Athletics at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Men's 400 metres

The men's 400 metres was an event at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. The competition was held between 16–18 of October.[1] Times are listed as both hand timing and automatic timing. Hand timing was the official time used in the 1968 Olympics. Fifty-five athletes from 36 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 Lee Evans of the United States, the fourth consecutive and 11th overall title in the event by an American. The Americans swept the podium, the second time a podium sweep occurred in the men's 400 metres (the United States had previously done it in 1904, when the nation had 10 of the 12 competitors).

Men's 400 metres
at the Games of the XIX Olympiad
VenueUniversity Olympic Stadium, Mexico City
Dates16–18 October 1968
Competitors55 from 36 nations
Winning time43.8 WR
Medalists
Lee Evans  United States
Larry James  United States
Ron Freeman  United States

Background

This was the sixteenth appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Andrzej Badeński of Poland, who had won bronze in 1964, was the only finalist from the Tokyo Games to compete again in 1968. The United States team was "dominant in this event in 1968"; Larry James held the world record at 44.1 seconds, Lee Evans was the AAU and NCAA champion, and even the third member of the team, Ron Freeman, ran well below Olympic record time at the U.S. trials.[2]

Barbados, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Morocco, Nicaragua, and Sudan appeared in this event for the first time. The federation of Malaysia also competed for the first time, though Malaya had previously appeared. East and West Germany competed separately for the first time. The United States made its sixteenth 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. The "fastest loser" system, introduced in 1964, was available but not used in 1968 because there was no need to balance quarterfinals as there were 8 heats in the first round. Those heats each had between 6 and 8 athletes, with the top four advancing. The 4 quarterfinals each had 8 runners; the top four athletes in each quarterfinal heat advanced to the semifinals. The semifinals featured 2 heats of 8 runners each. The top four runners in each semifinal heat advanced, making an eight-man final.[2][3]

Records

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

World record Larry James (USA)44.1Echo Summit, United States14 September 1968
Olympic record Otis Davis (USA)44.9Rome, Italy6 September 1960

Lee Evans broke the Olympic record with a 44.8 second run in the second semifinal; both Larry James and Martin Jellinghaus matched the old record in that same semifinal. All three Americans broke the new record in the final, with Evans (43.8 seconds) and James (43.9 seconds) also coming in under the world record time. Evans' auto-timed result of 43.86 seconds was not official under the rules at that point (which used hand-timed results) but was later recognized as the initial world record upon the switch to automatic timing as official in 1977.

Schedule

The quarterfinals were held on the second day (with the semifinals) rather than the first day (with the first round heats), a change from previous years.

All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6)

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 16 October 196815:40Round 1
Thursday, 17 October 196815:20
18:00
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Friday, 18 October 196815:50Final

Results

Round 1

The top four runners in each of the eight heats advanced to the quarterfinal round.

Heat 1

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Lee Evans United States45.345.40Q
2Claver Kamanya Tanzania45.745.74Q
3Christian Nicolau France45.745.77Q
4Sam Bugri Ghana45.845.88Q
5Manfred Kinder West Germany46.946.95
6Ezra Burnham Barbados47.947.94

Heat 2

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Andrzej Badeński Poland45.545.52Q
2Clifton Forbes Jamaica45.745.75Q
3Larry James United States45.845.83Q
4Daniel Rudisha Kenya46.946.96Q
5Angelo Hussein Sudan47.747.80
6Victor Asirvatham Malaysia48.048.02

Heat 3

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Amadou Gakou Senegal45.345.39Q
2Tegegne Bezabeh Ethiopia45.545.60Q
3Ron Freeman United States45.645.67Q
4Rodobaldo Díaz Cuba46.446.48Q
5Ramon Magariños Spain46.946.92
6Anthony Egwunyenga Nigeria47.347.37
7Francisco Menocal Nicaragua49.149.14

Heat 4

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Martin Jellinghaus West Germany46.446.50Q
2Pedro Grajales Colombia46.746.73Q
3Michael Zerbes East Germany46.846.84Q
4Ross MacKenzie Canada47.047.05Q
5Howard Davies Great Britain47.247.30
6Jacques Pennewaert Belgium48.548.55
7José Astacio El Salvador52.952.92

Heat 5

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Amos Omolo Uganda45.845.85Q
2Munyoro Nyamau Kenya45.945.91Q
3Jean-Claude Nallet France45.945.93Q
4Helmar Müller West Germany45.945.98Q
5José Jacinto Hidalgo Venezuela46.346.32
6Carlos Martínez Cuba47.247.28
7Tony Harper Bermuda49.149.18

