Athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's 400 metres

The men's 400 metres event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place between 12 and 14 August at the Olympic Stadium.[1] Fifty-three athletes from 35 nations competed.[2] The event was won by Wayde van Niekerk of South Africa, the nation's second gold medal in the men's 400 metres (after Bevil Rudd in 1920). Kirani James of Grenada and LaShawn Merritt of the United States became the sixth and seventh men to win two medals in the event, but Michael Johnson remained the only man with two gold medals.

Men's 400 metres
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Interior view of the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange, where the Men's 400m took place.
VenueOlympic Stadium
Dates12 August 2016
(Heats)
13 August 2016
(semi-final)
14 August 2016
(final)
Competitors53 from 35 nations
Winning time43.03 WR
Medalists
Wayde van Niekerk  South Africa
Kirani James  Grenada
LaShawn Merritt  United States

Summary

Kirani James was the Olympic champion in 2012 and was in good form before the competition with a run of 44.08 seconds placing him second on the global rankings. The 2008 Olympic champion LaShawn Merritt topped the lists for the season as the only man under 44 seconds. Wayde van Niekerk ranked third and was the 2015 World Championships winner. At that competition the trio had all run under 44 seconds for medals (a first for the sport) and were the principal challengers to the Olympic title. Two younger athletes, Baboloki Thebe and Machel Cedenio, were the next fastest athletes to enter.[3][4] James was the fastest in the first round with 44.93 and Cedenio was the other heat winner under 45 seconds. The 2016 World Indoor Champion Pavel Maslák, David Verburg and Rafał Omelko qualified as fastest losers. Former European champions Martyn Rooney and Kevin Borlée were eliminated.[5]

In the semi-finals, James had a season's best time of 44.02 to win the round nearly two tenths ahead of Merritt. Cedenio won the 2nd semi final ahead with van Niekerk second. Bralon Taplin won the third semi final. Fastest loser qualifiers Karabo Sibanda, Matthew Hudson-Smith and Ali Khamis all set personal bests.[6]

In the final, the three favorites James, van Niekerk and Merritt led from the start. By the end of the turn, van Niekerk had a clear 2 metre lead, Merritt just slightly ahead of James who had closed the gap during the turn. Cedenio was another four metres back, with Taplin another metre back. In the home straight van Niekerk increased his lead while James overtook Merritt, finishing second and third. Cedenio was fourth, Taplin faded, and in lane 1, 18-year-old Karabo Sibanda finished fifth.

Van Niekerk set a new world record of 43.03 seconds, beating Michael Johnson’s previous record set at the 1999 World Championships by 0.15 seconds.[7] Johnson was in the stadium, working in the British commentary booth.[8]

Cedenio set the national record for Trinidad and Tobago and Ali Khamis in sixth set the national record for Bahrain.

Background

This was the 28th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The top six finishers from 2012 (in order: Kirani James of Grenada, Luguelín Santos of the Dominican Republic, Lalonde Gordon of Trinidad and Tobago, Chris Brown of the Bahamas, and Kevin Borlée and Jonathan Borlée of Belgium) returned. LaShawn Merritt of the United States, 2008 gold medalist who was injured and could not finish his heat in 2012, also returned. A new challenger was Wayde van Niekerk of South Africa. James (2011), Merritt (2013), and van Niekerk (2015) were the latest three world champions.[2]

Bahrain and Niger appeared in this event for the first time. Also competing was one member of the Refugee Olympic Team. The United States made its 27th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could enter up to 3 qualified athletes in the men's 200 metres event if all athletes meet the entry standard during the qualifying period. (The limit of 3 has been in place since the 1930 Olympic Congress.) The qualifying standard was 45.40 seconds. The qualifying period was from 1 May 2015 to 11 July 2016. The qualifying time standards could be obtained in various meets during the given period that have the approval of the IAAF. Indoor and outdoor meets were accepted. NOCs could also use their universality place—each NOC could enter one male athlete regardless of time if they had no male athletes meeting the entry standard for an athletics event—in the 400 metres.[9][10]

