1988 Summer Olympics / Athletics - High Jump (Men)

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Olympic rings
Olympic Park Stadium.jpg
sport athletics
discipline high jump
gender Men
Attendees 27 athletes from 17 countries
Competition location Seoul Olympic Stadium
Competition phase September 24, 1988 (qualifying)
September 25, 1988 (final)
Medalist
gold medal Hennadij Avdjejenko ( URS ) Soviet UnionSoviet Union 
Silver medal Hollis Conway ( USA ) United StatesUnited States 
Bronze medal Rudolf Powarnitsyn ( URS ) Patrik Sjöberg ( SWE ) Soviet UnionSoviet Union 
SwedenSweden 

The men's high jump at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul was held on September 24th and 25th, 1988 in two rounds in the Seoul Olympic Stadium. 27 athletes took part.

Olympic champion was Hennadij Avdjejenko from the Soviet Union. He won ahead of the American Hollis Conway . Two bronze medals were awarded as two athletes reached the same height with the same number of failed attempts. The medals went to Rudolf Powarnitsyn from the Soviet Union and Patrik Sjöberg from Sweden.

The 1984 Olympic champions Dietmar Mögenburg and Carlo Thränhardt competed for the Federal Republic of Germany . Both reached the final. Mögenburg finished sixth, Thränhardt seventh.
Athletes from the GDR, Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.

Current title holders

Olympic champion 1984 Dietmar Mögenburg ( Federal Republic of Germany ) Germany BRBR Germany  2.35 m Los Angeles 1984
World Champion 1987 Patrik Sjöberg ( Sweden ) SwedenSweden  2.38 m Rome 1987
European champion 1986 Igor Paklin ( Soviet Union ) Soviet UnionSoviet Union  2.34 m Stuttgart 1986
Pan American champion 1987 Javier Sotomayor ( Cuba ) CubaCuba  2.32 m Indianapolis 1987
Central America and Caribbean Champion 1987 Clarence Saunders ( Bermuda ) Bermuda 1910Bermuda  2.26 m Caracas 1987
South America Champion 1987 Fernando Moreno ( Argentina ) ArgentinaArgentina  2.17 m São Paulo 1987
Asian champion 1987 Liu Yungpeng ( People's Republic of China ) China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China  2.24 m Singapore 1987
African Champion 1988 Boubacar Guèye ( Senegal ) SenegalSenegal  2.16 m Annaba 1988

Existing records

World record 2.43 m Javier Sotomayor ( Cuba ) CubaCuba  Salamanca , Spain September 8, 1988
Olympic record 2.36 m Gerd Wessig ( GDR ) Germany Democratic Republic 1949GDR  Final of Moscow , Soviet Union (today Russia ) August 1, 1980

qualification

Date: September 24, 1988

For the qualification, the athletes were drawn into two groups. The qualification height for the direct entry into the final was 2.28 m. Since only seven jumpers jumped this height (highlighted in light blue), the final field was filled with the next best jumpers from both groups (highlighted in light green). In the end, 2.25 m was enough for participation in the finals, which the athletes in the second group jumping later had already achieved. So the actual qualification level was not even tackled by one of them after the 2.25 m had been mastered.

Group A

space Surname nation 2.05 m 2.10 m 2.15 m 2.19 m 2.22 m 2.25 m 2.28 m height annotation
1 Dietmar Mögenburg Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany - - - O - O O 2.28 m
Igor Paklin Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - - - O - O O
3 Geoff Parsons United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain - - O - - xo O 2.28 m
4th Clarence Saunders Bermuda 1910Bermuda Bermuda - - - O - xxo O 2.28 m
5 Hollis Conway United StatesUnited States United States - - - O O xo x o 2.28 m
Dalton Grant United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain - - - O - xo x o
7th Arturo Ortíz SpainSpain Spain O - O - xo xo x o 2.28 m
8th Róbert Ruffíni CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia - - O O xo O xxx 2.25 m
9 Luca Toso ItalyItaly Italy - - O xo - xx o xxx 2.25 m
10 Troy Kemp BahamasBahamas Bahamas - - O O - - xxx 2.19 m
Sorin Matei Romania 1965Romania Romania - - - O - xxx
12 Floyd Manderson United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain O O O xx o xxx 2.19 m
13 Paul Ngadjadoum ChadChad Chad O O O - 2.15 m

