Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's triple jump

The final of the men's triple jump event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia was held on July 27, 1996. There were 43 participating athletes from 32 nations, with two qualifying groups. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The top twelve and ties, and all those reaching 17.00 metres advanced to the final. The qualification round was held on July 26, 1996.[1] The event was won by Kenny Harrison of the United States, the nation's second consecutive and sixth overall victory in the men's triple jump. Jonathan Edwards's silver was Great Britain's first medal in the event since 1984; Yoelbi Quesada's bronze was Cuba's first men's triple jump medal ever.

Men's triple jump
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
Pictogram for athletics
VenueCentennial Olympic Stadium
Date26 July 1996 (qualifications)
27 July 1996 (finals)
Competitors43 from 32 nations
Winning distance18.09 OR
Medalists
Kenny Harrison
 United States
Jonathan Edwards
 Great Britain
Yoelbi Quesada
 Cuba

Summary

Coming into the competition, Jonathan Edwards was the only man to have jumped 18 metres, from his remarkable back to back world records at the world championships a year earlier and backing it up with another 18 metre jump in London a few weeks later. At age 30, he was the youngest of the major contenders; defending champion Mike Conley was already 33, and former world champion Kenny Harrison was 31 and coming back from a serious knee injury. Edwards did not look that good in qualifying, unable to make the automatic qualifying mark in two attempts, while Harrison, Conley, Yoelbi Quesada, Brian Wellman and Galin Georgiev did.

In the final, on his first attempt Edwards looked a lot better, his first attempt landing well past the 18 metre mark and approaching his world record. Exiting the pit, he saw the red flag. A few jumpers later, Harrison became the second best jumper in history with a 17.99, adding more than a foot to the Olympic record. On his second attempt, Edwards put another jump deep into the pit and again saw the red flag. Now Edwards was faced with the prospect of getting nothing if he could not land his next jump in the top eight. His next time down the runway was much more careful and controlled, making a far less secure 17.13, which at the moment put him in third place, but was well within the ability of most of the jumpers who followed him in the order. Again following Edwards, Harrison jumped 18.09 m (59 ft 4 in) to become the second man over 18 metres. More impressive, it was into a -0.4 mp/s wind, which remains the longest jump ever into a negative wind. Edwards survived in third behind Quesada. On his next jump he was able to let loose and hit 17.88, an outstanding jump for anybody else in any other competition, but that left him 21 cm behind in second place. In the same round Quesada improved to 17.44 and Conley to 17.40. On his fifth attempt, Edwards soared to within inches of the world record marker, but got another red flag. Having earned the last jump, Harrison passed to rest for one final attempt, if needed. On his final attempt Edwards boomed another one close to the world record, but the red flag ended his evening with Harrison taking the gold. Neither Quesada or Conley improved their position in their last jumps, also fouling both attempts, so Quesada held on to bronze.

Background

This was the 23rd appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The returning finalists from the 1992 Games were gold medalist Mike Conley Sr. of the United States, bronze medalist Frank Rutherford of the Bahamas, fifth-place finisher Brian Wellman of Bermuda, sixth-place finisher Yoelbi Quesada of Cuba, eighth-place finisher Zou Sixin of China, ninth-place finisher Vasiliy Sokov of the Unified Team (now representing Russia), and tenth-place finisher Māris Bružiks of Latvia (who did not start in Atlanta). Jonathan Edwards of Great Britain was the world champion and world record holder, the only man yet to jump over 18 metres. Americans Conley and Kenny Harrison and Cubans Quesada and Aliecer Urrutia joined Edwards in the top tier of contenders.[2]

Armenia, Azerbaijan, Dominica, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Lithuania, Russia, Tunisia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan each made their first appearance in the event. The United States competed for the 22nd time, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format

The competition used the two-round format introduced in 1936. In the qualifying round, each jumper received three attempts to reach the qualifying distance of 17.00 metres; if fewer than 12 men did so, the top 12 (including all those tied) would advance. In the final round, each athlete had three jumps; the top eight received an additional three jumps, with the best of the six to count.[2][3]

Records

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

World record Jonathan Edwards (GBR)18.29Gothenburg, Sweden7 August 1995
Olympic record Mike Conley Sr. (USA)17.63Barcelona, Spain3 August 1992

Kenny Harrison jumped 17.99 metres in the first round of the final, breaking the Olympic record. He extended his new record further with his fourth jump, reaching 18.09 metres. Jonathan Edwards also beat the old Olympic record, though his 17.88 metres came after Harrison's first effort.

