Athletics at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The men's marathon at the 2008 Summer Olympics took place on 24 August at 7:30am in Beijing, ending in the Beijing National Stadium.[1] Ninety-five athletes from 56 nations competed.[2] The winner of the event was Samuel Wanjiru of Kenya, who set an Olympic record in the time of two hours, six minutes, and 32 seconds.[3] It was Kenya's first victory in the men's marathon. Morocco won its first medal in the event since 1960, with Jaouad Gharib's silver. Tsegay Kebede of Ethiopia took bronze.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
Samuel Wanjiru
VenueBeijing
DatesAugust 24
Competitors95 from 56 nations
Winning time2:06:32 OR
Medalists
Samuel Wanjiru
 Kenya
Jaouad Gharib
 Morocco
Tsegay Kebede
 Ethiopia

Summary

It began in the early morning instead of the traditional late at night start. Through 10k, a group of 8 was at front. They were all broken down to five at 20k. At the front was Eritrean Yonas Kifle, Ethiopian Deriba Merga, Kenya's Martin Lel and Sammy Wanjiru, and Moroccan Jaouad Gharib. over the next 10k Deriba Merga started to press the pace, dropping Lel and Kifle. Just after 30k, Sammy Wanjiru attacked Deriba Merga who would crack and fade out of the medals. Sammy Wanjiru continued to sustain his gap back to Gharib. Gharib slowly reeled the deficit back but Wanjiru won the gold medal in an Olympic record 2:06:32. Gharib got silver, and Tsegaye Kebede pulled himself into third to take the bronze.

Background

This was the 26th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The defending champion, Stefano Baldini of Italy, was the only returning runner from the top ten finishers in the 2004 marathon. The reigning champion (from 2007) was Luke Kibet Bowen of Kenya; he had been injured during rioting in Kenya and had not yet regained top form, but did entered as an injury replacement. Jaouad Gharib of Morocco had won the 2003 and 2005 world championships; he competed in Beijing. The favorite would have been well-established 10,000 metres runner Haile Gebrselassie of Ethiopia, who had started competing in marathons in 2005 and broken the world record at the 2007 Berlin race; Gebrselassie did not run in Beijing due to air quality concerns. The race was thus "wide open."[2]

Eritrea, Kazakhstan, and Montenegro each made their first appearance in Olympic men's marathons. The United States made its 25th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) was able to enter up to three entrants providing they had met the A qualifying standard (2:15:00) in the qualifying period (1 January 2007 to 23 July 2008). NOCs were also permitted to enter one athlete providing he had met the B standard (2:18:00) in the same qualifying period.[4] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress.

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.[2]

Records

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

World record Haile Gebrselassie (ETH)2:04:26Berlin, Germany28 September 2007
Olympic record Carlos Lopes (POR)2:09:21Los Angeles, United States12 August 1984

Samuel Wanjiru set a new Olympic record at 2:06:32.

Schedule

All times are China Standard Time (UTC+8)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 24 August 20087:30Final

Results

Seventy-six runners finished; 19 did not.[5]

