Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's pole vault
The men's pole vault event at the 2000 Summer Olympics as part of the athletics program was held at the Olympic Stadium on Wednesday, 27 September, and Friday, 29 September.[1] Thirty-six athletes from 22 nations competed.[2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Nick Hysong of the United States, the nation's first victory in the event since its 16-Games streak (from 1896 to 1968) ended. The American team also took silver, as Lawrence Johnson finished second. Russia's Maksim Tarasov became the seventh man to win multiple pole vault medals, and the second to do so under two different flags, adding a bronze to his 1992 gold (for the Unified Team).
Men's pole vault at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Stadium Australia | |||||||||
Date | 27 September 2000 (qualifying) 29 September 2000 (final) | |||||||||
Competitors | 36 from 22 nations | |||||||||
Winning height | 5.90 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Summary
editSergey Bubka had been the dominant pole vaulter and world record holder for five Olympic cycles and this was his fourth Olympic appearance, but the Bubka curse continued into a third consecutive Olympics as he failed to clear a height for the second time (it also happened at Barcelona in 1992). Eight men managed to get to 5.90 m (19 ft 4+1⁄4 in), the winning height. Australia's two Russian−born vaulters Viktor Chistiakov and Dmitriy Markov were perfect before their adopted home crowd to that point, along with American Lawrence Johnson. With an earlier miss at 5.50m, Nick Hysong was in fourth place, but his first attempt clearance leapfrogged him into the lead, when the rest of the field failed to match him. Johnson was the only one to make it on his second attempt, putting him in the silver position. 1992 champion Maksim Tarasov entered the height tied for fifth with Okkert Brits with three earlier misses, while Michael Stolle had already taken seven attempts to get over his first three bars. Both Tarasov and Stolle made 5.90m on their last attempt, but Tarasov had the tiebreaker to take the bronze. Markov saved one heroic attempt to snatch victory, but nobody could clear 5.96m.
Background
editThis was the 24th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The returning finalists from the 1996 Games were gold medalist Jean Galfione of France, fourth-place finisher Igor Potapovich of Kazakhstan, sixth-place finisher Dmitriy Markov of Belarus (now representing Australia), seventh-place finisher Tim Lobinger of Germany, eighth-place finisher Lawrence Johnson of the United States, ninth-place finisher Michael Stolle of Germany, and eleventh-place finisher (and 1992 finalist) Danny Krasnov of Israel. 1992 gold medalist Maksim Tarasov (then of the Unified Team, now of Russia) also returned, and was the reigning world champion—the first man other than Sergey Bubka to win that title. Bubka, of Ukraine, was the favorite (especially in the absence of 2004 leader Jeff Hartwig, who had failed to make the United States team); Bubka had been the best pole vaulter in the world since the early 1980s but had managed only one Olympic medal, gold in 1988 (missing 1984 due to boycott, failing to clear a height in the 1992 final, and 1996 due to injury).[2]
The Czech Republic made its men's pole vaulting debut, although Czechoslovakia had participated before. The United States made its 23rd appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.
Qualification
editEach National Olympic Committee was permitted to enter up to three athletes that had jumped 5.60 metres or higher during the qualification period. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. If a NOC had no athletes that qualified under that standard, one athlete that had jumped 5.45 metres or higher could be entered.[3]
Competition format
editThe competition used the two-round format introduced in 1912, with results cleared between rounds. Vaulters received three attempts at each height. Ties were broken by the countback rule.
In the qualifying round, the bar was set at 5.25 metres, 5.40 metres, 5.55 metres, 5.65 metres, and 5.70 metres. The next step would have been 5.75 metres, but no vaulters attempted that height. All vaulters clearing 5.75 metres advanced to the final. If fewer than 12 cleared that height, the top 12 (including ties, after applying the countback rules) advanced.
In the final, the bar was set at 5.50 metres, 5.70 metres, 5.80 metres, 5.90 metres, and 5.96 metres.[2][4]
Records
editThese were the standing world and Olympic records (in meters) before the 2000 Summer Olympics.
World record | Sergey Bubka (UKR) | 6.14 | Sestriere, Italy | 31 July 1994 |
Olympic record | Jean Galfione (FRA) Igor Trandenkov (RUS) Andrei Tivontchik (GER) |
5.92 | Atlanta, United States | 2 August 1996 |
No new world or Olympic records were set during the competition.
Schedule
editAll times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Wednesday, 27 September 2000 | 18:30 | Qualifying |
Friday, 29 September 2000 | 18:30 | Final |
Results
editKey
- o = Height cleared
- x = Height failed
- – = Height passed
- r = Retired
- SB = Season's best
- PB = Personal best
- NR = National record
- AR = Area record
- OR = Olympic record
- WR = World record
- WL = World lead
- NM = No mark
- DNS = Did not start
- DQ = Disqualified
Qualifying
editThe qualifying round was held on Wednesday, 27 September 2000. The qualifying height was 5.75 metres. For all qualifiers who did not achieve the standard, the remaining spaces in the final were filled by the highest jumps until a total of 12 qualifiers. Because only six men cleared 5.70 metres, raising the bar to 5.75 metres was unnecessary.
