Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's 400 metres

The men's 400 metres was an event at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. It was held from August 4 to August 8. Eighty athletes from 56 nations competed.[1][2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Alonzo Babers, returning the United States to the top of the podium for the first time since 1972 (and the 13th time overall). Gabriel Tiacoh won the Ivory Coast's first Olympic medal in any event, with a silver.

Men's 400 metres
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
Alonzo Babers winning the gold medal
VenueLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Dates4 to 8 August
Competitors80 from 56 nations
Winning time44.27
Medalists
Alonzo Babers
 United States
Gabriel Tiacoh
 Ivory Coast
Antonio McKay
 United States

Background

This was the twentieth appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. None of the finalists from 1980 returned. The favorites were Bert Cameron of Jamaica (winner of the first world championship in 1983) and Americans Antonio McKay and Alonzo Babers.[2]

The British Virgin Islands, Cameroon, Chad, Equatorial Guinea, the Gambia, Mauritius, Mozambique, Nepal, Oman, Rwanda, Somalia, Suriname, Togo, the United Arab Emirates, and Zimbabwe appeared in this event for the first time. The United States made its 19th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format

The competition retained the basic four-round format from 1920. The "fastest loser" system, introduced in 1964, was used for the first round. There were 10 first-round heats, each with 8 runners. The top three runners in each heat advanced, along with the next two fastest overall. The 32 quarterfinalists were divided into 4 quarterfinals with 8 runners each; the top four athletes in each quarterfinal heat advanced to the semifinals, with no "fastest loser" spots. 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

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1976 Summer Olympics.

World record Lee Evans (USA)43.86Mexico City, Mexico18 October 1968
Olympic record Lee Evans (USA)43.8Mexico City, Mexico18 October 1968

No world or Olympic records were set during this event. National records set were:

NationAthleteRoundTime
 BarbadosElvis FordeSemifinal 245.32
 SomaliaIbrahim OkashHeat 147.91

Schedule

For the first time, the event was held on four separate days, with each round being on a different day.

All times are Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7)

Date Time Round
Saturday, 4 August 198410:30Round 1
Sunday, 5 August 198417:00Quarterfinals
Monday, 6 August 198416:55Semifinals
Wednesday, 8 August 198416:45Final

Results

Round 1

Alonzo Babers wins heat of the 400 meters.

Heat 1

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
15 Davison Lishebo Zambia 46.20Q
21 David Peltier Barbados 46.57Q
37 Allan Ingraham Bahamas 46.72Q
46 Boubacar Diallo Senegal 46.73
52 Dean Greenaway British Virgin Islands 47.33
63 Evaldo da Silva Brazil 47.55
74 Ibrahim Okash Somalia 47.91NR
88 Issaka Hassane Chad 49.64

Heat 2

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
13 Gabriel Tiacoh Ivory Coast 45.96Q
26 David Kitur Kenya 46.25Q
35 Marcel Arnold Switzerland 46.46Q
42 Gary Minihan Australia 46.93
51 Nordin Jadi Malaysia 47.12
67 Tommy Johansson Sweden 47.77
78 Daniel Andre Mauritius 49.09
84 Faustin Butéra Rwanda 51.41

Heat 3

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
11 Innocent Egbunike Nigeria 46.63Q
25 Mark Senior Jamaica 46.73Q
38 Gérson de Souza Brazil 47.02Q
46 Manuel Ramirez-Caicedo Colombia 47.17
57 Brian Saunders Canada 47.40
64 Mohamed Amer Al-Malky Oman 47.61
73 Meesaq Rizvi Pakistan 49.58
2 Secundino Borabota Equatorial Guinea DSQ

Heat 4

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
14 Bertland Cameron Jamaica 46.14Q
27 Oddur Sigurdsson Iceland 46.30Q
32 Doug Hinds Canada 46.42Q
41 Richard Louis Barbados 46.70
55 Jean-Didiace Bémou Republic of the Congo 47.26
63 Hector Llatser France 47.30
78 Phillip Pipersburg Belize 48.04
86 Alberto López Guatemala 52.21

Heat 5

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
17 Alonzo Babers United States 45.81Q
23 Michael Paul Trinidad and Tobago 46.18Q
32 Philip Brown Great Britain 46.26Q
41 Moses Kyeswa Uganda 46.78
58 Tim Bethune Canada 46.98
66 Joseph Ramotshabi Botswana 48.11
75 Dawda Jallow The Gambia 48.36
84 René López El Salvador 48.71

Heat 6

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
11 Bruce Frayne Australia 46.08Q
22 Aldo Canti France 46.14Q
38 Susumu Takano Japan 46.26Q
46 Nafi Mersal Egypt 46.46
53 Alfred Browne Antigua and Barbuda 47.29
67 Rashid Al-Jirbi United Arab Emirates 48.71
74 Siegfried Cruden Suriname 50.07
5 Hassan El-Kashief Sudan DNF

Heat 7

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
12 Sunder Nix United States 45.42Q
26 Elvis Forde Barbados 45.47Q
37 Antonio Sánchez Spain 46.03Q
44 Anton Skerritt Trinidad and Tobago 46.30q
55 James Atuti Kenya 47.04
68 Adjé Adjeoda Vignon Togo 47.43
73 Lapule Tamean Papua New Guinea 47.60
81 Pushpa Raj Ojha Nepal 52.12

