Athletics at the 1956 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metres

The men's 100 metres sprint event at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia, was held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 23 and 24 November.[1] Sixty-five athletes from 31 nations competed; each nation was limited to three athletes. The final was won by American Bobby Morrow, marking the fifth consecutive victory by a different American. Hec Hogan of Australia won that country's first medal in the event since 1900.[2] The competition took place in strong winds, with the final run into a 2.5 m/s (5.6 mph) headwind.

Men's 100 metres
at the Games of the XVI Olympiad
VenueMelbourne Cricket Ground
Melbourne, Australia
Dates23 November (heats, quarterfinals)
24 November 1956 (semifinals, final)
Competitors65 from 31 nations
Winning time10.5 seconds
Medalists
Bobby Morrow  United States
Thane Baker  United States
Hec Hogan  Australia
Video on YouTube Official Video @24:28

Background

This was the thirteenth time the event was held, having appeared at every Olympics since the first in 1896. None of the finalists from 1952 returned. Notable entrants were Americans Bobby Morrow (NCAA champion, U.S. Olympic trial champion, and heavy favorite) and Ira Murchison (world record co-holder); Dave Sime was injured and did not make the American team.[3]

The Bahamas, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Liberia, Malay, Singapore, and Ethiopia were represented in the event for the first time. In addition, German athletes competed as the "United Team" for the first time, though pre-World War II Germany had competed many times and West Germany had competed as "Germany" in 1952. The United States was the only nation to have appeared at each of the first thirteen Olympic men's 100 metres events.

Competition format

The event retained the four round format from 1920–1952: heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. There were 12 heats, of 4–6 athletes each, with the top 2 in each heat advancing to the quarterfinals. The 24 quarterfinalists were placed into 4 heats of 6 athletes. The top 3 in each quarterfinal advanced to the semifinals. There were 2 heats of 6 semifinalists, once again with the top 3 advancing to the 6-man final.[3]

Records

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

World record 10.1 Willie Williams Berlin, Germany 3 August 1956
10.1 Ira Murchison Berlin, Germany 4 August 1956
10.1 Leamon King Ontario, United States 20 October 1956
10.1 Leamon King Santa Ana, United States 27 October 1956
Olympic record 10.3 Eddie Tolan Los Angeles, USA 1 August 1932
10.3 Ralph Metcalfe Los Angeles, USA 1 August 1932
10.3 Jesse Owens Berlin, Germany 2 August 1936
10.3 Harrison Dillard London, United Kingdom 31 July, 1948

Despite headwinds, Ira Murchison and Bobby Morrow each equalled the Olympic record of 10.3 seconds (hand-timed) in the quarterfinals. Morrow did it again in the semifinals.

Results

Heats

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

Heat one

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ira Murchison United States10.67Q
2Jan Jarzembowski Poland10.95Q
3Hilmar Þorbjörnsson Iceland11.12
4Mario Colarossi Italy11.14
5René Ahumada Mexico11.26
6Raja bin Ngah Ali Malaya11.41

Heat two

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Mike Agostini Trinidad and Tobago10.98Q
2Luigi Gnocchi Italy11.01Q
3Titus Erinle Nigeria11.09
4Jorge de Barros Brazil11.15
5Vanchak Voradilok Thailand11.78
6Roba Negousse Ethiopia12.07

Heat three

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Maurice Rae New Zealand10.84Q
2Abdul Khaliq Pakistan10.97Q
3Manfred Steinbach United Team of Germany10.99
4Rafael Romero Venezuela11.14
5Evaristo Iglesias Cuba11.50

Heat four

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ben Nduga Uganda10.88Q
2Ken Box Great Britain10.96Q
3Kyohei Ushio Japan11.09
4Kesavan Soon Singapore11.35
5Jack Parrington Canada11.62

Heat five

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Marian Foik Poland10.88Q
2Boris Tokarev Soviet Union11.09Q
3Franco Galbiati Italy11.13
4Tom Robinson Bahamas11.30
5Jalal Gozal Indonesia11.45
6James Roberts Liberia11.45

Heat six

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Manfred Germar United Team of Germany10.91Q
2Ray Land Australia11.05Q
3Keith Gardner Jamaica11.22
4Alain David France11.24
5Emmanuel Putu Liberia11.44
6Beyene Legesse Ethiopia11.94

