1984 Summer Olympics / Athletics - Pole Vault (Men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | Pole vault | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 19 athletes from 13 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | ||||||||
Competition phase | August 6, 1984 (qualifying) August 8, 1984 (final) |
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The men's pole vault at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles was held on August 6th and 8th, 1984 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum . Nineteen athletes took part.
The Olympic champion was the Frenchman Pierre Quinon , who won ahead of the American Mike Tully . Bronze was awarded twice: to Earl Bell from the USA and Thierry Vigneron from France.
The Swiss Felix Böhni reached the final and was seventh there.
Jumpers from the Federal Republic of Germany, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part. Athletes from the GDR were also not there because of the Olympic boycott.
Current title holders
Olympic champion 1980 | Władysław Kozakiewicz ( Poland ) | 5.78 m | Moscow 1980 |
World Champion 1983 | Serhiy Bubka ( Soviet Union ) | 5.70 m | Helsinki 1983 |
European Champion 1982 | Alexander Krupski ( Soviet Union ) | 5.60 m | Athens 1982 |
Pan American Champion 1983 | Mike Tully ( USA ) | 5.45 m | Caracas 1983 |
Central America and Caribbean Champion 1983 | Edgardo Rivera ( Puerto Rico ) | 5.20 m | Havana 1983 |
South America Champion 1983 | Fernando Hoces ( Chile ) | 4.70 m | Santa Fe 1983 |
Asian champion 1983 | Zhang Chen ( People's Republic of China ) | 5.00 m | Kuwait City 1983 |
African champions 1982 | Loué Legbo ( Ivory Coast ) | 4.00 m | Cairo 1982 |
Existing records
World record | 5.90 m | Serhiy Bubka ( Soviet Union ) | London , UK | July 13, 1984 |
Olympic record | 5.78 min | Władysław Kozakiewicz ( Poland ) | Final of Moscow , Soviet Union (today Russia ) | July 30, 1980 |
qualification
Date: August 6, 1984
For the qualification, the athletes were drawn into two groups. The qualification height for the direct entry into the final was 5.45 m. However, only three jumpers mastered this mark. Therefore the final field was filled with the next best jumpers of both groups, the so-called lucky losers , so that a total of fourteen athletes made it to the final. Ultimately, the jump height was 5.30 m for the final. The directly qualified athletes are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
Group A
space | Surname | nation | 5.10 m | 5.20 m | 5.30 m | 5.35 m | 5.40 m | 5.45 m | height | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Earl Bell | United States | - | - | - | O | - | O | 5.45 m | |
Mike Tully | United States | |||||||||
Thierry Vigneron | France | |||||||||
4th | Alberto Ruiz | Spain | xo | - | xo | - | xo | xx o | 5.45 m | |
5 | Pierre Quinon | France | - | - | xo | - | O | - | 5.40 m | |
6th | Felix Böhni | Switzerland | - | - | O | - | xx o | xxx | 5.40 m | |
7th | Tomás Hintnaus | Brazil | - | - | - | O | - | xxx | 5.35 m | |
8th | Serge Ferreira | France | - | - | O | - | xxx | 5.30 m | ||
Douglas Lytle | United States | - | - | O | xxx | 5.30 m | ||||
ogV | Kazimir Zalar | Sweden | - | - | xxx | without height |
Group B
space | Surname | nation | 5.10 m | 5.20 m | 5.30 m | 5.35 m | 5.40 m | 5.45 m | height | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kimmo Pallonen | Finland | - | O | O | xo | x o | - | 5.40 m | |
2 | Mauro Barella | Italy | O | O | xo | xx o | - | - | 5.35 m | |
3 | Jeffrey Gutteridge | Great Britain | O | - | O | xxx | 5.30 m | |||
4th | Weimin Yang | People's Republic of China | O | O | O | - | xxx | 5.30 m | ||
5 | Tomomi Takahashi | Japan | O | - | xx o | - | xxx | 5.30 m | ||
6th | John Morrisette | American Virgin Islands | O | O | x- | xx | 5.20 m | |||
7th | Keith Stock | Great Britain | xo | x o | xxx | 5.20 m | ||||
8th | Zebiao Ji | People's Republic of China | x o | xxx | 5.10 m | |||||
9 | Edgardo Rivera | Puerto Rico | xx o | - | x- | xx | 5.10 m |
final
Date: August 8, 1984
Fourteen jumpers had qualified for the final, of which only four had reached the required level of qualification. All three Americans and French who competed had progressed. There was also one jumper each from Finland, Italy, Switzerland, Spain, China, Brazil, Japan and Great Britain.
