Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's 200 metres

The men's 200 metres was an event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There were 78 participating athletes from 57 nations, with eleven qualifying heats (78), five quarterfinal races (40), two semifinals (16) and a final (8).[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Michael Johnson of the United States, the nation's fourth consecutive and 16th overall victory in the event. Frankie Fredericks of Namibia won his second straight silver medal, the eighth man to win multiple medals in the 200 metres. Ato Boldon earned Trinidad and Tobago's first medal in the event with his bronze.

Men's 200 metres
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
Michael Johnson (1995)
VenueCentennial Olympic Stadium
DatesJuly 31 – August 1
Competitors78 from 57 nations
Winning time19.32 WR
Medalists
Michael Johnson
 United States
Frank Fredericks
 Namibia
Ato Boldon
 Trinidad and Tobago

Background

This was the 22nd appearance of the event, which was not held at the first Olympics in 1896 but has been on the program ever since. Four of the eight finalists from the 1992 Games returned: gold medalist Michael Marsh of the United States, silver medalist Frankie Fredericks of Namibia, fourth-place finisher (and 1988 bronze medalist) Robson da Silva of Brazil, and sixth-place finisher John Regis of Great Britain; fifth-place finisher Olapade Adeniken of Nigeria was entered but did not start. Michael Johnson, favored to win in Barcelona before food poisoning resulted in a semifinal exit, also returned.[2]

By the summer of 1996, Pietro Mennea's world record of 19.72 had stood for almost 17 years. Carl Lewis (19.73 in 1983), and Marsh (19.73 in 1992) had come tantalizingly close to it, but eased up. Finally at the Olympic Trials, Johnson knocked .06 off the record. In Atlanta, Johnson (the 1995 World Champion) was the clear favorite and was attempting an unprecedented men's 200/400 double. (Two women had done the double; Valerie Brisco-Hooks in 1984 and Marie-José Pérec just completed her double less than ten minutes before the men's 200 metres final). Johnson occupied the same lane 3 as Pérec had just run in. But, just as in 1992, Fredericks (the 1993 World Champion) had snapped a Johnson winning streak shortly before the Games and could not be disregarded as a challenger.[2]

Aruba, Comoros, Gabon, Guam, Ukraine, and the United Arab Emirates each made their debut in the event. The United States made its 21st appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Summary

From the gun, Johnson took the lead, quickly making up the stagger on Ivan Garcia to his outside halfway through the turn. Coming on to the straight, Johnson led by a metre from Frankie Fredericks and Ato Boldon, with Jeff Williams fourth. Johnson continued to pull away to the finish and won by over three metres from Fredericks, with Boldon a further metre back. Obadele Thompson closed with a strong straight to edge past Williams at the line another three metres behind Boldon. Three strides past the finish line, while others were still finishing, Johnson looked back to see the clock had stopped at 19.32 and began celebrating. His time was a Beamonesque .4 of a second faster than the world record had been just five weeks earlier, .34 faster than that performance. Far behind him, Fredericks had run 19.68, superior to the old record and Boldon had run 19.80. At that point in time, Fredericks was #2 and Boldon was #7 performer all time.

Competition format

The competition used the four round format introduced in 1920: heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. The "fastest loser" system introduced in 1960 was used in the heats and quarterfinals.

There were 11 heats of 7 or 8 runners each, with the top 3 men in each advancing to the quarterfinals along with the next 7 fastest overall. The quarterfinals consisted of 5 heats of 8 athletes each; the 3 fastest men in each heat and the next fastest overall advanced to the semifinals. There were 2 semifinals, each with 8 runners. The top 4 athletes in each semifinal advanced. The final had 8 runners. The races were run on a 400 metre track.[2]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1996 Summer Olympics.

World record Michael Johnson (USA)19.66Atlanta, United States23 June 1996
Olympic record Michael Marsh (USA)19.73Barcelona, Spain5 August 1992

In the final, Michael Johnson set a new world record with a time of 19.32.

