1984 Summer Olympics / Athletics - 4 × 400 m (men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | 4 x 400 meter relay | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 113 athletes from 26 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | ||||||||
Competition phase | August 10, 1984 (preliminary and semi-finals) August 11, 1984 (final) |
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The men's 4-by-400-meter relay at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles was held on August 10 and 11, 1984 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum . 113 athletes took part in 26 registered and 25 started relays.
The US season with Sunder Nix , Ray Armstead , Alonzo Babers and Antonio McKay was Olympic champion. The silver medal went to Great Britain with Kriss Akabusi , Garry Cook , Todd Bennett and Philip Brown , and bronze to Nigeria ( Sunday Uti , Moses Ugbisie , Rotimi Peters , Innocent Egbunike ).
The season of the BR Germany was eliminated in the semifinals.
Relays from Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part. The GDR season was also not there because of the Olympic boycott.
Current title holders
Olympic champion 1980 |
Soviet Union ( Remigijus Valiulis , Michail Linge , Nikolai Tschernezki , Wiktor Markin ) |
3: 01.08 min | Moscow 1980 |
World Champion 1983 |
Soviet Union ( Sergei Lowatschow , Aljaksandr Trashchyla , Nikolai Tschernezki , Viktor Markin ) |
3: 00.79 min | Helsinki 1983 |
European Champion 1982 |
BR Germany ( Erwin Skamrahl , Harald Schmid , Thomas Giessing , Hartmut Weber ) |
3: 00.51 min | Athens 1982 |
Pan American Champion 1983 |
USA ( Alonzo Babers , Mike Bradley , James Rolle , Eddie Carey ) |
3: 00.27 min | Caracas 1983 |
Central America and Caribbean Champion 1983 | Cuba | 3: 05.12 min | Havana 1983 |
South America Champion 1983 |
Brazil (Paulo Correia, Evaldo da Silva, José Luíz Barbosa , Sérgio Menezes) |
3: 10.8 min | Santa Fe 1983 |
Asian champion 1983 | Iraq | 3: 07.98 min | Kuwait City 1983 |
African champions 1982 | Kenya | 3: 05.61 min | Cairo 1982 |
Existing records
World record | 2: 56.16 min |
USA ( Vince Matthews , Ron Freeman , Larry James , Lee Evans ) |
Mexico City , Mexico | 20th October 1968 |
Olympic record | Mexico City Final , Mexico |
Preliminary round
Date: August 10, 1984
In the preliminary round, the 26 relays were drawn in four runs. The first three seasons of each run qualified for the semi-finals. Furthermore, the four fastest times, the so-called lucky losers , advanced. The directly qualified relays are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
The USA relay achieved the fastest lead time with 3: 01.44 min in run 4. The slowest directly qualified relay was the team from Trinidad and Tobago in run 1 with 3: 06.81 min. The fastest relay that could not qualify was the relay of France with 3: 08.33 min in run 2.
Forward 1
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia |
Darren Clark Gary Minihan Peter Van Miltenburg Rick Mitchell |
3: 03.72 min | |
2 | Canada |
Michael Sokolowski Douglas Hinds Brian Saunders Timothy Béthune |
3: 04.47 min | |
3 | Trinidad and Tobago |
Anton Skerritt Michael Puckerin Derek Archer Michael Paul |