Competition format

The competition used the three-round format introduced in 2004. The "fastest loser" system, introduced in 1964, was used for the first round and semifinals. There were 7 first-round heats, each with 7 or 8 runners. The top three runners in each heat advanced, along with the next three fastest overall. The 24 semifinalists were divided into 3 heats of 8 runners each. The top two runners in each semifinal heat and the next two fastest overall advanced, making an eight-man final.[11][2]

Records

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

World record Michael Johnson (USA)43.18Seville, Spain26 August 1999
Olympic record Michael Johnson (USA)43.49Atlanta, United States29 July 1996
Area
Time (s) Athlete Nation
Africa (records)43.48Wayde van Niekerk South Africa
Asia (records)43.93Yousef Ahmed Masrahi Saudi Arabia
Europe (records)44.33Thomas Schönlebe East Germany
North, Central America
and Caribbean
(records)
43.18Michael Johnson United States
Oceania (records)44.38Darren Clark Australia
South America (records)44.29Sanderlei Parrela Brazil

The following new world, Olympic and African record were established during this competition:

DateEventAthleteTimeWRORAR
14 AugustFinal Wayde Van Niekerk (RSA)43.03WRORAR

The following national records were established during the competition:

CountryAthleteRoundTimeNotes
Slovenia Luka Janežič (SLO)Semifinals45.07
Bahrain Ali Khamis (BRN)Semifinals44.49
South Africa Wayde van Niekerk (RSA)Final43.03WR, OR, AR
Trinidad and Tobago Machel Cedenio (TTO)Final44.01
Bahrain Ali Khamis (BRN)Final44.36

Schedule

All times are Brasília Standard Time (UTC-3)

Date Time Round
Friday, 12 August 201621:00Round 1
Saturday, 13 August 201620:30Semifinals
Sunday, 14 August 201622:00Final

Results

Round 1

[12]

Qualification rule: first 3 of each heat (Q) plus the 3 fastest times (q) qualified.

Heat 1

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
12Machel Cedenio Trinidad and Tobago0.17944.98Q
27Gil Roberts United States0.16845.27Q
34Yoandys Lescay Cuba0.19945.36Q, SB
46Fitzroy Dunkley Jamaica0.17645.66
53Kevin Borlée Belgium0.13845.90
65Alberth Bravo Venezuela0.20546.15
71Alex Lerionka Sampao Kenya0.19946.62
88Ousseini Djibo Idrissa Niger0.17350.06

Heat 2

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
14Bralon Taplin Grenada0.16245.15Q
22Nery Brenes Costa Rica0.15145.53Q
37Karabo Sibanda Botswana0.16645.56Q
41Matteo Galvan Italy0.15446.07
53Raymond Kibet Kenya0.23446.15
66Mehboob Ali Pakistan0.21248.37
78Bachir Mahamat Chad0.18848.59
5Anas Beshr Egypt0.141DQR163.3a

Heat 3

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
17Wayde van Niekerk South Africa0.14745.26Q
22Luguelín Santos Dominican Republic0.14845.61Q
38Javon Francis Jamaica0.17245.88Q
46Jonathan Borlée Belgium0.16246.01
53Alphas Kishoyian Kenya0.14746.74
65Brandon Valentine-Parris Saint Vincent and the Grenadines0.14447.62
4Alonzo Russell Bahamas0.159DQR163.3a

Heat 4

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
15Lalonde Gordon Trinidad and Tobago0.15345.24Q
24Luka Janežič Slovenia0.14845.33Q
36Baboloki Thebe Botswana0.15545.41Q
41Chris Brown Bahamas0.14745.56SB
52Martyn Rooney Great Britain0.15445.60
67Julian Jrummi Walsh Japan0.14946.37
78Gustavo Cuesta Dominican Republic0.14346.92
83James Chiengjiek Refugee Olympic Team0.21352.89