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

The competition returned to a two-day schedule after one Games with three days; now, however, there was no rest day between the two competition days.

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 31 July 199610:45
18:15
Heats
Quarterfinals
Thursday, 1 August 199619:10
21:00
Semifinals
Final

Results

Heat 1

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Michael Marsh United States 20.27Q
2 Sergejs Insakovs Latvia 20.41Q
3 Troy Douglas Bermuda 20.41Q
4 Steve Brimacombe Australia 20.45q
5 Alfred Visagie South Africa 21.10
6 Mohamed Al-Houti Oman 21.10
7 Takahiro Mazuka Japan 21.13

Heat 2

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Ivan Garcia Cuba 20.49Q
2 Albert Agyemang Ghana 20.69Q
3 Elston Cawley Jamaica 20.73Q
4 Owusu Dako Great Britain 20.83
5 Thomas Sbokos Greece 20.88
6 Anton Ivanov Bulgaria 21.20
7 David Wilson Guam 21.85
8 Mohamed Ould Brahim Mauritania 22.71

Heat 3

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Ato Boldon Trinidad and Tobago 20.26Q
2 Obadele Thompson Barbados 20.42Q
3 Anninos Markoullides Cyprus 20.57Q
4 Carlos Gats Argentina 20.82q
5 Joseph Gikonyo Kenya 20.88
6 Chris Donaldson New Zealand 20.96
7 Tao Wu-shiun Chinese Taipei 21.25

Heat 4

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Michael Johnson United States 20.55Q
2 Erik Wymeersch Belgium 20.68Q
3 Percival Spencer Jamaica 20.73Q
4 Frank Waota Ivory Coast 20.78q
5 Benjamin Sirimou Cameroon 21.00
6 Antoine Boussombo Gabon 21.06
Venancio Jose Spain DNS

Heat 5

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Francis Obikwelu Nigeria 20.62Q
2 Edson Ribeiro Brazil 20.69Q
3 John Regis Great Britain 20.78Q
4 Pierre Lisk Sierra Leone 20.86
5 Lars Hedner Sweden 20.97
6 Thomas Griesser Austria 21.20
7 Pascal Dangbo Benin 21.65
8 Hadhari Djaffar Comoros 22.68

Heat 6

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Patrick Stevens Belgium 20.60Q
2 Jordi Mayoral Spain 20.65Q
3 Claudinei da Silva Brazil 20.80Q
4 Joseph Loua Guinea 20.81q
5 Boevi Lawson Togo 20.99
6 Anderson Vilien Haiti 21.62
7 Peter Ogilvie Canada 22.00
8 Gustavo Envela Equatorial Guinea 22.09

Heat 7

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Linford Christie Great Britain 20.64Q
2 Robert Mackowiak Poland 20.67Q
3 George Panayiotopoulos Greece 20.69Q
4 Geir Moen Norway 20.78q
5 O'Brian Gibbons Canada 20.79q
6 Andrey Fedoriv Russia 20.95
7 Brahim Abdoulaye Chad 21.67

Heat 8

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Neil De Silva Trinidad and Tobago 20.54Q
2 Robson Da Silva Brazil 20.61Q
3 Oumar Loum Senegal 20.69Q
4 Dean Capobianco Australia 20.76q
5 Matthew Coad New Zealand 21.25
6 Amos Ali Papua New Guinea 21.37
7 Laurence Jack Vanuatu 21.94
Olapade Adeniken Nigeria DNS

Heat 9

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Jeff Williams United States 20.37Q
2 Vladyslav Dolohodin Ukraine 20.57Q
3 Francisco Navarro Spain 20.87Q
4 Alain Reimann Switzerland 20.99
5 Ousmane Diarra Mali 21.20
6 Mohamed Al-Aswad United Arab Emirates 21.77
Ibrahim Ismail Muftah Qatar DNS

Heat 10

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Koji Ito Japan 20.56Q
2 Torbjorn Eriksson Sweden 20.77Q
3 Emmanuel Tuffour Ghana 20.85Q
4 Mark Keddell New Zealand 20.93
5 Justice Dipeba Botswana 21.09
6 Carlton Chambers Canada 21.32
7 Miguel Janssen Aruba 21.72