Due to the Olympic boycott, the reigning world record holder and world champion Serhij Bubka, who would have been clearly the favorite here, could not compete. Two US jumpers and two French jumpers in particular had the best prospects for the Olympic medals: Mike Tully and Earl Bell from the USA and Pierre Quinon and Thierry Vigneron from France.
At 5.50 m there were still seven jumpers in competition. In addition to the four favorites, these were the Swiss Felix Böhni, the Finn Kimmo Pallonen and the US jumper Douglas Lytle. Both Böhni and Lytle failed here. Quinon, Tully, Vigneron and Pallonen skipped the height, Bell crossed the bar on the first attempt. The next height of 5.55 m was skipped by Quinon, Bell and Vigneron. Tully only needed one try, Pallonen failed and was eliminated.
Bell and Vigneron managed 5.60 m in their first attempt, Tully and Quinon skipped the height. Bell and Vigneron again skipped 5.65 m. Quinon had a failed attempt and took the two remaining attempts up to the next level. Tully crossed the bar on the third attempt. Quinon managed 5.70 m in the first attempt, Tully skipped the height, Earl Bell and Thierry Vigneron failed. They shared the bronze medal due to the failed attempt rule, even though Bell had one more try than Vigneron - he had jumped 5.50m in the first jump while Vigneron had left out here. The rule of multiple attempts did not apply here.
The next height of 5.75 m was skipped by Tully. Quinon crossed the bar on the first try. At 5.80 m both failed three times. Pierre Quinon became Olympic champion, Mike Tully won silver with 5.65 m.
Pierre Quinon won the first Olympic victory for France in the pole vault .
space | Surname | nation | 5.10 m | 5.20 m | 5.30 m | 5.40 m | 5.45 m | 5.50 m | 5.55 m | 5.60 m | 5.65 m | 5.70 m | 5.75 m | 5.80 m | Bottom line | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Pierre Quinon | France | - | - | - | - | xo | - | - | - | x- | O | O | xxx | 5.75 m | |
2 | Mike Tully | United States | - | - | - | - | O | - | O | - | xx o | - | - | xxx | 5.65 m | |
3 | Earl Bell | United States | - | - | - | O | - | O | - | O | - | xxx | 5.60 m | |||
Thierry Vigneron | France | - | - | - | O | - | - | - | O | - | xxx | 5.60 m | ||||
5 | Kimmo Pallonen | Finland | - | - | xo | - | x o | - | xxx | 5.45 m | ||||||
6th | Douglas Lytle | United States | - | - | - | O | - | xxx | 5.40 m | |||||||
7th | Felix Böhni | Switzerland | - | - | O | - | - | xxx | 5.30 m | |||||||
8th | Mauro Barella | Italy | xxo | - | xx o | xxx | 5.30 m | |||||||||
9 | Alberto Ruiz | Spain | - | O | - | xxx | 5.20 m | |||||||||
10 | Weimin Yang | People's Republic of China | x o | xxx | 5.10 m | |||||||||||
11 | Jeffrey Gutteridge | Great Britain | xx o | xxx | 5.10 m | |||||||||||
ogV | Serge Ferreira | France | - | - | xxx | without height | ||||||||||
Tomás Hintnaus | Brazil | - | - | - | xxx | |||||||||||
Tomomi Takahashi | Japan | xxx |
- Olympic Games 1984 Los Angeles Sarajevo with contributions by Ulrich Kaiser and Heinz Maegerlein , eds. Manfred Vorderwülbecke , C. Bertelsmann Verlag, Munich 1984, ISBN 3-570-01851-2 , p. 33
Web links
- SportsReference Pole Vault , accessed January 12, 2018
- Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , p. 286, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 12, 2018
Video
- Olympics - 1984 Los Angeles - Track & Field - Mens Pole Vault - USA Earl Bell & FRA Thierry Vigneron , published April 21, 2016 on youtube.com, accessed January 12, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 677 , accessed on January 12, 2018
- ↑ a b Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , p. 286, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 12, 2018
- ↑ SportsReference Pole Vault , accessed January 12, 2018