Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's 800 metres

The men's 800 metres event at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California took place between 3 and 6 August.[1] Sixty-nine athletes from 55 nations competed.[2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Joaquim Cruz of Brazil, the nation's first medal in the men's 800 metres. Sebastian Coe of Great Britain repeated his silver-medal performance from 1980, the eighth man to win two medals in the event.

Men's 800 metres
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
VenueLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Dates3 August 1984 (heats)
4 August 1984 (quarter-finals)
5 August 1984 (semi-finals)
6 August 1984 (final)
Competitors69 from 55 nations
Winning time1:43.00 OR
Medalists
Joaquim Cruz
 Brazil
Sebastian Coe
 Great Britain
Earl Jones
 United States

Summary

With four notable front runners in the race the battle to the break was important. Edwin Koech on the far outside and Joaquim Cruz went out hard around the first turn, with Earl Jones and Johnny Gray to the inside. Cruz, Jones and Gray converged at the same spot, Gray getting the short end of the stick and suddenly losing ground to the back of the field, then Koech converged from the outside, closing the door on Cruz and Jones, with Cruz edging ahead of Jones as contact was made causing Cruz to jump 200 metres into the race. The lead group was marked by British rivals, defending champion Steve Ovett and world record holder Sebastian Coe. They held that order through the next 200 metres, only upset by Gray long striding along the outside up to Coe's shoulder. Gray's added speed seemed to force the leaders to run faster to stay ahead of him, while Ovett withered out the back of the field. With 200 to go Gray seemed to tighten up, frustrated that his hard effort only netted him fifth place. Through the turn, Cruz inched closer to Koech, still marked by Coe and Jones. When Cruz pounced coming off the turn, Koech wilted, outside of him Coe and Jones were in a shoulder to shoulder sprint battle. Cruz had won the war, sprinting away to a clear 5 metre victory. Coe was able to make a slight gain on Jones to take silver. Jones still held off a late charge by Billy Konchellah for bronze.

Background

This was the 20th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Three of the top four men from 1980 returned: gold medalist Steve Ovett and silver medalist Sebastian Coe of Great Britain, as well as fourth-place finisher Agberto Guimarães of Brazil. Coe (the world record holder) was a favorite, along with Guimarães's countryman Joaquim Cruz. Ovett had a respiratory illness and, while still strong in the event, was not at peak power.[2]

Of the 55 nations represented, 20 had never had a competitor in the men's 800 metres before: Antigua and Barbuda, the British Virgin Islands, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, the Gambia, Grenada, Jordan, Mozambique, Nepal, Niger, Oman, Paraguay, Rwanda, San Marino, the Seychelles, the Solomon Islands, Swaziland, the United Arab Emirates, North Yemen, and Zimbabwe all appeared in the event for the first time. Great Britain made its 19th appearance, most among all nations, having had no competitors in the event only in the 1904 Games in St. Louis.

Competition format

For only the second time, the 800 metres was run over four rounds (the first was in 1960); the number of runners had increased to 69 from 41 in 1980. The "fastest loser" system introduced in 1964 was used for the first round. There were nine first-round heats, each with 7 or 8 athletes; the top three runners in each heat as well as the next five fastest overall advanced to the semifinals. There were four quarterfinals, each of 8 athletes; the top four runners in each advanced to the semifinals. There were two semifinals with 8 athletes each; the top four runners in each semifinal advanced to the eight-man final.[2][3]

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing World and Olympic records were as follows.

World record Sebastian Coe (GBR)1:41.73Florence, Italy10 June 1981
Olympic record Alberto Juantorena (CUB)1:43.50Montreal, Canada25 July 1976

In the final Joaquim Cruz set a new Olympic record at 1:43.00.

Schedule

All times are Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7)

Date Time Round
Friday, 3 August 198416:40Round 1
Saturday, 4 August 198417:40Quarterfinals
Sunday, 5 August 198418:05Semifinals
Monday, 6 August 198417:50Final

