1996 Summer Olympics / Athletics - 10,000 m (men)
sport | athletics | ||||||||
discipline | 10,000 meter run | ||||||||
gender | Men | ||||||||
Attendees | 46 athletes from 30 countries | ||||||||
Competition location | Centennial Olympic Stadium | ||||||||
Competition phase | July 26, 1996 (preliminary round) July 29, 1996 (final) |
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The men's 10,000-meter run at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta was held on July 26 and 28, 1996 at the Centennial Olympic Stadium . 46 athletes took part.
The Ethiopian Haile Gebrselassie became Olympic champion . He won ahead of the Kenyan Paul Tergat and the Moroccan Salah Hissou .
Stéphane Franke started for Germany . He qualified for the final and finished ninth.
Athletes from Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein did not take part.
Current title holders
Olympic champion 1992 | Khalid Skah ( Morocco ) | 27: 46.70 min | Barcelona 1992 |
World Champion 1995 | Haile Gebrselassie ( Ethiopia ) | 27: 12.95 min | Gothenburg 1995 |
European Champion 1994 | Abel Antón ( Spain ) | 28: 06.03 min | Helsinki 1994 |
Pan American champion 1995 | Armando Quintanilla ( Mexico ) | 28: 57.41 min | Mar del Plata 1995 |
Central America and Caribbean champions 1995 | Marcos Villa ( Mexico ) | 29: 44.16 min | Guatemala City 1995 |
South American Champion 1995 | Sérgio Gonçalves da Silva ( Brazil ) | 29: 10.73 min | Manaus 1995 |
Asian champion 1995 | Marti Sopjew ( Turkmenistan ) | 30: 04.87 min | Jakarta 1995 |
African champion 1996 | Stephen Kiogora ( Kenya ) | 29: 16.4 min | Yaoundé 1996 |
Oceania Champion 1994 | Paul McRae ( New Zealand ) | 31: 11.97 min | Auckland 1994 |
Existing records
World record | 26: 43.53 min | Haile Gebrselassie ( Ethiopia ) | Hengelo , Netherlands | August 16, 1995 |
Olympic record | 27: 21.46 min | Brahim Boutayeb ( Morocco ) | Final from Seoul , South Korea | September 26, 1988 |
Note: All times are Atlanta local time ( UTC − 5 ).
Preliminary round
July 26, 1996, from 9.45 p.m.
The athletes competed in a total of two preliminary runs. The first eight long-distance runners qualified for the finals. In addition, the four fastest times, the so-called lucky losers , made it through. The directly qualified runners are highlighted in light blue, the lucky losers in light green.
Forward 1
Majed Abu Maraheel was the first athlete to participate in the Olympic Games for the Palestinian Territories .
space | Surname | nation | Time (min) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Worku Bikila | Ethiopia | 27: 50.57 | |
2 | Paul Tergat | Kenya | 27: 50.66 | |
3 | Mathias Ntawulikura | Rwanda | 27: 51.69 | |
4th | Aloÿs Nizigama | Burundi | 27: 53.21 | |
5 | Salah Hissou | Morocco | 27: 53.32 | |
6th | Stefano Baldini | Italy | 27: 55.79 | |
7th | Abel Antón | Spain | 27: 56.26 | |
8th | Carlos de la Torre | Spain | 28: 04.14 | |
9 | Zoltán Káldy | Hungary | 28: 13.49 | |
10 | Marko Hhawu | Tanzania | 28: 14.08 | |
11 | Paul Evans | Great Britain | 28: 24.39 | |
12 | Robert Johnston | New Zealand | 28: 40.60 | |
13 | Katsuhiko Hanada | Japan | 28: 52.22 | |
14th | Róbert Štefko | Slovakia | 29: 03.80 | |
15th | Carlos Patrício | Portugal | 29: 15.41 | |
16 | Ronaldo da Costa | Brazil | 29: 26.58 | |
17th | Dan Middleman | United States | 29: 50.72 | |
18th | Mohamed Ezzher | France | 29: 55.34 | |
19th | Martin Pitayo | Mexico | 30: 32.20 | |
20th | Herder Vázquez | Colombia | 33: 26.15 | |
21st | Majed Abu Maraheel | Palestine | 34: 40.50 | |
