1956 Summer Olympics / Athletics - Javelin Throw (Men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | Javelin throw | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 21 athletes from 12 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Melbourne Cricket Ground | ||||||||
Competition phase | November 26, 1956 | ||||||||
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The men's javelin throw at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne was played on November 26, 1956 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground . 21 athletes took part.
The Olympic champion was the Norwegian Egil Danielsen with a new world record . He won ahead of Poland's Janusz Sidło and Wiktor Zybulenko from the Soviet Union.
Athletes from Switzerland and Austria did not start. Two German javelin throwers took part, both of which qualified for the final. Herbert Koschel took fourth place in the final, Heinrich Will came in ninth.
Existing records
World record | 83.66 m | Janusz Sidło ( Poland ) | Milan Italy | June 30, 1956 |
Olympic record | 73.78 m | Cy Young ( USA ) | Helsinki Finland Final | July 24, 1952 |
Conducting the competition
The athletes competed in a qualifying round on November 24th. The required qualification distance was 66.00 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 26, 10
a.m .: Qualification November 26, 3:25 p.m .: Final
Note: All times are local Melbourne time (UTC + 10)
qualification
Date: November 26, 1956, 10:00 a.m.
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | result | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Cy Young | United States | 63.30 m | 74.76 m OR | - | 74.76 m | OR |
2 | Egil Danielsen | Norway | 74.15 m OR | - | - | 74.15 m | |
3 | Vladimir Kuznetsov | Soviet Union | 64.88 m | 73.89 m | - | 73.89 m | |
4th | Herbert Koschel | Germany | 72.90 m | - | - | 72.90 m | |
5 | Alexander Gorshkov | Soviet Union | 72.31 m | - | - | 72.31 m | |
6th | Janusz Sidło | Poland | 72.00 m | - | - | 72.00 m | |
7th | Michel Macquet | France | 71.23 m | - | - | 71.23 m | |
8th | Viktor Zybulenko | Soviet Union | 71.20 m | - | - | 71.20 m | |
9 | Benjamin Garcia | United States | 71.17 m | - | - | 71.17 m | |
10 | Heinrich Will | Germany | 52.56 m | 64.68 m | 70.38 m | 70.38 m | |
11 | Giovanni Lievore | Italy | 69.64 m | - | - | 69.64 m | |
12 | Phil Conley | United States | 68.60 m | - | - | 69.64 m | |
13 | Jan Kopyto | Poland | 68.19 m | 54.89 m | - | 68.19 m | |
14th | Muhammad Nawaz | Pakistan | 59.44 m | 61.62 m | 67.57 m | 68.19 m | |
15th | Sándor Krasznai | Hungary | 61.87 m | 67.39 m | - | 67.39 m | |
16 | Bob Grant | Australia | x | 65.76 m | 61.50 m | 65.76 m | |
17th | Jalal Khan | Pakistan | 65.35 m | x | 61.61 m | 65.35 m | |
18th | Léon Syrovatski | France | 61.06 m | 62.65 m | 64.58 m | 64.58 m | |
19th | Reinaldo Oliver | Puerto Rico | 55.85 m | 52.42 m | 63.68 m | 63.68 m | |
20th | Peter Cullen | Great Britain | x | 61.37 m | 62.77 m | 62.77 m | |
21st | James Achurch | Australia | 57.09 m | 43.43 m | x | 57.09 m |
final
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | 4th attempt | 5th attempt | 6th attempt | Bottom line | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Egil Danielsen | Norway | 72.60 m | 68.49 m | 70.75 m | 85.71 m WR | 72.60 m | 68.86 m | 85.71 m | WR |
2 | Janusz Sidło | Poland | 72.78 m | x | 79.98 m OR | 79.70 m | 75.79 m | 73.50 m | 79.98 m | |
3 | Viktor Zybulenko | Soviet Union | 74.96 m OR | 75.84 m OR | 71.74 m | 79.50 m | 72.98 m | 63.24 m | 79.50 m | |
4th | Herbert Koschel | Germany | 74.68 m | 60.80 m | 69.88 m | 61.66 m | x | 61.29 m | 74.68 m | |
5 | Jan Kopyto | Poland | 71.82 m | 73.32 m | 73.02 m | 74.28 m | 57.20 m | 73.27 m | 74.28 m | |
