1988 Summer Olympics / Athletics - 800 m (women)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | 800 meter run | ||||||||
gender | Women | ||||||||
Attendees | 29 athletes from 19 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Seoul Olympic Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | September 24, 1988 (preliminary round) September 25, 1988 (semi-finals) September 26, 1988 (final) |
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The women's 800-meter run at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul was held from September 24 to 26, 1988 in three rounds at the Seoul Olympic Stadium. 29 athletes took part.
Olympic champion was Sigrun Wodars from the GDR. She won ahead of her compatriot Christine Wachtel and the American Kim Gallagher .
Gabriela Lesch took part for the Federal Republic of Germany , who was eliminated in the semifinals.
Runners from Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.
Current titleholders
Olympic champion 1984 | Doina Melinte ( Romania ) | 1: 57.60 min | Los Angeles 1984 |
World Champion 1987 | Sigrun Wodars ( GDR ) | 1: 55.26 min | Rome 1987 |
European champion 1986 | Nadija Olisarenko ( Soviet Union ) | 1: 57.15 min | Stuttgart 1986 |
Pan American Champion 1987 | Ana Fidelia Quirot ( Cuba ) | 1: 59.06 min | Indianapolis 1987 |
Central America and Caribbean Champion 1987 | Angelita Lind ( Puerto Rico ) | 2: 04.87 min | Caracas 1987 |
South American Champion 1987 | Soraya Telles ( Brazil ) | 2: 07.71 min | São Paulo 1987 |
Asian champion 1987 | Choi Se-bum ( South Korea ) | 2: 05.11 min | Singapore 1987 |
African champion in 1988 | Hassiba Boulmerka ( Algeria ) | 2: 06.16 min | Annaba 1988 |
Existing records
World record | 1: 53.28 min | Jarmila Kratochvilová ( Czechoslovakia ) | Munich , Federal Republic of Germany (now Germany ) | July 26, 1983 |
Olympic record | 1: 53.43 min | Nadija Olisarenko ( Soviet Union ) | Final of Moscow , Soviet Union (today Russia ) | July 27, 1980 |
Preliminary round
Date: September 24, 1988
The athletes started a total of four heats on September 24th. The first three athletes of each run qualified for the semi-finals. In addition, the four fastest times, the so-called lucky losers , made it through. The directly qualified athletes are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
Forward 1
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Inna Yevseeva | Soviet Union | 2: 01.59 min | |
2 | Slobodanka Čolović | Yugoslavia | 2: 1.80 min | |
3 | Shireen Bailey | Great Britain | 2: 02.36 min | |
4th | Sharon Powell | Jamaica | 2: 03.49 min | |
5 | Montserrat Pujol | Spain | 2: 03.73 min | |
6th | Choi Se-bum | South Korea | 2: 06.65 min | |
7th | Assumpta Achuo-Bei | Cameroon | 2: 07.10 min | |
8th | Kungu Bakombo | Zaire | 2: 11.00 min |
Forward 2
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Christine Wachtel | GDR | 2: 00.62 min | |
2 | Joetta Clark | United States | 2: 00.83 min | |
3 | Gabriela Lesch | BR Germany | 2: 00.95 min | |
4th | Maite Zúñiga | Spain | 2: 00.98 min | |
5 | Mary Burzminski | Canada | 2: 02.85 min | |
6th | Shiny Abraham | India | 2: 03.26 min | |
7th | Maria Mutola | Mozambique | 2: 04.36 min | |
8th | Sheila Seebaluck | Mauritius | 2: 08.93 min |
Forward 3
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sigrun Wodars | GDR | 2: 02.24 min | |
2 | Delisa Floyd | United States | 2: 02.37 min | |
3 | Soraya Telles | Brazil | 2: 02.48 min | |
4th | Dalia Matusevičienė | Soviet Union | 2: 02.57 min | |
5 | Kirsty Wade | Great Britain | 2: 02.75 min | |
6th | Maureen Stewart | Costa Rica | 2: 08.17 min | |
7th | Laverne Bryan | Antigua and Barbuda | 2: 12.18 min | |
DNS | Sun Sumei | People's Republic of China |
Forward 4
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kim Gallagher | United States | 2: 01.70 min | |
2 | Diane Edwards | Great Britain | 2: 01.79 min | |
3 | Nadia Olisarenko | Soviet Union | 2: 01.81 min | |
4th | Letitia Vriesde | Suriname | 2: 01.83 min | |
5 | Hassiba Boulmerka | Algeria | 2: 03.33 min | |
6th | Renée Bélanger | Canada | 2: 04.74 min | |
DNS | Pink Colorado | Spain |
Semifinals
Date: September 25, 1988
The first four athletes in each of the two races (highlighted in light blue) qualified for the final.
