The men's 1500 metres was an event at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, with the final held on Saturday, December 1, 1956.[1] There were a total number of 37 participants from 22 nations. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Ron Delany of Ireland, the nation's first 1500 metres medal. The silver medalist was Klaus Richtzenhain, the only medalist in the event for the United Team of Germany. John Landy took bronze, Australia's first medal in the event since 1896.
Men's 1500 metres at the Games of the XVI Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Melbourne Cricket Ground | |||||||||
Dates | November 29 (semifinals) December 1 (final) | |||||||||
Competitors | 37 from 22 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 3:41.2 OR | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Summary
editAmong the non-qualifiers for the final were defending champion Josy Barthel, future silver medalist Michel Jazy and eventual marathon champion Mamo Wolde.
The final had twelve men toe the line. Uniquely, Murray Halberg used a sprinter's crouched start in lane 1 and sprinted into the lead from the gun. In future years, this kind of start would become forbidden in a long race. Halberg held that lead until there were two laps to go where he was passed in a rush by Mervyn Lincoln running in front of a home crowd. Lincoln held the lead until just after the bell when he was swallowed up by a rush led by Brian Hewson. Ten men went around Lincoln and he was cooked. Klaus Richtzenhain was the next to follow with Halberg making one more rush down the backstretch before he too was cooked. From tenth place, Ron Delany began picking off runners on the backstretch, as Halberg slowed, Delany used the traffic to step into fifth place at the start of the final turn. Passing in lane 2, Delany ran around the field, catching Hewson at the head of the straightaway. Hewson looked helplessly at Delany as he passed. Fighting out of the group Delany passed at the start of the turn, another home town favorite John Landy chased from behind, still in sixth at the head of the straight. With a stiff, upright sprinting style, Delany pulled away from the field. Hewson struggled down the final straight, watching Richtzenhain run past on the outside. Landy made a late final charge in lane 3 but just came up short in trying to catch Richtzenhain for silver.
Background
editThis was the 13th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Two finalists from the 1952 Games returned: gold medalist Josy Barthel of Luxembourg and eighth-place finisher Ingvar Ericsson of Sweden. The world record had changed hands six times since the 1952 Games; three of the men who had had it but were surpassed (László Tábori of Hungary, John Landy of Australia, and Gunnar Nielsen of Denmark) competed in Melbourne, along with the man who still held it (István Rózsavölgyi of Hungary). Five men had run a sub-four minute mile; the first to do so (Roger Bannister of Great Britain, who had finished fourth in this event in 1952) had retired, but three of those men (Tábori, Landy, and Brian Hewson, also of Great Britain) competed.[2]
Ethiopia and Pakistan each made their first appearance in the event; Germany competed as the United Team of Germany for the first time. The United States made its 13th appearance, the only nation to have competed in the men's 1500 metres at each Games to that point.
Competition format
editAfter a one-Games stint at three rounds in 1952, the 1956 competition returned to two rounds. There were three heats with 15 runners each (before withdrawals), with the top four runners in each advancing to the typical 12-man final race.[2][3]
Records
editThese were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1956 Summer Olympics.
World record | István Rózsavölgyi (HUN) | 3:40.6 | Tata, Hungary | 3 August 1956 |
Olympic record | Josy Barthel (LUX) | 3:45.2 | Helsinki, Finland | 26 July 1952 |
During the final, Ron Delany set a new Olympic record at 3:41.2. The top ten men in the final all surpassed the old Olympic record; the eleventh man matched it.