Heat seven

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Leonid Bartenev Soviet Union10.93Q
2Béla Goldoványi Hungary11.02Q
3Clive Bonas Venezuela11.17
4Gavin Carragher Australia11.36
5Thomas Obi Nigeria11.47
6Bjørn Nilsen Norway11.58

Heat eight

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Hec Hogan Australia10.72Q
2René Bonino France10.96Q
3Géza Varasdi Hungary11.00
4Akira Kiyofuji Japan11.00

Heat nine

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Thane Baker United States10.93Q
2Edmund Turton Trinidad and Tobago11.38Q
3Sinnayah Karuppiah Jarabalan Malaya11.56
4Tan Eng Yoon Singapore11.63

Heat ten

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Stan Levenson Canada10.94Q
2Heinz Fütterer United Team of Germany11.10Q
3João Pires Sobrinho Brazil11.14
4Joe Goddard Trinidad and Tobago11.19
5Oliver Hunter Guyana11.22
6Ghulam Raziq Pakistan11.26

Heat eleven

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Edward Ajado Nigeria11.01Q
2Roy Sandstrom Great Britain11.05Q
3Dick Harding Canada11.20
4Muhammad Sharif Butt Pakistan11.26
5Abebe Hailou Ethiopia11.54
6Sneh Wongchaoom Thailand11.95

Heat twelve

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Bobby Morrow United States10.90Q
2Yuriy Konovalov Soviet Union11.04Q
3David Segal Great Britain11.19
4Paiboon Vacharapan Thailand11.27
5Lee Kah Fook Malaya11.84

Quarterfinals

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

Quarterfinal one

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Bobby Morrow United States10.55Q, =OR (10.3 hand)
2Mike Agostini Trinidad and Tobago10.75Q
3Maurice Rae New Zealand10.78Q
4Béla Goldoványi Hungary10.95
5Heinz Fütterer United Team of Germany10.99
6Ray Land Australia11.15

Quarterfinal two

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ira Murchison United States10.55Q, =OR (10.3 hand)
2Abdul Khaliq Pakistan10.78Q
3Yuriy Konovalov Soviet Union10.93Q
4Luigi Gnocchi Italy10.96
5Edmund Turton Trinidad and Tobago11.37
6Ben Nduga Uganda12.95

Quarterfinal three

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Hec Hogan Australia10.78Q
2Boris Tokarev Soviet Union10.87Q
3Stan Levenson Canada10.93Q
4Jan Jarzembowski Poland10.98
5Edward Ajado Nigeria11.02
6Ken Box Great Britain11.45

Quarterfinal four

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Thane Baker United States10.62Q
2Manfred Germar Germany10.80Q
3Marian Foik Poland10.83Q
4Leonid Bartenev Soviet Union10.84
5René Bonino France10.96
6Roy Sandstrom Great Britain11.03

Semifinals

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

Semifinal one

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ira Murchison United States10.79Q
2Mike Agostini Trinidad and Tobago10.79Q
3Manfred Germar United Team of Germany10.85Q
4Abdul Khaliq Pakistan10.93
5Stan Levenson Canada10.94
6Yuriy Konovalov Soviet Union11.11

Semifinal two

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Bobby Morrow United States10.52Q, =OR (10.3 hand)
2Thane Baker United States10.61Q
3Hec Hogan Australia10.62Q
4Maurice Rae New Zealand10.68
5Marian Foik Poland10.84
6Boris Tokarev Soviet Union10.91

Final

Wind -2.5m/s

In lane 4, Bobby Morrow was out fast, sandwiched by his teammates Thane Baker in lane 6 and Ira Murchison in lane 1. Morrow just ran away from the field. Baker edged ahead of Murchison to get silver, and running before an Australian crowd, Hec Hogan came from behind to nip Murchison at the line. While Morrow was almost two metres ahead of Baker at the finish, the hand timing of the day gave them the same time of 10.5; the electronic timing system showed the margin to be a more accurate 0.15 of a second.

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)
Bobby Morrow United States10.510.62
Thane Baker United States10.510.77
Hec Hogan Australia10.610.77
4Ira Murchison United States10.610.79
5Manfred Germar United Team of Germany10.710.86
6Mike Agostini Trinidad and Tobago10.710.88

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1956 Melbourne Summer Games: Men's 100 metres". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 12 June 2017.
  2. Stanley Rowley's bronze medal in 1900 is retroactive; at the time, bronze medals were not awarded for third place. Thus, the 1956 Official Report states that Hogan's third-place finish "was the first time an Australian had won a sprint medal." Official Report, p. 269.
  3. "100 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
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