Athletics at the 1920 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

Men's marathon
at the Games of the VII Olympiad
VenueOlympisch Stadion, Antwerp
Dates22 August
Competitors48 from 17 nations
Winning time2:32:35.8
Medalists
   Finland
   Estonia
   Italy
Athletics at the
1920 Summer Olympics
Track events
100 m   men
200 m men
400 m men
800 m men
1500 m men
5000 m men
10,000 m men
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men
3000 m steeplechase men
4×100 m relay men
4×400 m relay men
3000 m team race men
3 km walk men
10 km walk men
Road events
Marathon men
Field events
Long jump men
Triple jump men
High jump men
Pole vault men
Shot put men
Discus throw men
Hammer throw men
Javelin throw men
56 lb weight throw men
Combined events
Pentathlon men
Decathlon men
Cross-country events
Individual men
Team men

The men's marathon event was part of the track and field athletics programme at the 1920 Summer Olympics. The distance of this race was 42.75 kilometres. The competition was held on Sunday, 22 August 1920.[1]

48 runners from 17 nations competed.

The weather during the race has been described as "cool".[2] An Associated Press report described the weather as "cold and showery", but "fine running weather for the marathoners".[3]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in hours) prior to the 1920 Summer Olympics.

World Record 2:36:07 Sweden Alexis Ahlgren London (GBR) 31 May 1913
Olympic Record 2:36:54.8(*) South Africa Ken McArthur Stockholm (SWE) 14 July 1912

(*) Distance was 40.2 kilometres

Hannes Kolehmainen is recognized as having set a new world best with a time of 2:32:35.8 hours.[4] Although the course distance was officially reported to be 42,750 meters/26.56 miles,[5] the Association of Road Racing Statisticians estimated the course to be only 40 km.[6]

Results

Place Athlete Time
1  Hannes Kolehmainen (FIN) 2:32:35.8
2  Jüri Lossmann (EST) 2:32:48.6
3  Valerio Arri (ITA) 2:36:32.8
4  Auguste Broos (BEL) 2:39:25.8
5  Juho Tuomikoski (FIN) 2:40:18.8
6  Sofus Rose (DEN) 2:41:18.0
7  Joseph Organ (USA) 2:41:30.0
8  Rudolf Hansen (DEN) 2:41:39.4
9  Urho Tallgren (FIN) 2:42:40.0
10  Tatu Kolehmainen (FIN) 2:44:02.3
11  Carl Linder (USA) 2:44:21.2
12  Charles Mellor (USA) 2:45:30.0
13  James Dellow (CAN) 2:46:47.0
14  Bobby Mills (GBR) 2:48:05.0
15  Arthur Scholes (CAN) 2:48:30.0
16  Shizo Kanakuri (JPN) 2:48:45.4
17  Gustav Kinn (SWE) 2:49:10.4
18  Albert Moché (FRA) 2:50:00.2
19  Phadeppa Chaugle (IND) 2:50:45.4
20  Zensaku Motegi (JPN) 2:51:09.4
21  Kenzo Yashima (JPN) 2:57:02.0
22  Norman General (CAN) 2:58:01.0
23  Rudolf Wåhlin (SWE) 2:59:23.0
24  Yahei Miura (JPN) 2:59:37.0
25  Henri Teyssedou (FRA) 3:00:04.0
26  Hendricus Wessel (NED) 3:00:17.0
27  Charles Melis (BEL) 3:00:51.0
28  William Grüner (SWE) 3:01:48.0
29  George Piper (GBR) 3:02:10.0
30  Sinton Hewitt (AUS) 3:03:27.0
31  Leslie Housden (GBR) 3:14:25.0
32  Iraklis Sakellaropoulos (GRE) 3:14:25.0
33  Juan Bascuñán (CHI) 3:17:47.0
34  Oscar Blansaer (BEL) 3:20:00.0
35  Eric Robertson (GBR) 3:55:00.0
 Ettore Blasi (ITA) DNF
 Louis Ichard (FRA) DNF
 Antonio Persico (ITA) DNF
 Albert Smoke (CAN) DNF
 Axel Jensen (DEN) DNF
 Panagiotis Trivoulidas (GRE) DNF
 Christiaan Huijgens (NED) DNF
 Desiré Van Remortel (BEL) DNF
 Hans Schuster (SWE) DNF
 Amédée Trichard (FRA) DNF
 Sadashir Datar (IND) DNF
 Christian Gitsham (RSA) DNF
 Arthur Roth (USA) DNF

References

Specific
  1. "Athletics at the 1920 Antwerpen Summer Games: Men's Marathon". sports-reference.com. Retrieved 2012-10-08.
  2. USA Track & Field (2004). "2004 USA Olympic Team Trials: Men’s Marathon Media Guide Supplement" (pdf). Santa Barbara, California: USA Track & Field. p. 11. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
  3. "Kolehmainen, Finn Marvel, Winner of Marathon Race: Olympic Star of 1912 Established New Record for 26 Mile Course – Esthonian Runner Presses Finn Hard – Joe Organ, First American to Finish, Comes in Seventh – American Relay Team Hangs Up New Record". The Lewiston Daily Sun. AP. 23 August 1920. p. 6. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  4. "12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook. Berlin 2009." (PDF). Monte Carlo: IAAF Media & Public Relations Department. 2009. pp. 546, 563, 565, 651, and 653. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  5. "Olympic Games Official Report 1920" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  6. http://www.arrs.net/HP_OlyMa.htm
General
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, November 09, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.