Heat 11

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Frank Fredericks Namibia 20.59Q
2 Seun Ogunkoya Nigeria 20.78Q
3 Gary Ryan Ireland 20.78Q
4 Sebastian Keitel Chile 20.96
5 Christoph Pöstinger Austria 20.98
6 Sandro Floris Italy 21.01
7 Wenzhong Chen China 21.05

Quarterfinal 1

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Frank Fredericks Namibia 20.38Q
2 Jeff Williams United States 20.47Q
3 Obadele Thompson Barbados 20.53Q
4 Erik Wymeersch Belgium 20.59
5 Percival Spencer Jamaica 20.59
6 Troy Douglas Bermuda 20.63
7 Francisco Navarro Spain 21.06
O'Brian Gibbons Canada DNS

Quarterfinal 2

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Michael Johnson United States 20.37Q
2 Geir Moen Norway 20.48Q
3 Neil De Silva Trinidad and Tobago 20.62Q
4 Robson Da Silva Brazil 20.65
5 Jordi Mayoral Spain 20.68
6 George Panayiotopoulos Greece 20.86
7 Dean Capobianco Australia 21.03
8 Oumar Loum Senegal 21.31

Quarterfinal 3

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Ivan Garcia Cuba 20.36Q
2 Koji Ito Japan 20.47Q
3 Steve Brimacombe Australia 20.53Q
4 Robert Mackowiak Poland 20.61
5 Anninos Markoullides Cyprus 20.63
6 Vladyslav Dolohodin Ukraine 20.65
7 Elston Cawley Jamaica 20.75
8 Frank Waota Ivory Coast 21.14

Quarterfinal 4

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Michael Marsh United States 20.39Q
2 Patrick Stevens Belgium 20.43Q
3 John Regis Great Britain 20.56Q
4 Sergejs Insakovs Latvia 20.58q
5 Albert Agyemang Ghana 20.87
6 Seun Ogunkoya Nigeria 21.00
7 Joseph Loua Guinea 21.01
Claudinei da Silva Brazil DNF

Quarterfinal 5

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Ato Boldon Trinidad and Tobago 20.25Q
2 Francis Obikwelu Nigeria 20.49Q
3 Emmanuel Tuffour Ghana 20.49Q
4 Linford Christie Great Britain 20.59
5 Edson Ribeiro Brazil 20.60
6 Torbjorn Eriksson Sweden 20.83
7 Carlos Gats Argentina 20.84
8 Gary Ryan Ireland 20.89

Semifinal 1

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Michael Johnson United States 20.27Q
2 Ivan Garcia Cuba 20.34Q
3 Jeff Williams United States 20.39Q
4 Patrick Stevens Belgium 20.46Q
5 Francis Obikwelu Nigeria 20.56
6 John Regis Great Britain 20.58
7 Emmanuel Tuffour Ghana 20.61
8 Neil De Silva Trinidad and Tobago 21.26

Semifinal 2

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Frank Fredericks Namibia 19.98Q
2 Ato Boldon Trinidad and Tobago 20.05Q
3 Michael Marsh United States 20.26Q
4 Obadele Thompson Barbados 20.32Q
5 Steve Brimacombe Australia 20.38
6 Koji Ito Japan 20.45
7 Sergejs Insakovs Latvia 20.48
8 Geir Moen Norway 20.96

Final

Held on August 1, 1996.

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
Michael Johnson United States 19.32WR
Frank Fredericks Namibia 19.68AR
Ato Boldon Trinidad and Tobago 19.80
4 Obadele Thompson Barbados 20.14
5 Jeff Williams United States 20.17
6 Ivan Garcia Cuba 20.21
7 Patrick Stevens Belgium 20.27
8 Michael Marsh United States 20.48

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1996 Atlanta Games: Men's 200 metres". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  2. "200 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
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