turn, Rhoden opened up a 5 metre lead on Wint, with Matson losing a couple of more metres. Through the final turn, McKenley began to get up a head of steam, catching Matson just before the home straight, still two metres behind Wint. At that point, Jamaica held the three medal positions, but McKenley was moving much faster than everyone else, quickly catching Wint and off after Rhoden. Wint had nothing to offer the challenge and instead began moving backward. Rhoden crossed the line just ahead of the fast closing McKenley, Matson also cruising past Wint, who was pipped by Haas at the line and almost caught by Mal Whitfield.

Background

This was the twelfth appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Jamaica's team was the same as in 1948: Arthur Wint (London gold medalist), Herb McKenley (silver), and George Rhoden (semifinalist; now also world record holder). The United States had 1948 bronze medalist Mal Whitfield return, this time joined by Gene Cole and future National Football League star Ollie Matson. Australia's finalist from London, Morris Curotta, also returned, making 4 of 6 finalists to come back.[2]

Guatemala, Israel, Pakistan, Puerto Rico, the Soviet Union, Thailand, and Venezuela appeared in this event for the first time. The United States made its twelfth appearance in the event, the only nation to compete in it at every Olympic Games to that point.

Competition format

The competition retained the basic four-round format from 1920, and the only change from 1948 was that the first round heats were larger. There were 12 heats in the first round, each with between 4 and 7 athletes. The top two runners in each heat advanced to the quarterfinals. There were 4 quarterfinals of 6 runners each; the top three athletes in each quarterfinal heat advanced to the semifinals. The semifinals featured 2 heats of 6 runners each. The top two runners in each semifinal heat advanced, making a six-man final.[2][3]

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing World and Olympic records were as follows.

World record George Rhoden (JAM)45.9Eskilstuna, Sweden22 August 1950
Olympic record Bill Carr (USA)46.2Los Angeles, United States5 August 1932

George Rhoden set a new Olympic record at 46.09 seconds in the final.

Schedule

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

Date Time Round
Thursday, 24 July 195215:20
18:35
Round 1
Quarterfinals
Friday, 25 July 195215:00
17:05
Semifinals
Finals

Results

Heats

The fastest two runners in each of the twelve heats advanced to the quarterfinal round.

Heat 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Karl-Friedrich Haas Germany47.58Q
2Leslie Lewis Great Britain47.95Q
3Edwin Carr, Jr. Australia48.23
4Zoltán Adamik Hungary48.70
5Evelio Planas Cuba49.44
6Abdul Rehman Pakistan51.47

Heat 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ardalion Ignatyev Soviet Union48.22Q
2Rolf Back Finland48.58Q
3Rupert Blöch Austria49.82
4Gérard Rasquin Luxembourg50.12
5John Anderton South Africa50.35
6Pongummart Ummarttayakul Thailand53.23

Heat 3

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Arthur Wint Jamaica47.42Q
2Jack Carroll Canada48.05Q
3Egon Solymossy Hungary49.32
4Josef Steger Switzerland49.35
5Jaakko Suikkari Finland50.92
6Aurang Zeb Pakistan51.25

Heat 4

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Lars-Erik Wolfbrandt Sweden48.57Q
2Terry Higgins Great Britain48.77Q
3Junkichi Matoba Japan49.57
4Vasilios Sillis Greece49.79
5Doğan Acarbay Turkey50.83
6Ivan Jacob India51.48

Heat 5

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Herb McKenley Jamaica48.09Q
2Louis van Biljon South Africa48.31Q
3Roger Moens Belgium48.71
4Ferenc Bánhalmi Hungary49.55
5Arie Gill-Glick Israel50.27
6Ernst von Gunten Switzerland50.88
Tage Ekfeldt SwedenDSQ

Heat 6

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Mal Whitfield United States48.68Q
2Guillermo Gutiérrez Venezuela48.82Q
3Gianni Rocca Italy49.51
4Gösta Brännström Sweden50.32
5Javier Souza Mexico50.47
6Emin Doybak Turkey51.34
7Fernando Casimiro Portugal52.33