Run 1
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sigrun Wodars | GDR | 1: 57.21 min | |
2 | Kim Gallagher | United States | 1: 57.39 min | |
3 | Slobodanka Čolović | Yugoslavia | 1: 57.49 min | |
4th | Maite Zúñiga | Spain | 1: 58.85 min | |
5 | Kirsty Wade | Great Britain | 2: 00.86 min | |
6th | Soraya Telles | Brazil | 2: 01.86 min | |
7th | Joetta Clark | United States | 2: 03.32 min | |
8th | Nadia Olisarenko | Soviet Union | 2: 05.27 min |
Run 2
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Christine Wachtel | GDR | 1: 58.44 min | |
2 | Delisa Floyd | United States | 1: 58.82 min | |
3 | Inna Yevseeva | Soviet Union | 1: 59.10 min | |
4th | Diane Edwards | Great Britain | 1: 59.66 min | |
5 | Gabriela Lesch | BR Germany | 1:59, 85 min | |
6th | Shireen Bailey | Great Britain | 1: 59.94 min | |
7th | Dalia Matusevičienė | Soviet Union | 2:00:15 min | |
8th | Letitia Vriesde | Suriname | 2: 02.34 min |
final
space | Surname | nation | time | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sigrun Wodars | GDR | 1: 56.10 min | |
2 | Christine Wachtel | GDR | 1: 56.64 min | |
3 | Kim Gallagher | United States | 1: 56.91 min | |
4th | Slobodanka Čolović | Yugoslavia | 1: 57.50 min | |
5 | Delisa Floyd | United States | 1: 57.80 min | |
6th | Inna Yevseeva | Soviet Union | 1: 59.37 min | |
7th | Maite Zúñiga | Spain | 1: 59.82 min | |
8th | Diane Edwards | Great Britain | 2: 00.77 min |
Date: September 26, 1988
Two runners from the GDR and two from the USA each qualified for the final. The starting field was completed with one athlete each from Yugoslavia, Spain, the Soviet Union and Great Britain.
One of the main favorites, Cuban Ana Fidelia Quirot , could not compete due to the Cuban boycott. The world champion Sigrun Wodars and vice world champion Christine Wachtel, both from the GDR, started with the greatest chances of victory and medals .
The two GDR athletes determined the final race from the start. Wachtel was in the lead until shortly before the end of the first lap, then Wodars took the lead. The 400 meter mark was passed in a very fast 56.43 seconds. Third was Inna Evsejewa, USSR, fourth was Yugoslav Slobodanka Čolović, ahead of US American Kim Gallagher. Behind it there was a gap that increased between 400 and 500 meters in the curve. In the target curve, Wachtel pushed past Wodars and Gallagher passed the two opponents in front of her. The two GDR runners and Gallagher were still lying close together and fighting for the medal distribution. The gaps to the rear were getting bigger. On the home stretch, Sigrun countered Wodars Wachtels attack and won the gold medal. Christine Wachtel remained the silver medal that she was able to claim against the strongly emerging American Kim Gallagher. Slobodanka Čolović defended her fourth place, while Inna Yevsejewa fell behind the American Delisa Floyd to sixth.
Sigrun Wodars won the GDR's first Olympic victory over 800 meters for women.
Web links
- SportsReference 800m , accessed January 30, 2018
- Official report on the Olympic Games in Seoul Volume two, part two , athletics results: p. 256f, English / French (PDF, 25.64 MB), accessed on January 30, 2018
Video
- 1988 Seoul Olympic Games Women's 800 , published July 9, 2015 on youtube.com, accessed January 30, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 795 , accessed on January 30, 2018
- ↑ Official report on the Olympic Games in Seoul, volume two, part two , athletics results: p. 256f, English / French (PDF, 25.64 MB), accessed on January 30, 2018
- ↑ a b Official report on the Olympic Games in Seoul Volume two, part two , Athletics results: p. 257, English / French (PDF, 25.64 MB), accessed on January 30, 2018