1956 Summer Olympics / Athletics - Hammer Throw (Men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | Hammer throw | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 22 athletes from 14 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Melbourne Cricket Ground | ||||||||
Competition phase | November 24, 1956 | ||||||||
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The men's hammer throw at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne was played on November 24, 1956 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground . 22 athletes took part.
The American Hal Connolly became Olympic champion . He won ahead of Mikhail Krivonossow and Anatoli Samozwetow , both from the Soviet Union.
Athletes from Germany, Switzerland and Austria did not start.
Existing records
World record | 68.54 m | Hal Connolly ( USA ) | Los Angeles , USA | November 2, 1956 |
Olympic record | 60.34 m | József Csermák ( Hungary ) | Helsinki Final , Finland | July 24, 1952 |
Conducting the competition
The athletes competed in a qualifying round on November 24th. The required qualification distance was 54.00 meters. For all qualified participants the final took place in the afternoon of the same day. The results achieved in the qualifying round were not included in the further course of the competition. In the final, each athlete was initially entitled to three attempts. The best six finalists could then make another three attempts.
Note: The qualified athletes are highlighted in light blue. The best results in the qualification and in the final are printed in bold.
Time schedule
November 24, 10:00 a.m .: Qualification
November 24, 2:30 p.m .: Final
Note: All times are local Melbourne time (UTC + 10)
qualification
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | result | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Anatoly Samotsvetov | Soviet Union | 59.53 m | - | - | 59.53 m | |
2 | Krešimir Račić | Yugoslavia | 59.06 m | - | - | 59.06 m | |
3 | Hal Connolly | United States | 59.05 m | - | - | 59.05 m | |
4th | Alfons Niklas | Poland | 52.11 m | 58.46 m | - | 58.46 m | |
5 | Tadeusz Ruth | Poland | 58.07 m | - | - | 58.07 m | |
6th | József Csermák | Hungary | 57.95 m | - | - | 57.95 m | |
7th | Albert Hall | United States | 57.50 m | - | - | 57.50 m | |
8th | Dmytro Jehorow | Soviet Union | 57.03 m | - | - | 57.03 m | |
9 | Sverre Strandli | Norway | 56.32 m | - | - | 56.32 m | |
10 | Birger Asplund | Sweden | 55.03 m | - | - | 55.03 m | |
11 | Peter Allday | Great Britain | 54.98 m | - | - | 54.98 m | |
Guy Husson | France | ||||||
13 | Don Anthony | Great Britain | 53.10 m | 54.89 m | - | 54.89 m | |
14th | Muhammad Iqbal | Pakistan | 54.59 m | - | - | 54.59 m | |
15th | Mikhail Krivonosov | Soviet Union | 54.53 m | - | - | 54.53 m | |
16 | Song Gyo-sik | South Korea | 53.30 m | x | 53.75 m | 53.75 m | |
17th | Yoshio Kojima | Japan | 52.67 m | 46.62 m | 46.23 m | 52.67 m | |
18th | Alejandro Díaz | Chile | x | 52.23 m | 51.33 m | 52.23 m | |
19th | Charlie Morris | Australia | x | 49.35 m | x | 49.35 m | |
20th | Neville Gadsden | Australia | x | x | 48.84 m | 48.84 m | |
21st | Martin Crowe | Australia | 45.76 m | 48.25 m | 48.43 m | 48.43 m | |
22nd | Fumio Kamamoto | Japan | 40.72 m | x | 44.70 m | 44.70 m |
Date: November 24, 1956, 10:00 a.m.
