Fencing at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's foil

The men's foil was one of eight fencing events on the fencing at the 1964 Summer Olympics programme. It was the fourteenth appearance of the event. The competition was held from October 13 to October 14, 1964. 55 fencers from 21 nations competed.[1] Nations had been limited to three fencers each since 1928. The event was won by Egon Franke of Poland, the nation's first victory in the men's foil. France returned to the podium after a one-Games absence, with Jean-Claude Magnan taking silver and Daniel Revenu the bronze.

Men's foil
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
Japanese stamp commemorating 1964 Olympic fencing
VenueWaseda Memorial Hall
DatesOctober 13 14
Competitors55 from 21 nations
Medalists
Egon Franke
 Poland
Jean-Claude Magnan
 France
Daniel Revenu
 France

Background

This was the 14th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1908 (when there was a foil display only rather than a medal event). Five of the eight finalists from 1960 returned: gold medalist Viktor Zhdanovich of the Soviet Union, bronze medalist Albie Axelrod of the United States, fourth-place finisher Witold Woyda of Poland, fifth-place finisher Mark Midler of the Soviet Union, and seventh-place finisher Bill Hoskyns of Great Britain. Jean-Claude Magnan of France was the reigning world champion. The previous two world champions, Ryszard Parulski of Poland and German Sveshnikov, were also competing in Tokyo.[2]

Iran, Malaysia, and South Korea each made their debut in the men's foil. The United States made its 13th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the inaugural 1896 competition.

Competition format

The 1964 tournament introduced a hybrid pool-play and knockout format. The competition began with two rounds of pool play. In each round, the fencers were divided into pools to play a round-robin within the pool. Bouts were to five touches. Barrages were used to break ties necessary for advancement. The competition then shifted to knockout rounds. These rounds used a single-elimination tournament format to reduce the remaining field from 24 to 16, then from 16 to 8, then from 8 to 4. There were also classification semifinals and a fifth-place match for the quarterfinal losers. Bouts in these knockout rounds were to 10 touches. The four quarterfinal winners then resumed pool play once again for the final.

Standard foil rules were used, including that touches had to be made with the tip of the foil, the target area was limited to the torso, and priority determined the winner of double touches.[2][3]

  • Round 1: There were 9 pools of 6 or 7 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each pool advanced to round 2.
  • Round 2: There were 6 pools of 6 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each pool advanced to the knockout rounds.
  • Knockout rounds: The 24 fencers were seeded into a truncated single-elimination tournament. Eight received byes into the round of 16. Three knockout rounds were held, finishing with the quarterfinals.
  • Classification: There were knockout-style classification matches for 5th place (two 5th–8th semifinals and a 5th/6th match).
  • Final: The final pool had 4 fencers.

Schedule

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Date Time Round
Tuesday, 13 October 19648:30Round 1
Round 2
Wednesday, 14 October 1964 
 
 
17:30
17:30
Round of 24
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Classification 5–8
Final

Results

Pool A

The three-way tie for third-place resulted in a barrage in the first pool. After each fencer went 1-1 in the barrage, touches received was used to break the tie. Cohen's 6 gave him the win over McKenzie's 7 and Elkalyoubi's 8; Cohen received third place. The tie-breaker then went back to head-to-head results between the two remaining fencers in the barrage to assign fourth place; Elkalyoubi had defeated McKenzie in their bout (and, incidentally, had defeated him in the main pool as well), so he placed fourth and advanced while McKenzie was eliminated.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Herman Sveshnikov Soviet Union50Q
2Jean Claude Magnan France41Q
3Herbert Cohen United States23B
M. Elkalyoubi Egypt23B
David McKenzie Australia23B
6Hahn Myung Seok South Korea05
Barrage A
RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
3Herbert Cohen United States11Q
4M. Elkalyoubi Egypt11Q
5David McKenzie Australia11

Pool B

The second pool required no barrage; ties within the top four were nominally broken by touches against (15-18 in favor of Sehem in the top two places) and then touches scored (21-18 for Okawa after he and Curletto tied at 18-18 in touches against).