DNF | Larbi Zéroual | Morocco | ||
DNS | Julian Paynter | Australia | ||
Yasuyuki Watanabe | Japan |
Forward 2
space | Surname | nation | Time (min) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Haile Gebrselassie | Ethiopia | 28: 14.20 | |
2 | Josephat Machuka | Kenya | 28: 14.27 | |
3 | Paul Koech | Kenya | 28: 17.48 | |
4th | Jon Brown | Great Britain | 28: 19.85 | |
5 | Alyan Al-Qahtani | Saudi Arabia | 28: 22.35 | |
6th | Khalid Skah | Morocco | 28: 23.21 | |
7th | Stéphane Franke | Germany | 28: 24.30 | |
8th | Armando Quintanilla | Mexico | 28: 27.28 | |
9 | Alejandro Gomez | Spain | 28: 28.16 | |
10 | Silvio Guerra | Ecuador | 28: 30.15 | |
11 | Abraham Assefa | Ethiopia | 28: 32.24 | |
12 | Toshinari Takaoka | Japan | 28: 38.18 | |
13 | Shaun Creighton | Australia | 28: 44.29 | |
14th | Alfredo Brás | Portugal | 28: 50.28 | |
15th | Hendrick Ramaala | South Africa | 29: 07.81 | |
16 | Bradley Barquist | United States | 29: 11.20 | |
17th | Charles Mulinga | Zambia | 29: 14.99 | |
18th | Miroslav Vanko | Slovakia | 29: 17.53 | |
19th | Sean Dollman | Ireland | 29: 19.03 | |
20th | Hamid Sajjadi | Iran | 29: 22.65 | |
21st | Jeff Schiebler | Canada | 29: 47.79 | |
DNF | Abdellah Béhar | France | ||
Paulo Guerra | Portugal | |||
Todd Williams | United States |
final
July 29, 1996, 10:00 p.m.
All three Kenyans and all three Spaniards had qualified for the final. They ran against two Ethiopians, two Moroccans and two participants from Great Britain as well as one participant each from Burundi, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania and Hungary.
The clear favorite was the Ethiopian world champion and world record holder Haile Gebrselassie. His strongest competitors were the Kenyan Paul Tergat, third in the World Cup last year, the 1992 Olympic champion and vice world champion Khalid Skah from Morocco and his compatriot Salah Hissou, fourth in the 1995 World Cup .
The first half of the race was run at 13: 55.22 minutes at a pace that was still feasible for most of the finalists. Initially, the Italian Stefano Baldini was in charge, but was soon replaced by Aloÿs Nizigama from Burundi. After the 5000 meter mark, the three Kenyans Tergat, Paul Koech and Josephat Machuka took the lead and ensured a significantly higher pace. Six runners were still together in a leading group, besides the three Kenyans there were Gebrselassie, Hissou and Nizigama. After 8000 meters, Tergat accelerated the pace. Now it was only Gebrselassie who could follow. Behind them, Hissou held up well with a gap of six to seven meters, but his deficit grew larger and larger as the race went on and the other runners in the former top group were slowly catching up on Hissou. At the beginning of the last lap, Gebrselassie put in a long sprint, Tergat increasingly lost contact with him. On the home stretch, the Kenyan came closer again, but could no longer reach his competitor. Haile Gebrselassie won the race with a new Olympic record . Silver medalist Paul Tergat also beat the previous record. This was only possible thanks to the exceptionally fast second half of the race in 13: 12.12 minutes. Salah Hissou was able to defend his third place and won the bronze medal more than sixteen seconds behind Tergat. Aloÿs Nizigama came in fourth, Josephat Machuka in fifth and Paul Koech in sixth. Khalid Skah finished seventh ahead of South African Mathias Ntawulikura. The German Stéphane Franke finished ninth, making him the best finalist who did not come from Africa.
