1968 Summer Olympics / Athletics - Triple Jump (Men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | Triple jump | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 34 athletes from 24 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Estadio Olímpico Universitario | ||||||||
Competition phase | October 16, 1968 (qualification) October 17, 1968 (final) |
||||||||
|
The men's triple jump at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City was held on October 16 and 17, 1968 in the Estadio Olímpico Universitario . 34 athletes took part.
Olympic champion was Viktor Saneyev . He won with a new world record in front of the Brazilian Nelson Prudêncio and the Italian Giuseppe Gentile .
Joachim Kugler and Michael Sauer started for the Federal Republic of Germany - officially Germany . Sauer failed in the qualification, Kugler came in eleventh in the final.
The GDR - officially East Germany - was represented by Heinz-Günter Schenk and Klaus Neumann , both of whom were eliminated in the qualification.
Athletes from Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.
Existing records
World record | 17.03 m | Józef Szmidt ( Poland ) | Olsztyn , Poland | 5th August 1960 |
Olympic record | 16.85 m | Tokyo , Japan | October 16, 1964 |
Conducting the competition
The athletes competed in a qualifying round on October 17, which was completed in two groups. The twelve best starters qualified for the final. The width of 16.10 m meant the direct qualification for the final on October 18th. In this final, each participant initially had three attempts. The eight best athletes for the first time - and not, as was the case until 1964, six best - athletes were then allowed three more attempts.
Time schedule
October 16, 10:00 a.m .: Qualification
October 17, 3 p.m .: Final
Note: All times are Mexico City local time ( UTC −6)
The qualified athletes are highlighted in light blue.
qualification
Date: October 16, 1968, from 10:00 a.m.
Group A
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | Expanse | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Giuseppe Gentile | Italy | x | 17.10 m WR | - | 17.10 m | WR |
2 | Phil May | Australia | 16.32 m | - | - | 16.32 m | |
3 | Șerban Ciochină | Romania | 15.93 m | 16.07 m | 16.21 m | 16.21 m | |
4th | Józef Szmidt | Poland | x | 16.19 m | - | 16.19 m | |
5 | Michael Sauer | BR Germany | 15.61 m | 16.02 m | 15.84 m | 16.02 m | |
6th | Derek Boosey | Great Britain | 15.07 m | 15.99 m | 16.01 m | 16.01 m | |
7th | Norman Tate | United States | 13.43 m | 15.84 m | 15.83 m | 15.84 m | |
8th | Yukito Muraki | Japan | x | 15.37 m | 15.83 m | 15.83 m | |
9 | Tim Barrett | Bahamas | x | 15.06 m | 15.79 m | 15.79 m | |
10 | Dave Smith | United States | x | x | 15.75 m | 15.75 m | |
11 | Evangelos Vlasis | Greece | 15.47 m | 15.52 m | 15.71 m | 15.71 m | |
12 | Samuel Igun | Nigeria | 15.40 m | 13.86 m | 15.46 m | 15.46 m | |
13 | Alexander Solotaryov | Soviet Union | 15.41 m | 14.72 m | x | 15.41 m | |
14th | Chen Ming-chi | Taiwan | 15.29 m | 15.04 m | 14.76 m | 15.29 m | |
15th | Klaus Neumann | GDR | 15.16 m | x | - | 15.16 m | |
16 | Zoltán Cziffra | Hungary | 15.04 m | x | - | 15.04 m |
Group B
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | Expanse | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mansour slide | Senegal | 16.58 m | - | - | 16.58 m | |
2 | Art Walker | United States | 16.49 m | - | - | 16.49 m | |
3 | Nelson Prudêncio | Brazil | 15.79 m | 16.46 m | - | 16.46 m | |
4th | Georgi Stojkowski | Bulgaria | 15.26 m | x | 16.24 m | 16.24 m | |
5 | Viktor Saneyev | Soviet Union | 16.22 m | - | - | 16.22 m | |
6th | Luis Felipe Areta Sampériz | Spain | 15.94 m | 16.20 m | - | 16.20 m | |
7th | Joachim Kugler | BR Germany | 15.79 m | 16.20 m | - | 16.20 m | |
8th | Henrik Kalocsai | Hungary | 15.44 m | 16.16 m | - | 16.16 m | |
9 | Mikalaj Dudkin | Soviet Union | 15.81 m | 16.15 m | - | 16.15 m | |
10 | Jan Jaskólski | Poland | 15.88 m | 15.83 m | 16.04 m | 16.04 m | |
11 | Pertti Pousi | Finland | x | 15.84 m | 15.74 m | 15.84 m | |
12 | Fred Alsop | Great Britain | 12.93 m | 15.71 m | 15.50 m | 15.71 m | |
13 | Johnson Amoah | Ghana | 15.65 m | 15.28 m | 15.65 m | 15.65 m | |
14th | Aşkın Tuna | Turkey | 15.65 m | x | 15.43 m | 15.65 m | |
15th | Heinz-Günter Schenk | GDR | x | 14.72 m | 15.61 m | 15.61 m | |
16 | Drágán Ivanov | Hungary | 15.61 m | x | 14.42 m | 15.61 m | |
17th | Lennox Burgher | Jamaica | 15.20 m | 15.29 m | 15.14 m | 15.29 m | |
18th | Hector Serrate | Puerto Rico | 15.09 m | 15.05 m | 14.89 m | 15.09 m |
final
Date: October 17, 1960, 3:00 p.m.
