Athletics at the 1956 Summer Olympics – Men's 800 metres

The men's 800 metres event at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne was held on 23, 24, and 26 November 1956. There were a total number of 38 competitors from 24 nations.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Tom Courtney, the last of a streak of four American victories in the event and the seventh overall United States victory. Derek Johnson's silver put Great Britain back on the podium for the first time since that nation's own four-Games gold streak ended in 1932. Norway received its first men's 800 metres medal with Audun Boysen's bronze.

Men's 800 metres
at the Games of the XVI Olympiad
VenueMelbourne Cricket Ground
DatesNovember 23, 1956 (heats)
November 24, 1956 (semifinals)
November 26, 1956 (final)
Competitors38 from 24 nations
Winning time1:47.7 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Tom Courtney
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Derek Johnson
 Great Britain
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Audun Boysen
 Norway
 1952
1960 
Video on YouTube Official Video

Summary

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This one Olympiad saw the use of starting blocks from a waterfall start for the 800 meters. All subsequent races have used a standing start in lanes, breaking after the first turn (known as a one turn stagger). Out of the blocks, Tom Courtney got the edge around the turn, but by the end of the turn Arnie Sowell edged into the lead. Over the next 150 metres, Sowell opened up as much as a three-metre lead, but Courtney didn't go away. He bided his time for the next lap working his way back to Sowell's shoulder into the final turn and he brought Audun Boysen and Derek Johnson with him. Coming off the final turn it was the two Americans shoulder to shoulder, Sowell on the inside and Courtney on the outside looking like they would fight each other to the finish line like so many domestic races earlier in the season. Johnson had other ideas, squeezing between the two and into daylight. Again Courtney didn't go away, instead accelerating to keep pace, then with a final burst of speed, passing Johnson 20 metres before the tape to take the gold. Boysen followed Courtney past Sowell to narrowly capture bronze.

Background

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This was the 13th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The only finalist from the 1952 Games to return was fourth-place finisher Gunnar Nielsen of Denmark. In 1955, Audun Boysen of Norway had run under the then-world record time—but in a race in which he finished second, to Roger Moens of Belgium. Moens was injured and did not compete in Melbourne. Boysen faced American favorites Arnie Sowell (AAU champion) and Tom Courtney (U.S. Olympic trials victor) and British favorites Mike Rawson (AAA champion) and Derek Johnson (Commonwealth champion).[2][3]

Ethiopia, Kenya, Liberia, and Malaya appeared in the event for the first time; German athletes competed as the Unified Team of Germany for the first time. Great Britain and the United States each made their 12th appearance, tied for the most among all nations.

Competition format

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The event used the three-round format introduced in 1912. However, the number of semifinals was reduced from 3 to 2 and the final was shrunk from 9 men to 8. There were five first-round heats, each with between 6 and 9 athletes; the top three runners in each heat advanced to the semifinals. There were two semifinals with 7 or 8 athletes each; the top four runners in each semifinal advanced to the eight-man final.[3][4]

Records

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These were the standing world and Olympic records (in minutes) prior to the 1948 Summer Olympics.

World record  Roger Moens (BEL)1:45.7 Oslo, Norway3 August 1955
Olympic record  Mal Whitfield (USA)1:49.2 London, United Kingdom2 August 1948

Tom Courtney set a new Olympic record with a time of 1:47.7 in the final; the top four men in the final all broke the old record and the fifth-place finisher tied it.

Schedule

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All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)

Date Time Round
Friday, 23 November 195616:15Round 1
Saturday, 24 November 195616:00Semifinals
Monday, 26 November 195615:30Final

Results

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Heats

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Five heats were held, the fastest three of each would qualify for the semifinals.