Schedule
editAll times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Thursday, 29 November 1956 | 16:30 | Semifinals |
Saturday, 1 December 1956 | 16:15 | Final |
Results
editSemifinals
editSemifinal 1
editRank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Klaus Richtzenhain | United Team of Germany | 3:46.6 | Q |
2 | Stanislav Jungwirth | Czechoslovakia | 3:46.6 | Q |
3 | Ian Boyd | Great Britain | 3:47.0 | Q |
4 | Murray Halberg | New Zealand | 3:47:2 | Q |
5 | István Rozsavolgyi | Hungary | 3:49:4 | |
6 | André Ballieux | Belgium | 3:49:8 | |
7 | Michel Jazy | France | 3:50:0 | |
8 | Ted Wheeler | United States | 3:50:1 | |
9 | Jonas Pipynė | Soviet Union | 3:50:6 | |
10 | Josy Barthel | Luxembourg | 3:50:6 | |
11 | Mamo Wolde | Ethiopia | 3:51:0 | |
— | Jim Bailey | Australia | DNS | |
Phol Jaiswang | Thailand | DNS | ||
Dimitrios Konstantinidis | Greece | DNS | ||
Joseph Narmath | Liberia | DNS |
Semifinal 2
editRank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mervyn Lincoln | Australia | 3:45:4 | Q |
2 | Kenneth Wood | Great Britain | 3:46:6 | Q |
3 | Ron Delany | Ireland | 3:47.4 | Q |
4 | Laszlo Tabori | Hungary | 3:48.0 | Q |
5 | Ingvar Ericsson | Sweden | 3:49:0 | |
6 | Yevgeny Sokolov | Soviet Union | 3:49:2 | |
7 | Evangelos Depastas | Greece | 3:52:0 | |
8 | Olavi Salsola | Finland | 3:55:0 | |
9 | Günther Dohrow | United Team of Germany | 3:58:0 | |
10 | Ramón Sandoval | Chile | 3:58:1 | |
11 | Donald Bowden | United States | 3:59.7 | |
12 | Emile Leva | Belgium | 4:06:0 | |
13 | Sank Ok-Sim | South Korea | 4:09.0 | |
14 | Mahmoud Jan | Pakistan | 4:15:0 | |
15 | Somnuek Srisombat | Thailand | 4:30:0 |
Semifinal 3
editRank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Neville Scott | New Zealand | 3:48:0 | Q |
2 | Brian Hewson | Great Britain | 3:48:0 | Q |
3 | John Landy | Australia | 3:48.6 | Q |
4 | Gunnar Nielsen | Denmark | 3:48.6 | Q |
5 | Dan Waern | Sweden | 3:48:8 | |
6 | Gianfranco Baraldi | Italy | 3:52:0 | |
7 | Sergey Soukhanov | Soviet Union | 3:53:0 | |
8 | Jerome Walters | United States | 3:55:7 | |
9 | Georgios Papavassiliou | Greece | 3:57:0 | |
10 | Eduardo Fontecilla | Chile | 3:58:6 | |
— | Siegfried Herrmann | United Team of Germany | DNF | |
— | Muhammad Anwar | Pakistan | DNS | |
Audun Boysen | Norway | DNS | ||
George Johnson | Liberia | DNS | ||
Veliša Mugoša | Yugoslavia | DNS |
Overall results for semifinals
editFinal
editRank | Athlete | Nation | Time | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ron Delany | Ireland | 3:41.2 | OR | |
Klaus Richtzenhain | United Team of Germany | 3:42.0 | ||
John Landy | Australia | 3:42.0 | ||
4 | Laszlo Tabori | Hungary | 3:42.4 | |
5 | Brian Hewson | Great Britain | 3:42.6 | |
6 | Stanislav Jungwirth | Czechoslovakia | 3:42.6 | |
7 | Neville Scott | New Zealand | 3:42.8 | |
8 | Ian Boyd | Great Britain | 3:43.0 | |
9 | Kenneth Wood | Great Britain | 3:44.3 | |
10 | Gunnar Nielsen | Denmark | 3:45.0 | |
11 | Murray Halberg | New Zealand | 3:45.2 | |
12 | Mervyn Lincoln | Australia | 3:51.9 |
References
edit- ^ "Athletics at the 1956 Melbourne Games: Men's 1500 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
- ^ a b "1500 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
- ^ Official Report, p. 294.
External links
edit- "Official Report" (PDF). 1958. p. 296. Retrieved 2 April 2017.
- Results