Heat 8

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
15 Antonio McKay United States 45.55Q
21 John Anzarah Kenya 46.12Q
37 Isidro del Prado Philippines 46.82Q
46 Leonardo Loforte Mozambique 47.07
53 Joseph Rodan Fiji 49.00
68 Agripa Mwausegha Malawi 49.12
74 Charles Moses Ghana 50.39
2 Ali St. Louis Trinidad and Tobago DNF

Heat 9

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
12 Erwin Skamrahl West Germany 45.94Q
25 Angel Heras Spain 46.06Q
33 Todd Bennett Great Britain 46.09Q
44 Yann Quentrec France 46.94
57 Wilson dos Santos Brazil 47.55
68 Mark Handelsman Israel 48.17
71 Chris Madzokere Zimbabwe 48.49
86 Arsène Randriamahazomana Madagascar 48.86

Heat 10

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
16 Kriss Akabusi Great Britain 45.64Q
23 Darren Clark Australia 45.68Q
35 Sunday Uti Nigeria 45.74Q
42 Devon Morris Jamaica 45.80q
51 Mike Okot Uganda 46.68
68 Samuel Sarkpa Liberia 47.65
77 Mama Moluh Cameroon 48.90
4 Vincent Confait Seychelles DSQ

Quarterfinal 1

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
18 Antonio McKay United States 44.72Q
26 Darren Clark Australia 44.77Q
33 Kriss Akabusi Great Britain 45.43Q
44 Dave Lishebo Zambia 45.57Q
52 John Anzarah Kenya 45.67
61 Devon Morris Jamaica 46.14
77 Allan Ingraham Bahamas 46.14
85 David Peltier Barbados 46.48

Quarterfinal 2

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
14 Innocent Egbunike Nigeria 45.26Q
25 Sunder Nix United States 45.31Q
32 Elvis Forde Barbados 45.60Q
47 Aldo Canti France 45.64Q
53 Angel Heras Spain 45.88
66 Marcel Arnold Switzerland 46.10
78 Philip Brown Great Britain 46.63
81 Anton Skerritt Trinidad and Tobago 46.93

Quarterfinal 3

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
15 Alonzo Babers United States 44.75Q, PB
21 Sunday Uti Nigeria 45.01Q
38 Bertland Cameron Jamaica 45.16Q
47 Bruce Frayne Australia 45.35Q
56 Todd Bennett Great Britain 45.51
62 Antonio Sánchez Spain 45.79
74 Oddur Sigurdsson Iceland 46.07
83 Doug Hinds Canada 46.19

Quarterfinal 4

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
12 Gabriel Tiacoh Ivory Coast 45.15Q
26 David Kitur Kenya 45.78Q
38 Michael Paul Trinidad and Tobago 45.84Q
44 Susumu Takano Japan 45.91Q
51 Erwin Skamrahl West Germany 46.39
67 Mark Senior Jamaica 46.50
73 Gerson Souza Brazil 46.65
85 Isidro del Prado Philippines 46.71

Semifinal 1

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
13 Innocent Egbunike Nigeria 45.16Q
27 Alonzo Babers United States 45.17Q
31 Darren Clark Australia 45.26Q
46 Sunder Nix United States 45.41Q
58 Aldo Canti France 45.59
65 Michael Paul Trinidad and Tobago 45.60
72 Kriss Akabusi Great Britain 45.69
84 Susumu Takano Japan 45.88

Semifinal 2

Cameron pulled up with an injury at 150 metres, hopping for about 20 metres before returning to a run. Despite the injury, he finished fourth to qualify for the final (in which he ultimately would not be able to run).[2]

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
14 Gabriel Tiacoh Ivory Coast 44.64Q
28 Sunday Uti Nigeria 44.83Q
33 Antonio McKay United States 44.92Q
42 Bertland Cameron Jamaica 45.10Q
55 Bruce Frayne Australia 45.21
61 Elvis Forde Barbados 45.32NR
76 David Kitur Kenya 45.62
87 Dave Lishebo Zambia 45.97

Final

Cameron was still injured from the semifinal race and could not start the final. Clark led early and held the lead until the final straight. Babers began his successful push from about the 250 metre mark, with Tiacoh behind him. McKay edged Clark and Nix at the finish.[2][4]

RankLane AthleteNation TimeNotes
4 Alonzo Babers United States 44.27PB
7 Gabriel Tiacoh Ivory Coast 44.54
1 Antonio McKay United States 44.71
45 Darren Clark Australia 44.75
56 Sunder Nix United States 44.75
62 Sunday Uti Nigeria 44.93
73 Innocent Egbunike Nigeria 45.35
8 Bertland Cameron Jamaica DNS

In the UK TV show Little Britain, character Denver Mills is credited as having won the silver medal in the 400 metres at the 1984 Olympics.

See also

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's 400 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  2. "400 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 2, pp. 273–74.
  4. Official Report, p. 274.
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