Heat 1

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Audun Boysen Norway1:52.01:52.08Q
2Mike Rawson Great Britain1:52.11:52.20Q
3Yoshitaka Muroya Japan1:52.31:52.42Q
4Gerard Rasquin Luxembourg1:52.71:52.88
5Dimitrios Konstantinidis Greece1:52.71:53.03
6Frank Rivera Puerto Rico1:56.41:56.58
7Mamo Wolde Ethiopia1:58.0
Murray Cockburn CanadaDNS
Olavi Salsola FinlandDNS
Dan Waern SwedenDNS

Heat 2

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Tom Courtney United States1:52.71:52.83Q
2Mike Farrell Great Britain1:52.81:52.86Q
3Evangelos Depastas Greece1:53.11:53.23Q
4Don MacMillan Australia1:53.41:53.50
5Shigeharu Suzuki Japan1:54.11:54.29
6Paul Schmidt United Team of Germany1:55.61:55.71
7Manikavagasam Harichandra Malaya1:56.27[5]
8Doug Clement Canada1:56.92[5]
9Phoi Jaiswang ThailandUnknown
István Rózsavölgyi HungaryDNS

Heat 3

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1James Bailey Australia1:51.11:51.13Q
2Arnie Sowell United States1:51.31:51.27Q
3Émile Leva Belgium1:52.01:52.03Q
4Sohan Singh Dhanoa India1:52.41:52.57
5Eduardo Fontecilla Chile1:52.81:52.94
6Günter Dohrow United Team of Germany1:53.71:53.90
7Arap Kiptalam Keter Kenya1:56.13[5]
8Bayene Ayanew EthiopiaUnknown
9Kenneth Perera MalayaUnknown

Heat 4

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Gunnar Nielsen Denmark1:51.21:51.27Q
2Lonnie Spurrier United States1:51.51:51.52Q
3Bill Butchart Australia1:51.61:51.67Q
4Gianfranco Baraldi Italy1:51.91:51.90
5Abdullah Khan Pakistan1:52.61:52.71
6Sim Sang-ok South Korea1:55.51:55.56
7George Johnson LiberiaUnknown
Ronnie Delany IrelandDNS
Stanislav Jungwirth CzechoslovakiaDNS

Heat 5

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Derek Johnson Great Britain1:50.81:50.93Q
2René Djian France1:51.11:51.15Q
3Lajos Szentgali Hungary1:51.81:51.89Q
4Ramón Sandoval Chile1:51.91:52.12
5Klaus Richtzenhain United Team of Germany1:53.31:53.47
6Mahmoud Jan Pakistan1:59.5
Josy Barthel LuxembourgDNS
George Kerr JamaicaDNS
Joseph Narmath LiberiaDNS

Semifinals

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Two semifinals were held, the fastest four of each would qualify for the final.

Semifinal 1

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Nielsen withdrew, "reserving himself for the 1,500 metres."[2]

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Thomas Courtney United States1:53.61:53.62Q
2Lonnie Spurrier United States1:53.61:53.71Q
3Mike Farrell Great Britain1:53.71:53.78Q
4Bill Butchart Australia1:53.81:53.81Q
5Lajos Szentgali Hungary1:53.91:53.94
6Yoshitaka Muroya Japan1:54.51:54.68
Gunnar Nielsen DenmarkDNS

Semifinal 2

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Bailey was "obviously unwell and later scratched from the 1,500 metres."[2]

RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1Arnie Sowell United States1:50.01:50.08Q
2Audun Boysen Norway1:50.01:50.20Q
3Derek Johnson Great Britain1:50.21:50.23Q
4Emile Leva Belgium1:50.41:50.44Q
5Mike Rawson Great Britain1:50.41:50.45
6René Djian France1:50.71:50.47
7James Bailey Australia1:51.41:51.40
8Evangelos Depastas Greece1:52.01:52.19

Final

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RankAthleteNationTime (hand)Time (automatic)Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s)Tom Courtney United States1:47.71:47.75OR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Derek Johnson Great Britain1:47.81:47.88
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Audun Boysen Norway1:48.11:48.25
4Arnie Sowell United States1:48.31:48.41
5Mike Farrell Great Britain1:49.21:49.29
6Lonnie Spurrier United States1:49.31:49.38
7Emile Leva Belgium1:51.81:51.75
8Bill Butchart Australia1:52.0

References

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  1. "Athletics at the 1956 Melbourne Summer Games: Men's 800 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 Official Report, p. 270.
  3. 1 2 "800 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  4. Official Report, pp. 292–93.
  5. 1 2 3 Unofficial auto-timed result. No hand-timed result is available.
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