Heat 6

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Jan Werner Poland45.945.97Q
2Martin Winbolt-Lewis Great Britain46.246.27Q
3Mamman Makama Nigeria46.446.49Q
4Sergio Bello Italy46.546.54Q
5Eddy Téllez Cuba46.746.80
6Noel Carroll Ireland46.846.83
7José L'Oficial Dominican Republic47.947.93

Heat 7

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Naftali Bon Kenya46.246.21Q
2Jan Balachowski Poland46.246.23Q
3Musa Dogon Yaro Nigeria46.246.24Q
4Gilles Bertould France46.346.31Q
5Don Domansky Canada46.446.46
6Melesio Piña Mexico46.846.81
7Leslie Miller Bahamas46.946.99
8Yoyaga Dit Coulibaly Ivory Coast50.050.11

Heat 8

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Wolfgang Müller East Germany46.646.66Q
2Colin Campbell Great Britain46.646.66Q
3Sergio Ottolina Italy46.746.78Q
4Juan Carlos Dyrzka Argentina47.047.02Q
5George Simon Trinidad and Tobago47.947.95
6Omar Ghizlat Morocco48.248.23
7Kun Min-Mu Republic of China49.049.07

Quarterfinals

The top four runners in each of the four heats advanced to the semifinal round.

Quarterfinal 1

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Amadou Gakou Senegal45.545.56Q
2Larry James United States45.745.77Q
3Claver Kamanya Tanzania46.046.03Q
4Ross MacKenzie Canada46.146.15Q
5Musa Dogon Yaro Nigeria46.146.19
6Colin Campbell Great Britain46.346.35
7Naftali Bon Kenya46.346.39
8Sergio Bello Italy46.846.84

Quarterfinal 2

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Amos Omolo Uganda45.345.33Q
2Lee Evans United States45.545.54Q
3Munyoro Nyamau Kenya46.146.12Q
4Wolfgang Müller East Germany46.246.32Q
5Jan Balachowski Poland46.346.33
6Rodobaldo Díaz Cuba46.346.38
7Juan Carlos Dyrzka Argentina46.846.85
Christian Nicolau FranceDNSN/A

Quarterfinal 3

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Jan Werner Poland45.645.63Q
2Martin Jellinghaus West Germany45.946.00Q
3Tegegne Bezabeh Ethiopia46.046.02Q
4Sam Bugri Ghana46.046.08Q
5Clifton Forbes Jamaica46.246.29
6Daniel Rudisha Kenya47.647.68
7Gilles Bertould France48.948.91
Sergio Ottolina ItalyDNSN/A

Quarterfinal 4

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Ron Freeman United States45.345.31Q
2Andrzej Badeński Poland45.645.60Q
3Helmar Müller West Germany45.745.78Q
4Jean-Claude Nallet France45.745.80Q
5Martin Winbolt-Lewis Great Britain45.945.91
6Michael Zerbes East Germany46.146.19
7Mamman Makama Nigeria46.446.41
8Pedro Grajales Colombia46.546.53

Semifinals

Top four in each of the two heats advanced to the final round.

Semifinal 1

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Amadou Gakou Senegal45.145.17Q
2Ron Freeman United States45.445.47Q
3Andrzej Badeński Poland45.445.50Q
4Tegegne Bezabeh Ethiopia45.545.60Q
5Sam Burgi Ghana45.945.92
6Helmar Müller West Germany46.246.22
7Claver Kamanya Tanzania46.246.22
8Wolfgang Müller East Germany48.348.37

Semifinal 2

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
1Lee Evans United States44.844.83Q, OR
2Larry James United States44.944.88Q
3Martin Jellinghaus West Germany44.945.06Q
4Amos Omolo Uganda45.445.52Q
5Jan Werner Poland45.745.75
6Munyoro Nyamau Kenya46.346.37
7Jean-Claude Nallet France49.049.01
8Ross MacKenzie Canada49.249.28

Final

Evans nearly withdrew from the final in protest of the expulsion of his college teammates Tommie Smith and John Carlos from the Games after their Black Power salute. Smith and Carlos, however, convinced him to compete. Evans and James were the first runners to achieve times below 44 seconds in the 400 metres.[2]

RankLaneAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (auto)Notes
6Lee Evans United States43.843.86WR
2Larry James United States43.943.97
1Ron Freeman United States44.444.41
45Amadou Gakou Senegal45.045.01
53Martin Jellinghaus West Germany45.345.33
64Tegegne Bezabeh Ethiopia45.445.42
77Andrzej Badeński Poland45.445.42
88Amos Omolo Uganda47.647.61

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1968 Mexico City Summer Games: Men's 400 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  2. "400 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 522.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.