Long leaps were expected in the high mountain air of Mexico City . It already began in the qualification: the Italian Giuseppe Gentile improved the eight-year-old world record of the 1964 Olympic champion Józef Szmidt from Poland from 17.03 m to 17.10 m.
In the final there were four more new world records. In the first round it was Gentile's turn again: he jumped 17.22 m. In second place was the Senegalese Mansur Dia. The Brazilian Nelson Prudêncio took second place in his second attempt with 17.05, third was Wiktor Sanejew, USSR, Józef Szmidt was fourth. The third round brought the next world record. This time it was Saneyev who jumped an inch further than Gentile at the beginning. First place two and three were kept by Gentile and Prudêncio, the US jumper Art Walker had worked his way up to fourth place. In round four, the Australian Phil May moved past Walker into fourth place. The world record number four came in the fifth attempt: Prudêncio improved the mark to 17.27 m. Saneev and Gentile followed in the medal places, while Saneyev's compatriot Mikalaj Dudkin was fourth.
In the last attempt, Viktor Saneyev managed to jump 17.39 m. That meant the Olympic victory and it was again a world record. Nelson Prudêncio and Giuseppe Gentile stayed in second and third place. Art Walker regained fourth place.
The 17-meter mark was jumped a total of eleven times in the triple jump competition. There were five world records in which the record that was valid until the Games was improved by 36 centimeters.
Viktor Saneyev achieved the first Soviet Olympic victory in the triple jump.
Giuseppe Gentile won the first Italian medal in this discipline.
space | Surname | nation | 1st attempt | Second attempt | 3. Attempt | 4th attempt | 5th attempt | 6th attempt | Bottom line | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Viktor Saneyev | Soviet Union | 16.49 m | 16.84 m | 17.23 m WR | 17.02 m | 16.81 m | 17.39 m WR | 17.39 m | WR |
2 | Nelson Prudêncio | Brazil | 16.33 m | 17.05 m | 16.75 m | x | 17.27 m WR | 17.15 m | 17.27 m | |
3 | Giuseppe Gentile | Italy | 17.22 m WR | x | x | x | 16.54 m | x | 17.22 m | |
4th | Art Walker | United States | 15.43 m | 16.45 m | 16.77 m | 16.48 m | x | 17.12 m | 17.12 m | |
5 | Mikalaj Dudkin | Soviet Union | 16.15 m | 16.70 m | 16.37 m | 16.73 m | 17.09 m | 16.53 m | 17.09 m | |
6th | Phil May | Australia | 15.48 m | 16.58 m | 16.51 m | 17.02 m | x | - | 17.02 m | |
7th | Józef Szmidt | Poland | 16.06 m | 16.77 m | x | 16.66 m | x | 16.89 m | 16.89 m | |
8th | Mansour slide | Senegal | 16.71 m | 16.48 m | 15.44 m | 16.73 m | 16.64 m | 15.83 m | 16.73 m | |
9 | Georgi Stojkowski | Bulgaria | 16.28 m | 16.46 m | 16.19 m | not in the final of the eight best jumpers |
16.46 m | |||
10 | Henrik Kalocsai | Hungary | 16.45 m | 16.39 m | 16.20 m | 16.45 m | ||||
11 | Joachim Kugler | BR Germany | 12.87 m | x | 15.90 m | 15.90 m | ||||
12 | Luis Felipe Areta Sampériz | Spain | 15.72 m | 15.75 m | 14.80 m | 15.75 m | ||||
13 | Șerban Ciochină | Romania | x | x | 15.62 m | 15.62 m |
literature
- Ekkehard zur Megede : The History of Olympic Athletics. Volume 2: 1948-1968. 1st edition. Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin 1969, pp. 363-3365
Video
- Viktor Saneev Wins His First Triple Jump Gold Medal - Mexico 1968 Olympics , published July 21, 2013 on youtube.com, accessed November 9, 2017
Web links
- SportsReference triple jump , accessed November 9, 2017
- Official report - summary p. 94f, English / French. (PDF), accessed on November 9, 2017
- Official report of the 1968 Olympic Games p. 528, English / French. (PDF), accessed on November 9, 2017
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Berlin 2009 Page 556 (Engl.) ( Memento of 29 June 2011 at the Internet Archive ), accessed on November 9, 2017
- ↑ 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 9, 2017
- ↑ a b Official Report of the 1968 Olympic Games ( Memento of the original from September 17, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was 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. 528, engl./frz. (PDF), accessed on November 9, 2017
- ↑ Ekkehard zur Megede , The History of Olympic Athletics, Volume 2: 1948–1968, Verlag Bartels & Wernitz KG, Berlin, 1st edition 1969, p. 364