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Mostafa Sehem Egypt41Q
2Ryszard Parulski Poland41Q
3Heisaburō Ōkawa Japan32Q
4Mario Curletto Italy32Q
5Enrique Penabella Cuba14
6Ivan Lund Australia05

Pool C

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Kazuo Mano Japan50Q
2Egon Franke Poland41Q
3Jozsef Gyuricza Hungary32Q
4Allan Jay Great Britain23Q
5Shin Doo Ho South Korea14
6Jesus Taboada Argentina05

Pool D

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Mark Midler Soviet Union50Q
2Julius Brecht United Team of Germany41Q
3Sandor Szabo Hungary32Q
4Nasser Madani Iran23Q
5Emilio Echeverri Colombia14
6Robert Foxcroft Canada05

Pool E

Touches against were 12-16-19 to break the three-way tie for second place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Nicola Granieri Italy50Q
2Daniel Revenu France32Q
3Sameh Abdelrahman Egypt32Q
4Kazuhiko Tabuchi Japan32Q
5John Andru Canada14
6Houshmand Almasi Iran05

Pool F

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Jacky Courtillat France50Q
2Ion Drîmbă Romania41Q
3Henry Hoskyns Great Britain32Q
4Michael Ryan Ireland23Q
5Orlando Nannini Argentina14
6Bijan Zarnegar Iran05

Pool G

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Jeno Kamuti Hungary50Q
2Roland Losert Austria41Q
3Alexander Leckie Great Britain32Q
4Ignacio Posada Colombia23Q
5Edwin Richards United States14
6J. Bouchier-Hayes Ireland05

Pool H

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Ștefan Haukler Romania60Q
2Witold Woyda Poland51Q
3Pasquale la Ragione Italy42Q
4Tim Gerresheim United Team of Germany33Q
5Brian McCowage Australia24
6Didier Tamayo Colombia15
7Ronnie Theseira Malaysia06

Pool I

Touches against were 14-18-20 to break the three-way tie for second and 22-24 to break the two-way tie for fifth.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Tănase Mureșanu Romania41Q
2Albert Axelrod United States32Q
3Dieter Schmitt United Team of Germany32Q
4Victor Zhdanovich Soviet Union32Q
5Kim Man Shik South Korea14
6Adolfo Bisellach Argentina14

Pool A

Touches against were 16-16-19 to break the three-way tie for second into second/third and fourth places, with touches scored 23-22 to separate second and third.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Herman Sveshnikov Soviet Union41Q
2Ion Drîmbă Romania32Q
3Witold Woyda Poland32Q
4Mario Curletto Italy32Q
5Jozsef Gyuricza Hungary23
6Alexander Leckie Great Britain05

Pool B

Touches against broke the tie for second and third, with 14-16. Since the tie for fourth and fifth determined advancement, another bout was fenced. Tabuchi, who had won the main-pool bout, defeated Sehem again in the barrage to win a qualification spot.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Mark Midler Soviet Union50Q
2Henry Hoskyns Great Britain32Q
3Egon Franke Poland32Q
4Mostafa Sehem Egypt23B
Kazuhiko Tabuchi Japan23B
6Michael Ryan Ireland05
Barrage B
RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
4Kazuhiko Tabuchi Japan10Q
5Mostafa Sehem Egypt01

Pool C

The three-way tie for first was broken by touches against (16-18-20), but the three-way tie for fourth required a barrage. Elkalyoubi, fencing in the first two bouts of the barrage, won both to clinch advancement and make a bout between Granieri and Haukler unnecessary. Their main-pool touches against (17-19) decided the fifth and sixth places.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Roland Losert Austria32Q
2Dieter Schmitt United Team of Germany32Q
3Victor Zhdanovich Soviet Union32Q
4M. Elkalyoubi Egypt23B
Nicola Granieri Italy23B
Ștefan Haukler Romania23B
Barrage C
RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
4M. Elkalyoubi Egypt20Q
5Ștefan Haukler Romania01
6Nicola Granieri Italy01

Pool D

A three-way tie for third place required a barrage, with two fencers advancing and the third eliminated. Cohen, who had beaten Muresan but lost to Mano in the main pool, won both of his barrage bouts to take third place. Mano defeated Muresan in the other barrage bout to revenge his loss in the main pool and take fourth, qualifying for the third round.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Tim Gerreshim United Team of Germany50Q
2Daniel Revenu France32Q
3Herbert Cohen United States23B
Kazuo Mano Japan23B
Tănase Mureșanu Romania23B
6Pasquale la Ragione Italy14
Barrage D
RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
3Herbert Cohen United States20Q
4Kazuo Mano Japan11Q
5Tănase Mureșanu Romania02