Results

Round 1

RankHeatAthleteNationTimeNotes
15Joaquim Cruz Brazil1:45.66Q
22Sebastian Coe Great Britain1:45.71Q
32Omer Khalifa Sudan1:45.81Q
42Colomán Trabado Spain1:46.00Q
52Riccardo Materazzi Italy1:46.03q
69Billy Konchellah Kenya1:46.27Q
75Steve Ovett Great Britain1:46.66Q
88Juma Ndiwa Kenya1:46.73Q
92Marcus O'Sullivan Ireland1:46.85q
108William Wuycke Venezuela1:46.88Q
111Babacar Niang Senegal1:46.90Q
121Abdi Bile Somalia1:46.92Q
133Owen Hamilton Jamaica1:46.95Q
149Peter Elliott Great Britain1:46.98Q
151Donato Sabia Italy1:47.04Q
167Edwin Koech Kenya1:47.11Q
179José Luíz Barbosa Brazil1:47.12Q
186Johnny Gray United States1:47.19Q
198Mohamed Alouini Tunisia1:47.20Q
206Pat Scammell Australia1:47.24Q
211Sotirios Moutsanas Greece1:47.32q
226Marco Mayr Switzerland1:47.36Q
236Ahmed Belkessam Algeria1:47.51q
247Hans-Peter Ferner West Germany1:47.55Q
259Bruce Roberts Canada1:47.56q
265Oslen Barr Guyana1:47.65Q
277Agberto Guimarães Brazil1:47.72Q
288Simon Hoogewerf Canada1:47.74
294Earl Jones United States1:47.75Q
304Faouzi Lahbi Morocco1:47.81Q
317Mark Handelsman Israel1:47.90
323Moussa Fall Senegal1:47.91Q
333John Marshall United States1:47.99Q
345Benjamín González Spain1:48.01
354Philippe Dupont France1:48.09Q
361Joseph Ramotshabi Botswana1:48.17
375Batulamai Rajakumar Malaysia1:48.19
383Jama Aden Somalia1:48.64
392Archfell Musango Zambia1:48.84
404Axel Harries West Germany1:48.92
418Taplumanei Jonga Zimbabwe1:49.59
423Peter Pearless New Zealand1:49.95
435Isaac Ganunga Malawi1:51.25
446Meesaq Rizvi Pakistan1:51.29
459Charles Borromeo India1:51.52
469Dale Jones Antigua and Barbuda1:51.52
471André Titos Mozambique1:51.73
485Francisco Figueredo Paraguay1:52.22
491Samuel Sawny Grenada1:53.08
508Charlie Oliver Solomon Islands1:53.22
517Jerry Molyneaux British Virgin Islands1:53.23
527Jean-Marie Rudasingwa Rwanda1:53.23
535Siegfried Cruden Suriname1:53.31
544Mouteb Al-Faouri Jordan1:53.89
552Leopoldo Acosta Ecuador1:54.06
563Alberto López Guatemala1:54.19
576William Amakye Ghana1:54.80
584Ibrahim Aziz United Arab Emirates1:54.86
599Peter Ceesay The Gambia1:55.35
609Ousman Miangoto Chad1:56.02
611Jodha Gurung Nepal1:56.72
622Manlio Molinari San Marino1:57.09
638Barakat Al-Sharji Oman2:00.38
646Philip Sinon Seychelles2:04.89
658Abdul Al-Ghadi North Yemen2:05.90
667Bartolomé Esono Asumu Equatorial Guinea2:17.29
3Vusie Dlamini SwazilandDSQ
4Kim Bok-joo South KoreaDSQ
7Moussa Daweye NigerDSQ

Quarterfinal 1

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Edwin Koech Kenya 1:44.74Q
2 Donato Sabia Italy 1:44.90Q
3 Agberto Guimarães Brazil 1:45.18Q
4 Peter Elliott Great Britain 1:45.49Q
5 Faouzi Lahbi Morocco 1:45.67
6 Babacar Niang Senegal 1:45.71
7 Sotirios Moutsanas Greece 1:46.34
Colomán Trabado Spain DNF

Quarterfinal 2

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Billy Konchellah Kenya 1:46.15Q
2 Omar Khalifa Sudan 1:46.33Q
3 Sebastian Coe Great Britain 1:46.75Q
4 José Luiz Barbosa Brazil 1:46.87Q
5 John Marshall United States 1:47.18
6 Riccardo Materazzi Italy 1:47.90
7 Ahmed Belkessam Algeria 1:48.11
8 Marco Mayr Switzerland 1:48.30

Quarterfinal 3

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Joaquim Cruz Brazil 1:44.84Q
2 Steve Ovett Great Britain 1:45.72Q
3 Johnny Gray United States 1:45.82Q
4 William Wuycke Venezuela 1:46.17Q
5 Abdi Bile Somalia 1:46.49
6 Owen Hamilton Jamaica 1:46.74
7 Pat Scammel Australia 1:47.90
8 Bruce Roberts Canada 1:49.72

Quarterfinal 4

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Earl Jones United States 1:45.44Q
2 Hans-Peter Ferner West Germany 1:45.52Q
3 Juma Ndiwa Kenya 1:45.59Q
4 Moussa Fall Senegal 1:45.71Q
5 Mohamed Alouini Tunisia 1:45.78
6 Marcus O'Sullivan Ireland 1:46.21
7 Oslen Barr Guyana 1:46.97
8 Philippe Dupont France 1:48.95

Semifinal 1

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Joaquim Cruz Brazil 1:43.82Q
2 Edwin Koech Kenya 1:44.12Q
3 Earl Jones United States 1:44.51Q
4 Steve Ovett Great Britain 1:44.81Q
5 Omar Khalifa Sudan 1:44.87
6 Moussa Fall Senegal 1:45.03
7 William Wuycke Venezuela 1:47.32
Peter Elliott Great Britain DNF

Semifinal 2

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
1 Sebastian Coe Great Britain 1:45.51Q
2 Billy Konchellah Kenya 1:45.67Q
3 Johnny Gray United States 1:45.82Q
4 Donato Sabia Italy 1:45.96Q
5 Hans-Peter Ferner West Germany 1:46.16
6 Agberto Guimarães Brazil 1:46.65
7 Juma Ndiwa Kenya 1:48.06
8 José Luiz Barbosa Brazil 1:48.70

Final

Rank AthleteNation TimeNotes
Joaquim Cruz Brazil 1:43.00OR
Sebastian Coe Great Britain 1:43.64
Earl Jones United States 1:43.83
4 Billy Konchellah Kenya 1:44.03
5 Donato Sabia Italy 1:44.53
6 Edwin Koech Kenya 1:44.86
7 Johnny Gray United States 1:47.89
8 Steve Ovett Great Britain 1:52.28

See also

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1984 Los Angeles Games: Men's 800 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  2. "800 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  3. Official Report, vol. 2, pp. 274–76.
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