Group B

space Surname nation 2.05 m 2.10 m 2.15 m 2.19 m 2.22 m 2.25 m 2.28 m height annotation
1 Patrik Sjöberg SwedenSweden Sweden - - - O O O - 2.25 m
2 Rudolf Powarnitsyn Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - - - xo O O - 2.25 m
Brian Stanton United StatesUnited States United States - - O O xo O -
4th Hennadij Avdjejenko Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - - O - xxo O - 2.25 m
5 James Allen Howard United StatesUnited States United States - O O - O x o - 2.25 m
Carlo Thränhardt Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany - - - O - x o -
7th Krzysztof Krawczyk PolandPoland Poland - - O - xo x o - 2.25 m
8th Milton Ottey CanadaCanada Canada - - - xo O xxx 2.22 m
9 Jo Hyeon-uk Korea SouthSouth Korea South Korea - O O - xx o - xxx 2.22 m
10 Brian Marshall CanadaCanada Canada - O xxo xxo xx o xxx 2.22 m
11 Artur Partyka PolandPoland Poland - O O O xxx 2.19 m
12 Zhu Jianhua China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of China - O - x o xxx 2.19 m
13 Fernando Pastoriza ArgentinaArgentina Argentina O O xxx 2.10 m
ogV Cheick Seynou Burkina FasoBurkina Faso Burkina Faso xxx without height

final

Date: September 25, 1988

The Cuban world record holder Javier Sotomayor could not take part in Seoul due to the boycott of his country . Otherwise, the high jump top of the world was completely at the start. In addition to the 1984 Olympic champion Dietmar Mögenburg, four former world record jumpers competed: Patrik Sjöberg from Sweden - also reigning world champion , Zhu Jianhua from China and Igor Paklin and Rudolf Powarnizyn from the Soviet Union. With Paklin and his compatriot Hennadij Awdjejenko, the two World Cup runners-up from 1987 were also in the field. A high-class competition was to be expected. Jianhua surprisingly failed to qualify. A total of sixteen athletes had qualified for the final: three jumpers each from the Soviet Union and three from the USA, two jumpers from the Federal Republic of Germany, two British and one participant each from Bermuda, Italy, Poland, Sweden, Spain and Czechoslovakia .

At the height of 2.34 m there were still eight jumpers fighting for the medals, with Paklin one and the German Carlo Thränhardt already having two failed attempts and taking their last jumps to the next height. However, both did not jump over the 2.36 m and were eliminated. While Avdjejenko and the US athlete Hollis Conway managed this height in the first attempt, Sjöberg and Powarnitsyn needed two attempts. Mögenburg and Clarence Saunders from Bermudas each tore once and took their remaining two attempts with them to the next height of 2.38 m. Both Saunders and Mögenburg failed. Saunders was fifth due to fewer failed attempts, Mögenburg sixth.

Hennadij Awdjejenko was the only jumper who could cross the 2.38 m. That was a new Olympic record and brought him the Olympic victory. Conway, like Powarnitsyn and Sjöberg, had three failed attempts. Hollis Conway won the silver medal for climbing the previous 2.36 m height on his first jump. Both Rudolf Powarnizyn and Patrik Sjöberg received bronze because they only had one failed attempt each at 2.36 m. Olympic champion Avdjejenko had 2.40 m put up, but tore the bar the first time. He saved the two remaining attempts for the world record height of 2.44 m, which he could not skip.

space Surname nation 2.15 m 2.20 m 2.25 m 2.28 m 2.31 m 2.34 m 2.36 m 2.38 m 2.40 2.44 Bottom line annotation
1 Hennadij Avdjejenko Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - O O - O O O x o x- xx 2.38 m OR
2 Hollis Conway United StatesUnited States United States - xo xo O O xo O xxx 2.36 m
3 Rudolf Powarnitsyn Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - O O O O O x o xxx 2.36 m
Patrik Sjöberg SwedenSweden Sweden - - O - O - x o xxx
5 Clarence Saunders Bermuda 1910Bermuda Bermuda - O xo - x-- O x-- xx 2.34 m
6th Dietmar Mögenburg Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany - - O - xo x o x-- xx 2.34 m
7th Dalton Grant United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain - - O - O xxx 2.31 m
Igor Paklin Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet Union - O O - O x-- xx
Carlo Thränhardt Germany BRBR Germany BR Germany - - O - O xx- x
10 James Allen Howard United StatesUnited States United States - O O xo O xxx 2.31 m
11 Brian Stanton United StatesUnited States United States O - O O x o xxx 2.31 m
12 Krzysztof Krawczyk PolandPoland Poland - O O xo xx o xxx 2.31 m
13 Luca Toso ItalyItaly Italy xo O O xxx 2.25 m
14th Arturo Ortíz SpainSpain Spain O - xx o xxx 2.25 m
15th Róbert Ruffíni CzechoslovakiaCzechoslovakia Czechoslovakia O xx o xxx 2.20 m
16 Geoff Parsons United KingdomUnited Kingdom Great Britain O - xxx 2.15 m

Web links

Video

Individual evidence

  1. IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 676 , accessed on January 27, 2018
  2. a b Official report on the Olympic Games in Seoul Volume two, part two , Athletics results: p. 242, English / French (PDF, 25.64 MB), accessed on January 27, 2018