Heat 7

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Jacques Degats France48.60Q
2Morris Curotta Australia48.87Q
3Vincenzo Lombardo Italy49.53
4Rudolf Haidegger Austria50.01
5Albert Lowagie Belgium50.26

Heat 8

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Hans Geister Germany47.99Q
2Yves Camus France48.06Q
3Milan Filo Czechoslovakia48.91
4Guðmundur Lárusson Iceland49.81
5Sompop Svadanandana Thailand53.68
6Jeremías Stokes Guatemala53.81

Heat 9

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Gene Cole United States48.44Q
2Alan Dick Great Britain48.84Q
3Edmunds Pīlāgs Soviet Union49.29
4Angel García Cuba49.34
5Antoine Uyterhoeven Belgium50.21
6Jean Hamilius Luxembourg50.75

Heat 10

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1George Rhoden Jamaica48.28Q
2Gerard Mach Poland48.64Q
3Paul Dolan Ireland48.81
4Jean-Pierre Goudeau France48.94
5Doug Clement Canada50.19

Heat 11

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1James Lavery Canada48.47Q
2Yuriy Lituyev Soviet Union49.01Q
3Frank Rivera Puerto Rico49.48
4Antonio Siddi Italy51.03

Heat 12

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ollie Matson United States48.17Q
2Hans Ernst Schneider Switzerland48.86Q
3Argemiro Roque Brazil49.05
4Schalk Booysen South Africa49.17
5Jiří David Czechoslovakia49.23
6Fred Hammer Luxembourg49.90
7Ossi Mildh Finland50.36

Quarterfinals

The fastest three runners in each of the four heats advanced to the semifinal round. Gerard Mach of Poland and Yuriy Lituyev of the Soviet Union were qualified but did not compete.

Quarterfinal 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Arthur Wint Jamaica46.98Q
2James Lavery Canada47.67Q
3Lars-Erik Wolfbrandt Sweden48.08Q
4Guillermo Gutiérrez Venezuela48.75
5Leslie Lewis Great Britain49.09
6Hans Ernst Schneider Switzerland49.32

Quarterfinal 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1George Rhoden Jamaica47.24Q
2Ollie Matson United States47.53Q
3Karl-Friedrich Haas Germany47.66Q
4Morris Curotta Australia48.86
5Rolf Back Finland51.53

Quarterfinal 3

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Mal Whitfield United States47.74Q
2Hans Geister Germany47.81Q
3Jack Carroll Canada47.82Q
4Louis van Biljon South Africa48.63
5Jacques Degats France48.90
6Alan Dick Great Britain49.20

Quarterfinal 4

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Herb McKenley Jamaica47.56Q
2Gene Cole United States47.88Q
3Ardalion Ignatyev Soviet Union48.25Q
4Yves Camus France48.43
5Terry Higgins Great Britain49.22

Semifinals

The fastest three runners in each of the two heats advanced to the final round.

Semifinal 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Arthur Wint Jamaica46.38Q
2Karl-Friedrich Haas Germany46.56Q
3Mal Whitfield United States46.64Q
4Gene Cole United States46.94
5Ardalion Ignatyev Soviet Union47.49
6James Lavery Canada47.83

Semifinal 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Herb McKenley Jamaica46.53Q
2George Rhoden Jamaica46.61Q
3Ollie Matson United States46.99Q
4Hans Geister Germany47.00
5Jack Carroll Canada47.61
Lars-Erik Wolfbrandt SwedenDNS

Final

RankLaneAthleteNationTimeNotes
6George Rhoden Jamaica46.09OR
4Herb McKenley Jamaica46.20
5Ollie Matson United States46.94
43Karl-Friedrich Haas Germany47.22
52Arthur Wint Jamaica47.24
61Mal Whitfield United States47.30

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1952 Helsinki Summer Games: Men's 400 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  2. "400 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  3. Official Report, pp. 275–77.
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