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Friday, 26 July 199618:10Qualifying
Saturday, 27 July 199619:00Final

Results

Qualifying

RankAthleteNation123DistanceNotes
1Kenny Harrison United States17.5817.58Q
2Mike Conley Sr. United States17.2017.20Q
3Yoelbi Quesada Cuba17.1917.19Q
4Brian Wellman Bermuda17.1017.10Q
5Galin Georgiev Bulgaria17.0217.02Q
6Jonathan Edwards Great Britain16.9316.9616.96q
7Robert Howard United States16.8316.7616.9216.92q
8Volodymyr Kravchenko Ukraine16.7116.90X16.90q
9Viktor Sotnikov Russia16.86X16.1916.86q
10Jérôme Romain Dominica16.80XX16.80q
11Armen Martirosyan Armenia15.7116.6816.7416.74q
12Frank Rutherford BahamasX16.3816.7316.73q
13Francis Agyepong Great Britain16.7116.68X16.71
14Charles Friedek GermanyX16.7116.5816.71
15Aliecer Urrutia Cuba16.7116.54X16.71
16Vasiliy Sokov RussiaX16.68X16.68
17Rogel Nachum Israel15.8616.6716.5316.67
18Anísio Silva Brazil16.3816.6716.0816.67
19Carlos Calado Portugal16.4316.65X16.65
20Yoel García Cuba15.94X16.6216.62
21Zou Sixin China16.1316.4416.5316.53
22Messias José Baptista Brazil16.0216.4516.1316.45
23Audrius Raizgys Lithuania16.38X16.0616.38
24Zsolt Czingler Hungary16.2216.35X16.35
25Salem Al-Ahmadi Saudi ArabiaX15.9716.3016.30
26Francis Dodoo GhanaXX16.2416.24
27Vasif Asadov AzerbaijanXX16.2116.21
28Jacob Katonon Kenya16.0816.17X16.17
29Stoyko Tsonov Bulgaria16.0016.15X16.15
30Sigurd Njerve Norway15.22X16.1516.15
31Aleksey Fatyanov Azerbaijan16.14X16.1316.14
32Igor Sautkin RussiaXX16.0616.06
33Tibor Ordina Hungary16.04XX16.04
34Andrew Murphy Australia15.97X16.0016.00
35Festus Igbinoghene Nigeria15.95X15.7215.95
36Sergey Arzamasov Kazakhstan15.91X15.91
37Maksim Smetanin Kyrgyzstan15.8315.90X15.90
38Yevgeniy Petin UzbekistanX15.5815.8915.89
39Paul Nioze Seychelles15.6315.43X15.63
40Kawan Lovelace Belize15.40X14.9715.40
41Hussain Jasim Iraq15.1915.27X15.27
42Ndabazinhle Mdhlongwa Zimbabwe14.47XX14.47
43Karim Sassi TunisiaXX14.2514.25
Māris Bružiks LatviaDNS

Final

RankAthleteNation123456DistanceNotes
Kenny Harrison United States17.99 ORX18.09 ORX18.09OR
Jonathan Edwards Great BritainXX17.1317.88XX17.88
Yoelbi Quesada Cuba17.0417.29X17.44XX17.44
4Mike Conley Sr. United States17.08X16.1717.40XX17.40
5Armen Martirosyan Armenia16.85X16.9716.48X16.3416.97
6Brian Wellman Bermuda16.95X16.82XXX16.95
7Galin Georgiev Bulgaria16.85XXXX16.9216.92
8Robert Howard United States16.7216.8316.90X16.4416.5216.90
9Viktor Sotnikov Russia16.8416.5316.56Did not advance16.84
10Volodymyr Kravchenko Ukraine16.3515.9216.62Did not advance16.62
11Frank Rutherford Bahamas16.38X16.36Did not advance16.38
Jérôme Romain DominicaXDid not advanceNo mark

See also

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1996 Atlanta Summer Games: Men's Triple Jump". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 25 December 2017.
  2. "Triple Jump, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 91.
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