Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The men's marathon at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, was held on Sunday August 12, 1984. The race started at 5:00 pm local time. There were 107 competitors from 59 countries. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. A total number of 78 athletes completed the race, with Dieudonné LaMothe from Haiti finishing in last position in 2:52:18. Twenty-nine athletes did not finish. Carlos Lopes of Portugal won in 2:09:21 which set the Olympic record for 24 years.[1] It was Portugal's first medal in the men's marathon. Ireland also won its first men's marathon medal, with John Treacy's silver. Great Britain returned to the podium for the first time since 1964 with Charlie Spedding taking bronze.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
Tickets for Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics
VenueLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
DateAugust 12
Competitors107 from 59 nations
Winning time2:09:21 OR
Medalists
Carlos Lopes
 Portugal
John Treacy
 Ireland
Charlie Spedding
 Great Britain

Background

This was the 20th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Returning runners from the 1980 marathon included silver medalist Gerard Nijboer of the Netherlands, sixth-place finisher Rodolfo Gómez of Mexico, ninth-place finisher (and 1972 silver and 1976 bronze medalist) Karel Lismont of Belgium, and tenth-place finisher Robert de Castella of Australia. The two-time defending champion, Waldemar Cierpinski of East Germany, was prevented from trying for a third gold by the Eastern Bloc boycott. The favorites were de Castella (1981 Fukuoka winner, in world record time, and 1983 World Championships winner), Alberto Salazar of the United States (1980–1982 New York winner and 1982 Boston winner), and Toshihiko Seko of Japan (1981 Boston winner and 1978–1980 and 1983 Fukuoka winner).[2]

Botswana, the Central African Republic, Cyprus, Djibouti, Israel, Jamaica, Jordan, Oman, Qatar, the Virgin Islands, and Zaire each made their first appearance in Olympic men's marathons; the Republic of China made its first appearance as Chinese Taipei. The United States made its 19th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format and course

As all Olympic marathons, the competition was a single race. The marathon distance of 26 miles, 385 yards was run over a point-to-point route starting at Santa Monica College and ending at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.[2]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1984 Summer Olympics.

World record Robert de Castella (AUS)2:08:18Fukuoka, Japan6 December 1981
Olympic record Waldemar Cierpinski (GDR)2:09:55.0Montreal, Canada31 July 1980

Carlos Lopes set a new Olympic record at 2:09:21.

Schedule

All times are Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 12 August 198417:15Final