6th | Giovanni Lievore | Italy | 71.26 m | 72.88 m | 67.46 m | 65.58 m | 64.87 m | 55.78 m | 72.88 m | |
7th | Michel Macquet | France | 70.03 m | 70.11 m | 71.84 m | not in the final of the six best throwers |
71.84 m | |||
8th | Alexander Gorshkov | Soviet Union | x | x | 70.32 m | 70.32 m | ||||
9 | Heinrich Will | Germany | 69.86 m | 67.39 m | x | 69.86 m | ||||
10 | Phil Conley | United States | 69.74 m | 60.92 m | 69.59 m | 69.74 m | ||||
11 | Cy Young | United States | x | 66.32 m | 68.64 m | 68.64 m | ||||
12 | Vladimir Kuznetsov | Soviet Union | 65.65 m | 62.80 m | 67.14 m | 67.14 m | ||||
13 | Sándor Krasznai | Hungary | 66.33 m | 60.03 m | 59.78 m | 66.33 m | ||||
14th | Muhammad Nawaz | Pakistan | 62.55 m | 59.42 m | 61.13 m | 62.55 m | ||||
ogV | Benjamin Garcia | United States | x | x | x | without space |
Date: November 26, 1956, 3:25 p.m.
The American Bud Held improved the almost 15-year-old world record in javelin throwing in 1953. This was made possible by his own collaboration in the development of the aerodynamics of the javelin design. The Pole Janusz Sidło threw again in June 1956 and was considered a top favorite for this competition. The 1952 Olympic champion Cyrus Young from the USA and the Norwegian Egil Danielsen were also considered medal candidates. Although he improved his own Olympic record in qualifying , Young played no role in the final score and finished eleventh.
The competition was characterized by constantly changing gusty winds. That didn't make throwing easy for the athletes. Soviet athlete Viktor Zybulenko set the first signs in the final when he beat Young's record in the first attempt and threw again in the second attempt. In the third attempt, Sidło countered with a four meter further throw, two centimeters below the 80 meter mark. In the fourth attempt, Danielsen caught a favorable wind in what was for him a happy moment, which he was able to use extremely successfully. He threw the spear in a flatter orbit and exceeded the pole by exactly 5.73 meters. This distance even set a new world record . In the same round, Zybulenko also had his best attempt, but he was only eight inches closer to Sidło. Danielsen was Olympic champion, Sidło won the silver and Zybulenko the bronze medal.
At the end of the preliminaries, Egil Danielsen actually wanted to pack his things in the third attempt, because he assumed he would be seventh and thus not be qualified for the final of the six best throwers. But he quickly realized that he was wrong and of course carried on.
Egil Danielsen won the first Norwegian gold medal in the javelin throw.
Janusz Sidło and Wiktor Zybulenko also won their countries' first medals in this discipline.
literature
- Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 2: 1948–1968, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 1st edition 1969, pp. 148–150
Web links
- SportsReference Javelin , accessed October 6, 2017
- Official report p. 338f, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017
- Melbourne 1956 Olympic Games - Official Olympic Film | Olympic History , range 1:19:16 min - 1:20:49 min, published on July 22, 2015 on youtube.com, accessed on October 6, 2017
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Berlin 2009, page 559 ( Memento from June 29, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ a b Official report p. 284, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017
- ↑ Official report p. 339, engl. (PDF), accessed on October 6, 2017
- ↑ SportsReference (Eng.)
- ↑ Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 1: 1896-1936, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 2nd edition 1970, p. 149