Heat 5

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
18LaShawn Merritt United States0.23545.28Q
23Abdelalelah Haroun Qatar0.19045.76Q
36Isaac Makwala Botswana0.24245.91Q
42Vitaliy Butrym Ukraine0.16645.92
54Donald Blair-Sanford Israel0.16346.06
65Deon Lendore Trinidad and Tobago0.20146.15
77Hederson Estefani Brazil0.23446.68

Heat 6

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
16Kirani James Grenada0.15644.93Q
25Rusheen McDonald Jamaica0.17945.22Q, SB
32Matthew Hudson-Smith Great Britain0.14245.26Q
43David Verburg United States0.16745.48q
57Winston George Guyana0.18645.77
68Diego Palomeque Colombia0.15946.48
4Abbas Abubakar Abbas Bahrain0.192DQR163.3a

Heat 7

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
17Ali Khamis Bahrain0.16145.12Q
21Steven Gardiner Bahamas0.14945.24Q
38Liemarvin Bonevacia Netherlands0.14245.49Q
45Rafał Omelko Poland0.17745.54q
54Pavel Maslák Czech Republic0.18345.54q
66Mohammad Anas India0.15845.95
72Orukpe Erayokan Nigeria0.18047.42SB
83Yuzo Kanemaru Japan0.14448.38

Semifinal 1

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
14Kirani James Grenada0.14444.02Q, SB
26LaShawn Merritt United States0.27144.21Q
32Karabo Sibanda Botswana0.17444.47q, PB
47Luguelín Santos Dominican Republic0.15544.71SB
51Javon Francis Jamaica0.17044.96
65Nery Brenes Costa Rica0.18145.02
78Liemarvin Bonevacia Netherlands0.16645.03SB
83Lalonde Gordon Trinidad and Tobago0.15745.13

Semifinal 2

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
15Machel Cedenio Trinidad and Tobago0.24344.39Q
23Wayde van Niekerk South Africa0.15644.45Q
32Pavel Maslák Czech Republic0.18545.06SB
46Luka Janežič Slovenia0.15445.07NR
51David Verburg United States0.15945.61
64Rusheen McDonald Jamaica0.18246.12
77Abdelalelah Haroun Qatar0.17346.66
8Baboloki Thebe BotswanaDNS

Semifinal 3

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
16Bralon Taplin Grenada0.17144.44Q
28Matthew Hudson-Smith Great Britain0.14344.48Q, PB
33Ali Khamis Bahrain0.14544.49q, NR
44Gil Roberts United States0.15144.65SB
55Steven Gardiner Bahamas0.15644.72
67Yoandys Lescay Cuba0.21645.00PB
72Rafał Omelko Poland0.16445.28
81Isaac Makwala Botswana0.17346.60

Final

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
8Wayde van Niekerk South Africa0.18143.03WR
6Kirani James Grenada0.13443.76SB
5LaShawn Merritt United States0.20443.85SB
43Machel Cedenio Trinidad and Tobago0.20344.01NR
51Karabo Sibanda Botswana0.16444.25PB
62Ali Khamis Bahrain0.14844.36NR
74Bralon Taplin Grenada0.18144.45
87Matthew Hudson-Smith Great Britain0.13844.61

References

  1. "Men's 400m". Rio 2016 Organisation. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  2. "400 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
  3. Minshull, Phil (2016-08-10). Preview: men's 400m – Rio 2016 Olympic Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-12.
  4. senior outdoor 2016 400 Metres men. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-12.
  5. Minshull, Phil (2016-08-13). Report: men's 400m heats – Rio 2016 Olympic Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-13.
  6. Minshull, Phli (2016-08-14). Report: men's 400m semi-finals – Rio 2016 Olympic Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-14.
  7. South African beats Michael Johnson’s 17-year-old 400m world record for gold
  8. "Wayde van Niekerk smashes Michael Johnson's record to claim 400m gold". Guardian. 15 August 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  9. "IAAF approves entry standards for Rio 2016 Olympic Games". Athletics Weekly. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  10. "Qualification System – Games of the XXXI Olympiad – Athletics". IAAF. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  11. Official Report, Results Book for Athletics.
  12. "Start List" (PDF). Olympics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 August 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
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