3: 06.81 min | |
4th | Sweden |
Lauri Tommy Johansson Eric Josjö Christer Gullstrand Thomas Nyberg |
3: 07.32 min | |
5 | Japan |
Shigenori Omori Ryoichi Yoshida Hiroki Fuwa Susumu Takano |
3: 08.16 min | |
6th | Mozambique |
Leonardo Loforte Pedro Gonçalvo André Titos Henrique Ferreira |
3: 08.95 min | |
7th | United Arab Emirates |
Rashid Al-Jirbi Khamis Ibrahim Khamis Mubarak Ismail Ibrahim Aziz |
3: 19.90 min |
Forward 2
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Great Britain |
Kriss Akabusi Garry Cook Todd Bennett Philip Brown |
3: 06.10 min | |
2 | Italy |
Roberto Ribaud Ernesto Nocco Mauro Zuliani Donato Sabia |
3: 06.28 min | |
3 | Uganda |
John Goville Moses Kyeswa Peter Rwamuhanda Mike Okot |
3: 06.65 min | |
4th | France |
Yann Quentrec Didier Dubois Jacques Fellice Aldo Canti |
3: 08.33 min | |
5 | Antigua and Barbuda |
Alfred Browne Larry Miller Howard Lindsay Dale Jones |
3: 10.95 min | |
6th | British Virgin Islands |
Guy Hill Jeremy Molyneaux Dean Greenaway Lindel Hodge |
3: 11.89 min | |
7th | Cameroon |
Ernest Tché-Noubossie Jean-Pierre Abossolo-Ze Barnabé Messomo Mama Moluh |
3: 16.00 min |
Forward 3
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Barbados |
Richard Louis David Peltier Clyde Edwards Elvis Forde |
3: 03.31 min | |
2 | BR Germany |
Martin Weppler Uwe Andreas Schmitt Thomas Giessing Erwin Skamrahl |
3: 03.33 min | |
3 | Ivory Coast |
Georges Kablan Degnan Avognan Nogboun René Djédjémél Gabriel Tiacoh |
3: 03.50 min | |
4th | Jamaica |
Stephen Griffiths Mark Senior Dennis Wallace Devon Morris |
3: 03.85 min | |
5 | Brazil |
João Batista da Silva José Luíz Barbosa Antônio Dias Ferreira Gérson de Souza |
3: 05.08 min | |
DSQ | Senegal |
Boubacar Diallo Babacar Niang Moussa Case Amadou Dia Ba |
||
DNS | Sierra Leone |
Forward 4
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States |
Willie Smith Ray Armstead Alonzo Babers Walter Lee McCoy |
3: 01.44 min | |
2 | Kenya |
John Anzrah Simon Kitur Jason Opicho Elijah Sogomo |
3: 06.07 min | |
3 | Nigeria |
Sunday Uti Moses Ugbisie Rotimi Peters Innocent Egbunike |
3: 06.34 min | |
4th | Spain |
Manuel González Solanes Benjamin González Antonio Sánchez Ángel Heras |
3: 08.79 min | |
5 | Oman |
Barakat Al-Sharji Mohamed Al-Hashimi Abdullah Sulaiman Al-Akbary Mohamed Amer Al-Malky |
3: 15.87 min |
Semifinals
Date: August 10, 1984
In each of the two semi-finals, the first four seasons (highlighted in light blue) qualified for the final.
Changes were made to the line-up of seven teams:
- USA: Sunder Nix and Antonio McKay for Ray Armstead and Alonzo Babers
- FRG: Jörg Vaihinger for Thomas Giessing
- AUS: Bruce Frayne for Rick Mitchell
- ITA: Roberto Tozzi for Mauro Zuliani
- BRA: Wilson David Santos for Antônio Dias Ferreira
- JAM: Karl Smith for Dennis Wallace
- KEN: David Kitur for Simon Kitur
A protest against the scoring of the first run was submitted and later rejected. The US runner Walter McCoy had run a few meters on the wrong track. The referees saw this as unintentional, especially since no other runners were hindered by it and the US relay had not gained a decisive advantage.
The USA achieved the best time in the semifinals with 3: 00.19 minutes in run 1.
