1948 Summer Olympics / Athletics - Discus Throw (Women)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | Discus throw | ||||||||
gender | Women | ||||||||
Attendees | 21 athletes from 11 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Wembley Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | July 30, 1948 | ||||||||
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The women's discus throw at the 1948 Olympic Games in London was played at Wembley Stadium on July 30, 1948 . 21 athletes took part. The final was the first decision in athletics in London.
The Olympic champion was Micheline Ostermeyer from France . She won ahead of the Italian Edera Gentile and the French Jacqueline Mazéas .
Existing records
- Official world record : 48.31 m - Gisela Mauermayer ( Germany ), Berlin , July 1, 1936 / unofficial: 50.50 m - Nina Dumbadse ( Soviet Union ), Sarpsborg , August 29, 1946 - not recognized as the Soviet Union was not a member at the time the IAAF was
- Olympic record : 47.63 m - Gisela Mauermayer ( Germany ), Berlin final , August 4, 1936
Conducting the competition
The participants competed on July 30th. There was no qualifying round.
Bottom line
July 30, 1948, 3:30 p.m.
Note: Only the best size has been recorded. The order and length of the trials are unknown.
In the absence of the Soviet athletes, especially the European champion Nina Dumbadse , the French Micheline Ostermeyer managed to win a competition whose victory distance was almost seven meters shorter than the world record . Even Gisela Wall Mayers Olympic record was far from being reached. The winner Micheline Ostermeyer would have finished third with her performance in Berlin in 1936 . In a film, she tells how she picked up a disc just a few weeks before the games in London . The French team was looking for a third female thrower for this discipline and Ostermeyer won this place. It is all the more astonishing that she won the Olympic gold medal with her last litter.
All medalists won their countries first medals in this discipline.
space | Surname | nation | Best | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Micheline Ostermeyer | France | 41.92 m | |
2 | Edera Gentile | Italy | 41.17 m | |
3 | Jacqueline Mazéas | France | 40.47 m | |
4th | Jadwiga Wajs | Poland | 39.30 m | |
5 | Lotte Haidegger | Austria | 38.81 m | |
6th | To Panhorst-Niesink | Netherlands | 38.74 m | |
7th | Majken Åberg | Sweden | 38.48 m | |
8th | Ingeborg Mello | Argentina | 38.44 m | |
9 | Frieda Tiltsch | Austria | 37.19 m | |
10 | Paulette Veste | France | 36.84 m | |
11 | Frances Kaszubski | United States | 36.50 m | |
12 | Gudrun Arenander | Sweden | 36.25 m | |
13 | Nel Roos-Lodder | Netherlands | 36.15 m | |
14th | Bevis Reid | Great Britain | 35.84 m | |
15th | Marianne Schläger | Austria | 34.79 m | |
16 | Dorothy Dodson | United States | 34.69 m | |
17th | Gabre Gabric | Italy | 34.17 m | |
18th | Pak Bong-sik | South Korea | 33.80 m | |
19th | Margaret Birtwistle | Great Britain | 33.02 m | |
20th | Elspeth Whyte | Great Britain | 32.46 m | |
21st | Julija Matej | Yugoslavia | 30.25 m |
literature
- Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 2: 1948–1968, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 1st edition 1969, p. 49
Web links
- SportsReference Discus Throw , accessed August 24, 2017
- Official report p. 283, (PDF), accessed on August 24, 2017
- Micheline Ostermeyer - Discus, Shot Put & Artist | London 1948 Olympics , published January 15, 2013 on youtube.com, accessed August 24, 2017
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Berlin 2009, page 647 ( Memento from June 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 2: 1948–1968, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 1st edition 1969, p. 49
- ^ Official report "Athletic Timetable" p. 240, engl. (PDF)
- ↑ SportsReference (Eng.)
- ↑ Micheline Ostermeyer: del piano al podio olímpico , published on July 28, 2016 on youtube.com, accessed on August 24, 2017