Rank | Group | Athlete | Nation | 5.25 | 5.40 | 5.55 | 5.65 | 5.70 | Height | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | B | Nick Hysong | United States | – | – | o | o | o | 5.70 | q |
2 | B | Danny Ecker | Germany | – | – | xo | – | o | 5.70 | q |
3 | A | Dmitriy Markov | Australia | – | – | o | – | xo | 5.70 | q |
4 | A | Viktor Chistiakov | Australia | – | o | xo | xxo | xo | 5.70 | q |
5 | B | Michael Stolle | Germany | – | – | o | – | xxo | 5.70 | q |
6 | B | Giuseppe Gibilisco | Italy | – | o | xo | o | xxo | 5.70 | q |
7 | A | Yevgeniy Smiryagin | Russia | – | o | o | o | xx– | 5.65 | q |
A | Tim Lobinger | Germany | – | o | o | o | x– | 5.65 | q | |
B | Okkert Brits | South Africa | – | – | o | o | – | 5.65 | q | |
B | Alexander Averbukh | Israel | – | – | o | o | – | 5.65 | q | |
B | Maksim Tarasov | Russia | – | – | – | o | – | 5.65 | q | |
12 | A | Lawrence Johnson | United States | – | – | xo | o | – | 5.65 | q |
A | Montxu Miranda | Spain | – | xo | o | o | xxx | 5.65 | q | |
14 | A | Štěpán Janáček | Czech Republic | – | xxo | o | o | xxx | 5.65 | |
15 | A | Rens Blom | Netherlands | – | o | o | xo | xxx | 5.65 | |
16 | A | Jean Galfione | France | – | o | o | xxx | — | 5.55 | |
B | Paul Burgess | Australia | – | o | o | xxx | — | 5.55 | ||
B | Kevin Hughes | Great Britain | o | o | o | xxx | — | 5.55 | SB | |
B | Javier García | Spain | – | o | o | xx– | x | 5.55 | ||
20 | A | Patrik Kristiansson | Sweden | – | o | xo | xxx | — | 5.55 | |
A | Danny Krasnov | Israel | – | o | xo | xxx | — | 5.55 | SB | |
22 | A | Thibaut Duval | Belgium | – | xo | xxo | xxx | — | 5.55 | |
B | Ilian Efremov | Bulgaria | o | xo | xxo | – | xxx | 5.55 | ||
B | Martin Eriksson | Sweden | – | xo | xxo | xxx | — | 5.55 | ||
25 | B | Manabu Yokoyama | Japan | – | xxo | xxo | xxx | — | 5.55 | |
26 | A | Pavel Gerasimov | Russia | – | xo | – | xxx | — | 5.40 | |
B | Chad Harting | United States | – | xo | x– | xx | — | 5.40 | ||
B | Dominic Johnson | Saint Lucia | – | xo | xxx | — | 5.40 | |||
29 | B | João André | Portugal | xo | xo | xxx | — | 5.40 | ||
30 | B | Denys Yurchenko | Ukraine | – | xxo | – | x– | — | 5.40 | |
30 | B | Romain Mesnil | France | – | xxo | x– | xx | — | 5.40 | |
32 | A | Nuno Fernandes | Portugal | xxo | xxx | — | 5.25 | |||
– | A | Sergey Bubka | Ukraine | – | – | – | – | xxx | No mark | |
A | Igor Potapovich | Kazakhstan | – | – | xxx | — | No mark | |||
A | Robison Pratt | Mexico | xxx | — | No mark | |||||
B | Photis Stefani | Cyprus | xxx | — | No mark | |||||
– | A | Ruhan Işım | Turkey | — | DNS |
Final
editThe final was held on Friday 29 September 2000.
Rank | Athlete | Nation | 5.50 | 5.70 | 5.80 | 5.90 | 5.96 | Height | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nick Hysong | United States | o | xo | o | o | xxx | 5.90 | PB | |
Lawrence Johnson | United States | – | o | o | xo | xxx | 5.90 | ||
Maksim Tarasov | Russia | o | – | xo | xxo | xxx | 5.90 | SB | |
4 | Michael Stolle | Germany | xxo | o | xo | xxo | xxx | 5.90 | |
5 | Viktor Chistiakov | Australia | o | o | o | xxx | — | 5.80 | SB |
Dmitriy Markov | Australia | o | – | o | xx– | x | 5.80 | ||
7 | Okkert Brits | South Africa | – | o | xo | xxx | — | 5.80 | |
8 | Danny Ecker | Germany | o | xo | xo | xxx | — | 5.80 | |
9 | Montxu Miranda | Spain | o | xxo | xxx | — | 5.70 | ||
10 | Giuseppe Gibilisco | Italy | o | xxx | — | 5.50 | |||
Aleksandr Averbukh | Israel | o | xxx | — | 5.50 | ||||
Yevgeniy Smiryagin | Russia | o | xxx | — | 5.50 | ||||
13 | Tim Lobinger | Germany | xo | xxx | — | 5.50 |
References
edit- ^ "Athletics at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games: Men's Pole Vault". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
- ^ a b c "Pole Vault, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
- ^ http://www.trackandfieldnews.com/images/stories/tfn_pdfs/ogqualifying_standards.pdf[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Official Report, Results Book for Athletics.