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Samuel Wanjiru Kenya2:06:32OR
Jaouad Gharib Morocco2:07:16
Tsegay Kebede Ethiopia2:10:00
4Deriba Merga Ethiopia2:10:21
5Martin Lel Kenya2:10:24
6Viktor Röthlin Switzerland2:10:35
7Gashaw Asfaw Ethiopia2:10:52
8Yared Asmerom Eritrea2:11:11
9Dathan Ritzenhein United States2:11:59
10Ryan Hall United States2:12:33
11Mike Fokoroni Zimbabwe2:13:17PB
12Stefano Baldini Italy2:13:25
13Tsuyoshi Ogata Japan2:13:26SB
14Grigoriy Andreyev Russia2:13:33
15Ruggero Pertile Italy2:13:39
16José Manuel Martínez Spain2:14:00
17Francis Kirwa Finland2:14:22
18Lee Myong-Seung South Korea2:14:37
19Janne Holmén Finland2:14:44
20Abderrahim Goumri Morocco2:15:00
21Aleksey Sokolov Russia2:15:57
22Brian Sell United States2:16:07
23Ottaviano Andriani Italy2:16:10
24Dan Robinson Great Britain2:16:14
25Deng Haiyang China2:16:17
26Abderrahime Bouramdane Morocco2:17:42
27Vasyl Matviychuk Ukraine2:17:50
28Lee Bong-Ju South Korea2:17:56
29Oleg Kulkov Russia2:18:11
30Paulo Gomes Portugal2:18:15
31Alex Malinga Uganda2:18:26
32Carlos Cordero Mexico2:18:40
33Ri Kum-Song North Korea2:19:08
34Henryk Szost Poland2:19:43
35José Amado García Guatemala2:20:15
36Yonas Kifle Eritrea2:20:23
37Nasar Sakar Saeed Bahrain2:20:24
38José de Souza Brazil2:20:25
39Kamiel Maase Netherlands2:20:30
40Pak Song-Chol North Korea2:21:16
41Iaroslav Musinschi Moldova2:21:18
42Kim Il-Nam North Korea2:21:51
43Juan Carlos Cardona Colombia2:21:57
44Hendrick Ramaala South Africa2:22:43
45Arjun Kumar Basnet Nepal2:23:09PB
46Hélder Ornelas Portugal2:23:20
47Procopio Franco Mexico2:23:24
48Nelson Cruz Cape Verde2:23:47
49Roberto Echeverría Chile2:23:54
50Kim Yi-Yong South Korea2:23:57
51Li Zhuhong China2:24:08
52Bat-Ochiryn Ser-Od Mongolia2:24:19
53Norman Dlomo South Africa2:24:28
54Arkadiusz Sowa Poland2:24:48
55Samson Ramadhani Tanzania2:25:03
56Ndabili Bashingili Botswana2:25:11
57Simon Munyutu France2:25:50
58Antoni Bernadó Andorra2:26:29
59Wu Wen-Chien Chinese Taipei2:26:55
60Lee Troop Australia2:27:17
61Constantino León Peru2:28:04
62Goran Stojiljković Montenegro2:28:14
63Alfredo Arévalo Guatemala2:28:26
64Yousf Othman Qader Qatar2:28:40
65Franklin Tenorio Ecuador2:29:05
66Francisco Bautista Mexico2:29:28
67Roman Kejžar Slovenia2:29:37
68Joachim Nshimirimana Burundi2:29:55
69Seteng Ayele Israel2:30:07
70Takhir Mamashayev Kazakhstan2:30:26
71Abdil Ceylan Turkey2:31:43
72José Ríos Spain2:32:35
73Hem Bunting Cambodia2:33:32
74Marcel Tschopp Liechtenstein2:35:06
75Pavel Loskutov Estonia2:39:01
76Atsushi Sato Japan2:41:08
Tesfayohannes Mesfen EritreaDNFAfter 35 km
Julio Rey SpainDNFAfter 35 km
Martin Fagan IrelandDNFAfter 30 km
Al Mustafa Riyadh BahrainDNFAfter 30 km
Ali Mabrouk El Zaidi LibyaDNFAfter 30 km
Marilson dos Santos BrazilDNFAfter 30 km
Luke Kibet Bowen[lower-alpha 1] KenyaDNFAfter 25 km
Abdulhak Elgorche Zakaria BahrainDNFAfter 25 km
Luis Fonseca VenezuelaDNFAfter 25 km
Oleksandr Sitkovskyy UkraineDNFAfter half
Franck de Almeida BrazilDNFAfter half
Andrei Gordeev BelarusDNFAfter half
João N'Tyamba AngolaDNFAfter half
Moses Moeketsi Mosuhli LesothoDNFAfter 20 km
Getuli Bayo TanzaniaDNFAfter 20 km
Mubarak Hassan Shami QatarDNFAfter 15 km
Simon Tsotang Maine LesothoDNFAfter 10 km
Clement Mabothile Lebopo LesothoDNFAfter 5 km
Olexandr Kuzin UkraineDNFAfter 0 km
Mohamed Ikoki Msandeki TanzaniaDNS
Satoshi Osaki JapanDNS
Augusto Soares East TimorDNS

Intermediates

DistanceAthleteNationTime
10 km1. José Manuel Martínez Spain29:25
2. Deriba Merga Ethiopias.t.
3. Martin Lel Kenyas.t.
4. Yared Asmerom Eritreas.t.
5. Yonas Kifle Eritrea+0:01
20 km1. Deriba Merga Ethiopia59:10
2. Yonas Kifle Eritreas.t.
3. Martin Lel Kenyas.t.
4. Jaouad Gharib Moroccos.t.
5. Samuel Kamau Wanjiru Kenyas.t.
30 km1. Deriba Merga Ethiopia1:29:14
2. Samuel Kamau Wanjiru Kenyas.t.
3. Jaouad Gharib Morocco+0:04
4. Martin Lel Kenya+0:09
5. Yonas Kifle Eritrea+0:15
40 km1. Samuel Kamau Wanjiru Kenya1:59:54
2. Jaouad Gharib Morocco+0:18
3. Deriba Merga Ethiopia+1:57
4. Tsegay Kebede Ethiopia+2:43
5. Martin Lel Kenya+3:04

s.t. - same time.

References

  1. "Olympic Athletics Competition Schedule". IAAF. Archived from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  2. "Marathon, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  3. "Kenyan wins marathon gold". Associated Press via Sportsnet.ca. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  4. "Entry Standards - The XXIX Olympic Games - Beijing, China - 8/24 August 2008". IAAF. Archived from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-08-27. Retrieved 2008-08-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. Athletics at the 2008 Beijing Summer Games: Men's Marathon. Sports Reference. Retrieved 2020-04-13.
  7. Luke Kibet. Association of Road Racing Statisticians. Retrieved 2020-04-13.
  8. Kenyan marathon star to replace injured Cheruiyot at Olympics. China Olympics (2008-08-17). Retrieved 2020-04-13.
  9. Olympics Day 16 Athletics. Zimbio. Retrieved 2020-04-13.
Notes
  1. Note that some sources, such as Sports Reference and the Association of Road Racing Statisticians, suggest that the Kenyan competitor Luke Kibet was Luke Kibet Chebii (born 1973) rather than Luke Kibet Bowen (born 1983).[6][7] This is incorrect, as it was the younger, reigning world champion who was called from the reserve pool to compete and was clearly visible at the race.[8][9]


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