Pool E

The fifth pool resulted in a four-way tie for third place, out of which two fencers would advance and two would be eliminated. The barrage resulted in two fencers going 2-1 to advance (with Jay's 20-21 edge in main-pool touches against giving him third place) and two going 1-2 (Parulski took fifth with 19 touches against in the main pool to Courtillat's 21) to be knocked out.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Albert Axelrod United States41Q
2Sando Szabor Hungary32Q
3Jacky Courtillat France23B
Allan Jay Great Britain23B
Nasser Madani Iran23B
Ryszard Parulski Poland23B
Barrage E
RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
3Allan Jay Great Britain21Q
4Nasser Madani Iran21Q
5Ryszard Parulski Poland12
6Jacky Courtillat France12

Pool F

Since the three-way tie for second didn't matter for qualification, it was broken by touches against. Magnan's 13 gave him second place, while Brecht and Kamuti were still tied at 17. They maintained their tie even through touches scored at 20, so both received third place in the pool.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesNotes
1Heisaburō Ōkawa Japan41Q
2Jean Claude Magnan France32Q
3Julius Brecht United Team of Germany32Q
Jeno Kamuti Hungary32Q
5Sameh Abdelrahman Egypt23
6Ignacio Posada Colombia05

Knockout rounds

The winner of each group advanced to the final pool, while the runner-up moved into a 5th-place semifinal.

Group 1

 
Round of 24Round of 16Quarterfinals
 
          
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Roland Losert (AUT)10
 
 
 
 Ion Drîmbă (ROU)6
 
 Ion Drîmbă (ROU)10
 
 
 
 Nasser Madani (IRI)4
 
 Roland Losert (AUT)10
 
 
 
 Sandor Szabo (HUN)9
 
 Sandor Szabo (HUN)10
 
 
 
 Dieter Schmitt (EUA)2
 
 Sandor Szabo (HUN)10
 
 
 Mark Midler (URS)8
 
 
 
 

Group 2

 
Round of 24Round of 16Quarterfinals
 
          
 
 
 
 
 Daniel Revenu (FRA)10
 
 
 
 Allan Jay (GBR)2
 
 Daniel Revenu (FRA)10
 
 
 Witold Woyda (POL)6
 
 
 
 
 
 Daniel Revenu (FRA)10
 
 
 Tim Gerresheim (EUA)5
 
 
 
 
 
 Tim Gerresheim (EUA)10
 
 
 
 Kazuo Mano (JPN)4
 
 Kazuo Mano (JPN)10
 
 
 M. Elkalyoubi (EGY)8
 

Group 3

 
Round of 24Round of 16Quarterfinals
 
          
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Jean Claude Magnan (FRA)10
 
 
 
 Okawa Heisaburo (JPN)7
 
 Okawa Heisaburo (JPN)10
 
 
 
 Herbert Cohen (USA)4
 
 Jean Claude Magnan (FRA)10
 
 
 Jeno Kamuti (HUN)7
 
 
 
 
 
 Jeno Kamuti (HUN)10
 
 
 
 Victor Zhdanovich (URS)9
 
 Victor Zhdanovich (URS)10
 
 
 Julius Brecht (EUA)6
 

Group 4

 
Round of 24Round of 16Quarterfinals
 
          
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Egon Franke (POL)10
 
 
 
 Albert Axelrod (USA)9
 
 Albert Axelrod (USA)10
 
 
 
 Tabuchi Kozuhiko (JPN)5
 
 Egon Franke (POL)10
 
 
 
 Henry Hoskyns (GBR)4
 
 Henry Hoskyns (GBR)10
 
 
 
 Mario Curletto (ITA)6
 
 Henry Hoskyns (GBR)10
 
 
 Herman Sveshnikov (URS)8
 
 
 
 

Fifth place classification

 
Fifth place semifinalsFifth place match
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Sandor Szabo (HUN)6
 
 
 
 Tim Gerresheim (EUA)10
 
 Tim Gerresheim (EUA)4
 
 
 
 Jeno Kamuti (HUN)10
 
 Jeno Kamuti (HUN)10
 
 
 Henry Hoskyns (GBR)6
 

Final

RankFencerNationWinsLosses
Egon Franke Poland30
Jean Claude Magnan France21
Daniel Revenu France12
4Roland Losert Austria03

References

  1. "Fencing: 1964 Olympic Results - Men's foil". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 2010-11-14. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
  2. "Foil, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  3. Official Report, p. 282.

Sources

  • Tokyo Organizing Committee (1964). The Games of the XVIII Olympiad: Tokyo 1964, vol. 2.
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