European Athletics Championships 1958/5000 m men

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6th European Athletics Championships
Athletics pictogram.svg
discipline Men's 5000 meter run
city SwedenSweden Stockholm
Stadion Olympic Stadium
Attendees 25 athletes from 15 countries
Competition phase August 21 (preliminary)
August 23 (final)
Medalist
gold gold Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak ( POL ) Poland 1944Poland 
Silver medals silver Kazimierz Zimny ( POL ) Poland 1944Poland 
Bronze medals bronze Gordon Pirie ( GBR ) United KingdomUnited Kingdom 
Official postcard of the Stockholm Olympic Stadium from 1912

The men's 5000-meter run at the 1958 European Athletics Championships was held on August 21 and 23, 1958 in the Stockholm Olympic Stadium.

There was a double victory for Poland in this discipline. European champion was Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak , who won his second gold medal at these championships four days earlier after winning the 10,000 meter title . Kazimierz Zimny came in second . Bronze went to the Briton Gordon Pirie .

Records

Existing records

World record 13: 35.0 min Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Vladimir Kuz Rome , Italy October 13, 1957
European record
Championship record 13: 56.6 min EM Bern , Switzerland August 29, 1954

Record improvement

European champion Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak improved the European Championship record by 3.2 seconds to 13: 53.4 minutes in the final on 23 August . Poland 1944Poland 

Preliminary round

Hein Cujé was eliminated as eighth of his run
For Joep Delnoye - here as the leader in a forest run - it was not enough to take part in the final after finishing tenth in the second preliminary run
Eugène Allonsius was eleventh in his heat and was eliminated

August 21, 1958, 5 p.m.

The preliminary round was held in two runs. The first six athletes per run - highlighted in light blue - qualified for the final, which was held two days later.

Forward 1

space Surname nation Time (min)
1 Sándor Iharos Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 14: 05.6 SB
2 Michel Bernard France 1946Fourth French Republic France 14: 05.8 SB
3 Kazimierz Zimny Poland 1944Poland Poland 14: 08.0
4th Gordon Pirie United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 14: 08.4
5 Ludwig Muller GermanyGermany Germany 14: 08.8 PB
6th Hubert Pärnäkiwi Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 14: 09.0
7th Eero Tuomaala FinlandFinland Finland 14: 10.8 PB
8th Hein Cujé NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 14: 12.8 PB
9 Albert Messitt IrelandIreland Ireland 14: 14.8 PB
10 Marcel Vandewattyne BelgiumBelgium Belgium 14: 18.2 PB
11 Sven Lundgren SwedenSweden Sweden 14: 27.6
12 Thyge Thøgersen DenmarkDenmark Denmark 14: 29.0 SB
13 Christos Chiotis Kingdom of GreeceKingdom of Greece Greece 14: 33.6 PB
14th José Molina Spain 1945Spain Spain 14: 57.8 PB

Forward 2

space Surname nation Time (min)
1 Alexander Artynyuk Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 14: 06.8
2 Peter Clark United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 14: 09.6
3 Miklós Szabó Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 14: 12.2 SB
4th Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak Poland 1944Poland Poland 14: 12.4
5 Miroslav Jurek CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 14: 12.4
6th Friedrich Janke GermanyGermany Germany 14: 12.4 SB
7th Jorma Kakko FinlandFinland Finland 14: 16.4 PB
8th Maurice Chiclet France 1946Fourth French Republic France 14: 17.0 PB
9 Manuel Alonso Spain 1945Spain Spain 14: 18.0 PB
10 Joep Delnoye NetherlandsNetherlands Netherlands 14: 18.4 PB
11 Eugène Allonsius BelgiumBelgium Belgium 14: 24.2 SB

final

Vice European Champion Kazimierz Zimny ​​in a photo from 2013 

August 23, 1958, 6:20 p.m.

space Surname nation Time (min)
1 Zdzisław Krzyszkowiak Poland 1944Poland Poland 13: 53.4 CR
2 Kazimierz Zimny Poland 1944Poland Poland 13: 55.2 SB
3 Gordon Pirie United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 14: 01.6 SB
4th Peter Clark United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 14: 03.8 PB
5 Alexander Artynyuk Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 14: 05.6 PB
6th Sándor Iharos Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 14: 07.2
7th Miroslav Jurek CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia 14: 12.0 SB
8th Friedrich Janke GermanyGermany Germany 14: 17.0
9 Michel Bernard France 1946Fourth French Republic France 14: 18.4
10 Miklós Szabó Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 14: 29.4
11 Hubert Pärnäkiwi Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 14: 34.8
12 Ludwig Muller GermanyGermany Germany 14: 34.8

Web links

References and comments

  1. IAAF world records. 5000 m men , accessed April 24, 2019