Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's decathlon

These are the official results of the men's decathlon competition at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California. There were a total number of 26 participating athletes, with the competition starting on August 8, 1984 and ending on August 9, 1984.[1]

Men's decathlon
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
VenueLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum
Date8 August 1984
9 August 1984
Competitors26 from 18 nations
Winning result8797 OR
Medalists
Daley Thompson
 Great Britain
Jürgen Hingsen
 West Germany
Siegfried Wentz
 West Germany

Medalists

GoldDaley Thompson
 Great Britain
SilverJürgen Hingsen
 West Germany
BronzeSiegfried Wentz
 West Germany

Abbreviations

DNSdid not start
NMno mark
ORolympic record
WRworld record
ARarea record
NRnational record
PBpersonal best
SBseason best

Schedule

August 8, 1984
  1. 100 m
  2. Long Jump
  3. Shot Put
  4. High Jump
  5. 400 m
August 9, 1984
  1. 110 m hurdles
  2. Discus Throw
  3. Pole Vault
  4. Javelin Throw
  5. 1,500 m

Records

Earlier in 1984 the IAAF had updated its decathlon scoring tables; the tables set in 1962 (with effect from 1964) would be replaced on 1 April 1985.[2] The world record performance at the changeover date would be recalculated using the new tables and become the new world record.[2] In the event that another performance had a lower total on the 1962 tables but a higher one on the 1984 tables, it would not supersede the pre-existing record.[2]

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in points) prior to the 1984 Summer Olympics:

Record1962 tables1984 tablesAthleteVenueDate
World Record 8798 8832 Jürgen Hingsen Mannheim (FRG) June 9, 1984
Olympic Record 8618/8617[n 1] 8634 Bruce Jenner Montreal (CAN) July 30, 1976

Daley Thompson's time in the Olympic 110mH was initially recorded as 14.34, on which basis he started the final 1500m needing 4:34.8 to beat Hingsen's world record, or 4:34.9 to equal it.[3] After slowing at the end to enjoy his triumph, he finished in 4:35.0, giving a points total of 8797, one below the world record (still a new Olympic record).[3] The time was over 14 seconds outside his personal best.[4] Under the 1984 tables (taking effect in 1985) Thompson's 8797 scored 8846, whereas Hingsen's 8798 was only 8832.[2] Nevertheless, Hingsen retained the record under the IAAF's grandfather rule.[2]

In 1986, the IAAF re-examined the photo finish of Thompson's Olympic 110mH, found it was one-thousandth of a second faster than initially thought, and rounded his time down from 14.34 to 14.33.[2][5] This gave him one extra point, thereby retrospectively equalling Hingsen's 8798 under the 1962 tables, and scoring 8847 on the 1984 tables.[2] The IAAF ruled on 15 July 1986 that Thompson was co-holder of the world record from 9 August 1984 until 1 April 1985, and sole holder thereafter.[2]

Results

  The highest mark recorded in each event is highlighted in yellow
Rank Athlete Nationality 100m LJ SP HJ 400m 110m H DT PV JT 1500m Points Notes
Daley Thompson Great Britain10.448.0115.722.0346.9714.3346.565.0065.244:35.008798EWR[n 2]
Jürgen Hingsen West Germany10.917.8015.872.1247.6914.2950.824.5060.444:22.608673
Siegfried Wentz West Germany10.997.1115.872.0947.7814.3546.604.5067.684:33.968412
4Guido Kratschmer West Germany10.807.4015.931.9449.2514.6647.284.9069.404:47.998326
5William Motti France11.287.4514.422.0648.1314.7150.924.5063.764:35.158266
6John Crist United States11.336.98w14.052.0648.4515.0146.184.8061.884:23.788130
7Jim Wooding United States11.047.0113.901.9747.6214.5747.384.6057.204:28.318091
8Dave Steen Canada11.207.41w12.572.0348.0915.3944.044.8056.924:17.708047
9Georg Werthner Austria11.416.9613.801.9449.4415.3641.184.7076.964:16.418012
10Michele Rüfenacht Switzerland10.726.9613.862.0048.6314.5745.304.3055.104:39.477924
11Bradley McStravick Great Britain10.926.8213.381.9448.6815.0145.544.3061.544:25.157890
12Tim Bright United States11.226.7513.802.0048.8714.5241.745.4053.664:49.277862
13Patrick Vetterli Switzerland11.447.1313.882.0349.8315.1443.824.5064.664:55.067739
14Peter Hadfield Australia11.157.1313.681.7648.5015.0543.364.5055.224:25.907683
15Weng Kangqiang China11.287.3012.451.8850.5215.2138.744.6069.724:34.107662
16Ku Chin-shui Chinese Taipei11.426.8912.762.0350.5914.9139.704.9062.364:50.757629
17Trond Skramstad Norway11.207.1814.201.8549.2515.0840.024.5054.944:43.027579
18Douglas Fernández Venezuela11.596.7413.121.8849.8316.0543.524.4067.124:23.967553
19Lee Fu-an Chinese Taipei10.987.0013.022.0349.6715.4937.104.5054.964:45.877541
20Colin Boreham Great Britain11.466.9013.511.9750.1915.4844.104.2052.664:32.507485
21Mohamed Mansour Salah Qatar11.516.6211.541.8852.0416.2036.263.5045.024:35.646589
22Claudio Escauriza Paraguay11.666.5114.101.8253.0617.5147.764.0064.16DNF6546
23Fidel Solórzano Ecuador11.156.9910.091.9449.2416.2233.543.1048.665:07.386519
24Ángel Díaz Guatemala11.546.489.621.9152.0816.0228.683.3047.964:26.116342
25Vivian Coralie Mauritius11.375.84w9.791.8251.2816.3932.923.0041.584:26.266084
Albert Miller Fiji11.486.3213.071.9150.2215.3638.46NMDNSDNF

Aftermath

Thompson's irreverence during the medal ceremony and press conference attracted some criticism.[4] While his heel-click jump off the podium was unproblematic, his t-shirts with slogans and off-colour jokes were seen by some as beneath the dignity of the occasion.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Jenner's 1976 performance was officially calculated as 8618 using a 400m time of 50.0.[2] From 1977, the IAAF required 400m times accurate to 100th of a second; Jenner's 50.04 was worth one point less. Both figures have been quoted subsequently.[2]
  2. Originally 8797 OR

References

  1. "Athletics at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games: Men's Decathlon". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  2. Hymans, Richard; Matrahazi, Imre (2015). "Decathlon". Progression of IAAF World Records (PDF). pp. 216–217. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  3. Litsky, Frank (10 August 1984). "Thompson Wins His 2d Olympic Decathlon". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  4. Bagchi, Rob (4 April 2012). "50 stunning Olympic moments No21: Daley Thompson wins 1984 decathlon". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  5. "Sports People; Record to Thompson". The New York Times. 16 May 1986. p. 24. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.