On July 31, the runners competed in seven preliminary runs. The three fastest athletes each qualified for the quarter-finals on the same day. The three best runners from the four quarter-finals also made it to the next round, the semi-finals. In the preliminary rounds, the top three qualified for the final. The two semi-finals and the final were played on August 1st.
Note: The qualified athletes are highlighted in light blue. The run times given are the hand-stopped results from the official report. The results of the electrical timing, if available, are listed in the note.
In the final, the Japanese Takayoshi Yoshioka, the first Asian in a 100-meter final, got the best start. But Eddie Tolan of the 'Midnight Express', as his nickname was, was able to catch up with the Japanese after thirty meters and passed him. Ralph Metcalfe had caught up with Tolan twenty yards to go. The electronic time measurement showed 10.38 s for both runners. The finish photo also gave no information about the outcome of the race. The judges chose Tolan without realizing why. And this is the official result to this day: Gold for Tolan, silver for the Metcalfe at the same time, both officially stopped at 10.3 s, which meant a new Olympic record and the same time the world record was set . The bronze medal was won by the German champion Arthur Jonath with 10.4 seconds.
For the first time, all finalists stayed below the 11-second mark.
For the USA it was the fifth double success in the ninth Olympic final.
Electronic timing was already used in these games, but it was unofficial. The official times resulted solely from the hand-stopped values.
Picture gallery
Olympic Champion Eddie Tolan (USA) - photo from 1930
The first finalist from Asia: Takayoshi Yoshioka from Japan, who came in sixth
Helmut Körnig (DEU) was eliminated in the semi-finals.
The Canadian Olympic champion in Amsterdam in 1928 , world record holder Percy Williams, also failed in the semifinals.
For Christiaan Berger (NED) the quarter-finals were over.
Liu Changchun, the first Chinese to compete in the Olympic Games, was eliminated in the preliminary stages.
literature
Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 1: 1896-1936, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 2nd edition 1970, pp. 224-226