Split times | |||
---|---|---|---|
Intermediate mark |
Meanwhile | Leading | 1000 m time |
1000 m | 2: 48.32 min | Stefano Baldini with the entire field | 2: 48.32 min |
2000 m | 5: 31.26 min | Aloÿs Nizigama with the complete field | 2: 42.94 min |
3000 m | 8: 16.87 min | Aloÿs Nizigama with the complete field | 2: 45.61 min |
4000 m | 11: 06.63 min | Aloÿs Nizigama with the complete field | 2: 49.76 min |
5000 m | 13: 55.22 min | Aloÿs Nizigama with the complete field | 2: 48.49 min |
6000 m | 16: 35.48 min | Paul Koech in a top group of six | 2: 40.26 min |
7000 m | 19: 18.36 min | Josephat Machuka in a top group of six | 2: 42.88 min |
8000 m | 22: 01.62 min | Paul Tergat in front of Haile Gebrselassie | 2: 43.39 min |
9000 m | 24: 35.88 min | Paul Tergat in front of Haile Gebrselassie | 2: 34.29 min |
10,000 m | 27: 07.34 min | Haile Gebrselassie | 2: 31.46 min |
space | Surname | nation | Time (min) | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Haile Gebrselassie | Ethiopia | 27: 07.34 | OR |
2 | Paul Tergat | Kenya | 27: 08.17 | |
3 | Salah Hissou | Morocco | 27: 24.67 | |
4th | Aloÿs Nizigama | Burundi | 27: 33.79 | |
5 | Josephat Machuka | Kenya | 27: 35.08 | |
6th | Paul Koech | Kenya | 27: 35.19 | |
7th | Khalid Skah | Morocco | 27: 46.98 | |
8th | Mathias Ntawulikura | Rwanda | 27: 50.73 | |
9 | Stéphane Franke | Germany | 27: 59.08 | |
10 | Jon Brown | Great Britain | 27: 59.72 | |
11 | Armando Quintanilla | Mexico | 28: 09.46 | |
12 | Marko Hhawu | Tanzania | 28: 20.58 | |
13 | Abel Antón | Spain | 28: 29.37 | |
14th | Carlos de la Torre | Spain | 28: 32.11 | |
15th | Alejandro Gomez | Spain | 28: 39.11 | |
16 | Zoltán Káldy | Hungary | 28: 45.48 | |
17th | Worku Bikila | Ethiopia | 28: 59.15 | |
18th | Stefano Baldini | Italy | 29: 07.77 | |
DNF | Paul Evans | Great Britain | ||
Alyan Al-Qahtani | Saudi Arabia |
literature
- Gerd Rubenbauer (ed.), Olympic Summer Games Atlanta 1996 with reports by Britta Kruse, Johannes Ebert, Andreas Schmidt and Ernst Christian Schütt, comments: Gerd Rubenbauer and Hans Schwarz, Chronik Verlag im Bertelsmann Verlag, Gütersloh / Munich 1996, p. 33f
Video
- 10,000m Final Men, 1996 - Haile Gebrselassie & Paul Tergat. First 5K , published May 19, 2012 on youtube.com, accessed February 27, 2018
- Finale du 10000m des Jeux Olympiques 1996 d'Atlanta - Haile Gebresselassie & Paul Tergat , published on November 8, 2012 on youtube.com, accessed on February 27, 2018
Web links
- SportsReference 10,000m , accessed February 27, 2018
- Official Report, Part III on the Olympic Games in Atlanta , p. 80, English / French (PDF, 13,520 MB), accessed on February 27, 2018
Individual evidence
- ↑ IAAF Statistics Handbook, Beijing 2015, page 673 , accessed on February 27, 2018
- ↑ a b Official Report, Part III on the Olympic Games in Atlanta ( Memento of the original from October 7, 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. 80, English / French (PDF, 13,520 MB), accessed on February 27, 2018