Results

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Carlos Lopes Portugal2:09:21OR
John Treacy Ireland2:09:56
Charlie Spedding Great Britain2:09:58
4Takeshi So Japan2:10:55
5Robert de Castella Australia2:11:09
6Juma Ikangaa Tanzania2:11:10
7Joseph Nzau Kenya2:11:28
8Djama Robleh Djibouti2:11:39
9Jerry Kiernan Ireland2:12:20
10Rod Dixon New Zealand2:12:57
11Pete Pfitzinger United States2:13:53
12Hugh Jones Great Britain2:13:57
13Jorge González Puerto Rico2:14:00
14Toshihiko Seko Japan2:14:13
15Alberto Salazar United States2:14:19
16Mehmet Terzi Turkey2:14:20
17Shigeru So Japan2:14:38
18Ralf Salzmann West Germany2:15:29
19Henrik Jørgensen Denmark2:15:55
20Hussein Ahmed Salah Djibouti2:15:59
21Agapius Masong Tanzania2:16:25
22Gidamis Shahanga Tanzania2:16:27
23Eloi Schleder Brazil2:16:35
24Karel Lismont Belgium2:17:07
25Allan Zachariasen Denmark2:17:10
26Michail Koussis Greece2:17:38
27Pertti Tiainen Finland2:17:43
28Alain Lazare France2:17:52
29Vincent Ruguga Uganda2:17:54
30Armand Parmentier Belgium2:18:10
31César Mercado Puerto Rico2:19:09
32Omar Abdillahi Charmarke Djibouti2:19:11
33Øyvind Dahl Norway2:19:28
34Derek Froude New Zealand2:19:44
35Giovanni d'Aleo Italy2:20:12
36Jesús Herrera Mexico2:20:33
37Lee Hong-yeol South Korea2:20:56
38Juan Camacho Bolivia2:21:04
39Cor Vriend Netherlands2:21:08
40Frans Ntaole Lesotho2:21:09
41Johan Geirnaert Belgium2:21:35
42Jacques Boxberger France2:22:00
43Marco Marchei Italy2:22:38
44Art Boileau Canada2:22:43
45Samuel Hlawe Swaziland2:22:45
46Baikuntha Manandhar Nepal2:22:52
47Ahmed Mohamed Ismail Somalia2:23:27
48Chae Hong-nak South Korea2:23:33
49Joseph Otieno Kenya2:24:13
50Bruno Lafranchi Switzerland2:24:38
51Dick Hooper Ireland2:24:41
52Derrick Adamson Jamaica2:25:02
53Claudio Cabán Puerto Rico2:27:16
54Marc Agosta Luxembourg2:27:41
55Wilson Theleso Botswana2:29:20
56Alejandro Silva Chile2:29:53
57Chen Chang-ming Chinese Taipei2:29:53
58Kim Won-sik South Korea2:30:57
59Rubén Aguiar Argentina2:31:18
60Sabag Shemtov Israel2:31:34
61Vincent Rakabaele Lesotho2:32:15
62Marios Kassianidis Cyprus2:32:51
63Arjun Pandit Nepal2:32:53
64Ismael Mahmoud Ghassab Jordan2:33:30
65Alain Bordeleau Canada2:34:27
66Tau John Tokwepota Papua New Guinea2:36:36
67Patric Nyambariro-Nhauro Zimbabwe2:37:18
68Kimurgor Ngeny Kenya2:37:19
69Amiri Yadav Nepal2:38:10
70Adolphe Ambowode Central African Republic2:41:26
71Carlos Ávila Honduras2:42:03
72Jules Randrianarivelo Madagascar2:43:05
73Abdul Lahij Ahmed Somalia2:44:39
74George Mambosasa Malawi2:46:14
75Marlon Williams Virgin Islands2:46:50
76Johnson Mbangiwa Botswana2:48:12
77Leonardo Illut Philippines2:49:39
78Dieudonné LaMothe Haiti2:52:18
Awadh Al-Sameer OmanDNF
Ahmet Altun TurkeyDNF
Dave Edge CanadaDNF
Matthews Kambale MalawiDNF
Ronald Lanzoni Costa RicaDNF
Bigboy Matlapeng BotswanaDNF
Tommy Persson SwedenDNF
Kjell-Erik Ståhl SwedenDNF
Domingo Tibaduiza ColombiaDNF
Rodolfo Gómez MexicoDNF
Gerard Nijboer NetherlandsDNF
Gerhard Hartmann AustriaDNF
Omar Aguilar ChileDNF
Filippos Filippou CyprusDNF
Juan Carlos Traspaderne SpainDNF
Santiago de la Parte SpainDNF
Geoff Smith Great BritainDNF
Nimley Twegbe LiberiaDNF
Miguel Angel Cruz MexicoDNF
Cor Lambregts NetherlandsDNF
Stig Roar Husby NorwayDNF
Cidálio Caetano PortugalDNF
Delfim Moreira PortugalDNF
Ibrahim Al-Taher QatarDNF
Mehmet Yurdadön TurkeyDNF
Wilson Achia UgandaDNF
John Tuttle United StatesDNF
Masini Situ-Kumbanga ZaireDNF
Tommy Lazarus ZimbabweDNF
Martti Vainio FinlandDNS

See also

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's Marathon". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  2. "Marathon, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.