Run 1
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States |
Sunder Nix Walter Lee McCoy Willie Smith Antonio McKay |
3:00, 19 min | |
2 | Great Britain |
Kriss Akabusi Garry Cook Todd Bennett Philip Brown |
3: 02.98 min | |
3 | Canada | Michael Sokolowski Douglas Hinds Brian Saunders Timothy Béthune |
3: 03.93 min | |
4th | Uganda |
John Goville Moses Kyeswa Peter Rwamuhanda Mike Okot |
3: 04.02 min | |
5 | BR Germany |
Martin Weppler Uwe Andreas Schmitt Jörg Vaihinger Erwin Skamrahl |
3: 04.69 min | |
6th | Ivory Coast | Georges Kablan Degnan Avognan Nogboun René Djédjémél Gabriel Tiacoh |
3: 04.87 min | |
7th | Sweden | Lauri Tommy Johansson Eric Josjö Christer Gullstrand Thomas Nyberg |
3: 09.40 min | |
8th | Japan | Shigenori Omori Ryoichi Yoshida Hiroki Fuwa Susumu Takano |
3: 10.73 min |
Run 2
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nigeria |
Sunday Uti Moses Ugbisie Rotimi Peters Innocent Egbunike |
3: 02.22 min | |
2 | Australia |
Peter Van Miltenburg Gary Minihan Bruce Frayne Darren Clark |
3: 03.79 min | |
3 | Italy |
Roberto Tozzi Ernesto Nocco Roberto Ribaud Donato Sabia |
3: 03.87 min | |
4th | Barbados |
Richard Louis David Peltier Clyde Edwards Elvis Forde |
3: 03.89 min | |
5 | Brazil |
João Batista da Silva Wilson David Santos José Luíz Barbosa Gérson de Souza |
3: 03.99 min | |
6th | Jamaica | Stephen Griffiths Mark Senior Karl Smith Devon Morris |
3: 04.24 min | |
7th | Kenya | John Anzrah David Kitur Jason Opicho Elijah Sogomo |
3: 04.74 min | |
DSQ | Trinidad and Tobago | Anton Skerritt Michael Puckerin Derek Archer Michael Paul |
final
space | Season | occupation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | United States |
Sunder Nix Ray Armstead Alonzo Babers Antonio McKay |
2: 57.91 min | |
2 | Great Britain |
Kriss Akabusi Garry Cook Todd Bennett Philip Brown |
2: 59.13 min | |
3 | Nigeria |
Sunday Uti Moses Ugbisie Rotimi Peters Innocent Egbunike |
2: 59.32 min | |
4th | Australia |
Bruce Frayne Darren Clark Gary Minihan Rick Mitchell |
2: 59.70 min | |
5 | Italy |
Roberto Tozzi Ernesto Nocco Roberto Ribaud Pietro Mennea |
3: 01.44 min | |
6th | Barbados |
Richard Louis David Peltier Clyde Edwards Elvis Forde |
3: 1.60 min | |
7th | Uganda |
John Goville Moses Kyeswa Peter Rwamuhanda Mike Okot |
3: 02.09 min | |
8th | Canada | Michael Sokolowski Douglas Hinds Brian Saunders Timothy Béthune |
3: 02.82 min |
Date: August 11, 1984
In the final, line-up changes were made in three teams. The US replaced Walter Lee McCoy with Ray Armstead and Willie Smith with Alonzo Babers. Australia swapped Rick Mitchell for Peter Van Miltenburg and in Italy Pietro Mennea ran for Donato Sabia.
The US season was the clear favorite, especially in front of the home crowd. However, the pace of the first round was set by the Nigerians, who moved ahead of Australia, USA, Italy and Great Britain. Darren Clark put Australia in the front on the second substitution. The USA had moved up to second place ahead of Nigeria and the British. Alonzo Babers brought the Americans to the top on his lap. On the final section, Antonio McKay secured the US victory. Philip Brown had put the British season in second place, which won the silver medal. Nigeria was also able to overtake the Australians, who had been third up to that point, and won bronze. Italy, Barbados, Uganda and Canada came in behind Australia. The world record was not achieved in this competition, but it was a high quality race. The first four seasons undercut the three-minute mark. Four years earlier, not a single team had managed that. In 1976 and 1972 , the winning season alone ran under three minutes.
Alonzo Babers won his second gold medal in Los Angeles after his 400m win . In the sixteenth Olympic final there was the eleventh US victory.
Nigeria won the first medal in this discipline.
literature
- 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. 24f
Web links
- SportsReference 4 × 400 m , accessed on January 9, 2018
- Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , p. 284f, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 9, 2018
Video
- Men's 4 x 400m Relay Final at LA Olympics in 1984 , posted June 17, 2015 on youtube.com, accessed January 9, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 684 , accessed on January 9, 2018
- ↑ Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , p. 284, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 9, 2018
- ↑ Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , pp. 284f, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 9, 2018
- ↑ Los Angeles 1984 Official Report, 3, Results of the Games , p. 285, English / French (PDF, 11 MB), accessed on January 9, 2018
- ↑ SportsReference 4 × 400 m , accessed on January 9, 2018