1968 Summer Olympics / Athletics - 20 km walk (men)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Olympic rings
Estadio olimpico universitario unam.jpg
sport athletics
discipline 20 km walk
gender Men
Attendees 34 athletes from 21 countries
Competition location Estadio Olímpico Universitario
(start / finish)
Competition phase October 14, 1968
Medalist
gold medal Volodymyr Holubnychy ( URS ) Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union 
Silver medal José Pedraza ( MEX ) MexicoMexico 
Bronze medal Mykola Smaha ( URS ) Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union 

The men's 20 km at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City was held on October 14, 1968. 34 athletes took part. The start and finish was the Estadio Olímpico Universitario .

Olympic champion was Volodymyr Holubnytschyj from the Soviet Union. He won in front of the Mexican José Pedraza and the Soviet goalkeeper Mykola Smaha .

While Julius Müller from the Federal Republic of Germany - officially Germany - was disqualified, all three starters from the GDR - officially East Germany - were able to place. Gerhard Sperling was fifth, Hans-Georg Reimann seventh and Peter Frenkel tenth. The Swiss René Pfister also reached the goal and was 23rd.
Walkers from Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.

Existing records

World best 1:25:22 h Gennady Agapov ( Soviet Union ) Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union  Leningrad , Soviet Union (now Russia ) July 21, 1968
Olympic record 1: 29: 34.0 h Ken Matthews ( Great Britain ) United KingdomUnited Kingdom  20km walk from Tokyo , Japan October 15, 1964

World records are not set in street walking because of the different track conditions.

Conducting the competition

The athletes competed on October 14 at 4:50 p.m. ( UTC −6). There were no qualifying rounds.

Result

Date: October 14, 1968, 4:50 p.m.

The competition was characterized by constant changes in leadership. At kilometer five, the US walker Rudy Haluza led just ahead of Mykola Smaha and Volodymyr Holubnytschyj. Even the East German Hans-Georg Reimann, only a second back, was very close to the top. Smaha and Holubnytschyj led the field at ten kilometers, followed by Haluza, almost twelve seconds behind. Almost seven seconds behind, local hero José Pedraza was just ahead of the GDR walker Sperling. Smaha and Holubnytschyj were tied at the top even at fifteen kilometers. Her lead over her pursuer Haluza was 21 seconds, with Pedraza another twelve seconds behind.

Despite these backlogs, things got exciting on arrival at the stadium. Holubnytschyj had been able to set himself apart from Smaha a little. Pedraza was thirty yards behind Smaha. Supported by almost 80,000 fans, the Mexican was able to catch the Soviet walker Smaha on the last lap. Holubnytschyj was now within reach of Pedraza, who, however, was almost running and no longer moving forward according to the rules for athletic walking . Holubnytschyj was able to save the victory over the finish line. However, it left a bad taste, because Rudy Haluza, who was officially fourth, was deprived of the bronze medal due to Pedraza's disqualification, which was neglected by the judges. It was the closest decision in this discipline since it was first held in 1956 , with all three medalists crossing the finish line in just five seconds. The Olympic record remained untouched, which was to be expected given the altitude.

Volodymyr Holubnychy won his third consecutive medal in this discipline. In 1960 in Rome he was Olympic champion, in 1964 in Tokyo he won the bronze medal.

José Pedraza won the first Mexican medal in this discipline. It was also the host nation's only athletics medal.

Split times
Intermediate
mark
Meanwhile Leading 5 km time
5 km 23:11 min Rudy Haluza, Mykola Smaha, Volodymyr Holubnytschyj 23:11 min
10 km 46:54 min Mykola Smaha, Volodymyr Holubnychy 23:43 min
15 km 1:10:19 h Volodymyr Holubnychy, Mykola Smaha 23:25 min
20 km 1:33:59 h Volodymyr Holubnychy 23:40 min
space Surname nation Time [h] annotation
1 Volodymyr Holubnychy Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 1: 33: 58.4
2 José Pedraza MexicoMexico Mexico 1: 34: 00.0
3 Mykola Smaha Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 1: 34: 03.4
4th Rudy Haluza United StatesUnited States United States 1: 35: 00.2
5 Gerhard Sperling Germany Democratic Republic 1968GDR GDR 1: 35: 27.2
6th Otto Bartsch Soviet Union 1955Soviet Union Soviet Union 1: 36: 16.8
7th Hans-Georg Reimann Germany Democratic Republic 1968GDR GDR 1: 36: 31.4
8th Stefan Ingvarsson SwedenSweden Sweden 1: 36: 43.4
9 Leonida Caraiosifoglu Romania 1952Romania Romania 1: 37: 07.6
10 Peter Frenkel Germany Democratic Republic 1968GDR GDR 1: 37: 20.8
11 Arthur Jones United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 1:37:32
12 Pasquale Busca ItalyItaly Italy 1:37:32
13 José Oliveros MexicoMexico Mexico 1:38:17
14th Antal Kiss Hungary 1957Hungary Hungary 1:38:24
15th Stig Lindberg SwedenSweden Sweden 1:40:03
16 Frank Clark AustraliaAustralia Australia 1:40:06
17th Tom Dooley United StatesUnited States United States 1:40:08
18th Karl-Heinz Merschenz CanadaCanada Canada 1:40:11
19th Charles Sowa LuxembourgLuxembourg Luxembourg 1:40:17
20th Eladio Campos MexicoMexico Mexico 1:41:52
21st Örjan Andersson SwedenSweden Sweden 1:41:58
22nd John Webb United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 1:42:51
23 René Pfister SwitzerlandSwitzerland Switzerland 1:43:36
24 Bob Hughes United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain 1:43:50
25th Ron Laird United StatesUnited States United States 1:44:38
26th Mieczysław Rutyna Poland 1944Poland Poland 1:47:29
27 Euclides Calzado CubaCuba Cuba 1:49:27
28 Julio Ortíz GuatemalaGuatemala Guatemala 1:54:48
29 Roberto Castellanos El SalvadorEl Salvador El Salvador 1:58:48
DSQ Julius Muller Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany
DNF Felix Cappella CanadaCanada Canada
Kazuo Saitō Japan 1870Japan Japan
José Esteban Valle Nicaragua 1908Nicaragua Nicaragua
Carlos Vanegas Nicaragua 1908Nicaragua Nicaragua

literature

  • Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 2: 1948–1968, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 1st edition 1969, p. 355

Video

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. IAAF Statistics Handbook, Berlin 2009 Page 566 (Engl.) ( Memento of 29 June 2011 at the Internet Archive ), accessed on November 7, 2017
  2. Official report of the 1968 Olympic Games ( Memento of the original from September 17, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. P. 10, English / French (PDF), accessed on November 7, 2017 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / library.la84.org
  3. Official report of the 1968 Olympic Games ( Memento of the original from September 17, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. P. 533, engl./frz. (PDF), accessed on November 7, 2017 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / library.la84.org
  4. SportsReference , accessed November 7, 2017