The actually nominated Cliff Blair helped reporter Jerry Nason from the Boston Globe with his reports from Melbourne. The US team suspended Blair for violating the amateur statutes. A replacement for him was not nominated, so that the US team was only represented here with two throwers.
final
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | 4th attempt | 5th attempt | 6th attempt | Bottom line | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hal Connolly | United States | x | 60.92 m | 62.65 m | 61.76 m | 63.19 m OR | x | 63.19 m | OR |
2 | Mikhail Krivonosov | Soviet Union | 60.59 m | 63.00 m OR | 63.03 m OR | x | x | x | 63.03 m | |
3 | Anatoly Samotsvetov | Soviet Union | 62.10 m OR | 58.13 m | 61.94 m | 60.22 m | 59.20 m | 62.56 m | 62.56 m | |
4th | Albert Hall | United States | 57.76 m | 61.83 m | x | 61.58 m | x | 61.96 m | 61.96 m | |
5 | József Csermák | Hungary | 58.27 m | 58.43 m | 60.70 m | x | 59.10 m | x | 60.70 m | |
6th | Krešimir Račić | Yugoslavia | 57.99 m | 60.36 m | x | x | 58.07 m | 55.09 m | 60.36 m | |
7th | Dmytro Jehorow | Soviet Union | 60.22 m | x | x | not in the final of the six best throwers |
60.22 m | |||
8th | Sverre Strandli | Norway | 58.62 m | 58.49 m | 59.21 m | 59.21 m | ||||
9 | Peter Allday | Great Britain | 57.78 m | 57.06 m | 58.00 m | 58.00 m | ||||
10 | Alfons Niklas | Poland | 57.70 m | x | x | 57.70 m | ||||
11 | Muhammad Iqbal | Pakistan | 56.45 m | 55.24 m | 56.94 m | 56.94 m | ||||
12 | Don Anthony | Great Britain | x | 55.22 m | 56.72 m | 56.72 m | ||||
13 | Guy Husson | France | x | x | 55.02 m | 55.02 m | ||||
14th | Tadeusz Ruth | Poland | x | x | 53.43 m | 53.43 m | ||||
ogV | Birger Asplund | Sweden | x | x | x | without space |
Date: November 24, 1956, 2:30 p.m.
There were two favorites for this competition: the 1954 European champion , Mikhail Krivonossow from the USSR, and the American Harold Connolly, who dethroned the Soviet thrower as a world record holder shortly before the games .
The final turned into an exciting three-way battle. First, Anatoly Samozwetow took the lead with a new Olympic record . In the second attempt, Krivonossow threw further ninety centimeters, and Connolly also pushed himself past Samotsvetow into second place in round three. Krivonossow was able to improve his distance with the third attempt by another three centimeters, but then failed to make a valid attempt. In the fifth round, Connolly got his best throw and he took the lead with sixteen centimeters ahead of Kriwonossow. Although Samozvetow was able to improve his distance again with his last attempt, it was not enough to overtake Krivonossow. With that the medals were distributed.
The fourth-placed US thrower Albert Hall also threw further in three attempts than the previous Olympic record of the Hungarian József Csermák. This in turn surpassed his own previous Olympic record in the third round. This time, however, that was only enough for fifth place. The sixth-placed Yugoslav Krešimir Račić surpassed this earlier record from the Helsinki final .
Hal Connolly made headlines not only because of his Olympic victory. His relationship with the Czechoslovak discus winner , Olga Fikotová , aroused public interest. A few months later, the two married in Prague . a. Emil Zatopek .
Mikhail Krivonossow and Anatoly Samozvetow won the first Soviet medals in hammer throw .
literature
- Ekkehard zur Megede : The History of Olympic Athletics. Volume 2: 1948-1968. 1st edition. Verlag Bartels & Wernitz, Berlin 1969, pp. 146-148.
Web links
- SportsReference Hammerwurf , accessed October 6, 2017
- Official report p. 340f, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017
- Melbourne 1956 Official Olympic Film - Part 4 | Olympic History , range 7:02 min - 9:35 min, published July 15, 2015 on youtube.com, accessed October 6, 2017
Individual evidence
- ^ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Berlin 2009 page 558 ( Memento from June 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b Official report p. 284, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017.
- ↑ SportsReference (Eng.)
- ↑ Official report p. 340, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017.
- ↑ SportsReference (Eng.)