Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The men's marathon at the 2004 Summer Olympics took place on August 29 in the streets of Athens, Greece. These streets were recently painted for the event, which provided an excellent road surface for the athletes. Drawing upon the ancient origins of the race, the marathon began in Marathon, Greece, and eventually ended at Panathinaiko Stadium, the venue previously used for the 1896 Athens Olympics.[1]

Men's marathon
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
VenueMarathon to Athens, Greece
Dates29 August
Competitors102 from 59 nations
Winning time2:10:55
Medalists
Stefano Baldini  Italy
Mebrahtom Keflezighi  United States
Vanderlei de Lima  Brazil

The 42-km (26-mile) journey began in Marathon. The top contenders all found themselves in a large leading group that held a modest pace through the half marathon. A few tried to surge ahead but the most successful was Vanderlei De Lima's attack at 20k. Past 25k, Stefano Baldini raised the tempo taking seven others with him. Finally, the chase group had been whittled down to three: Stefano Baldini, Paul Tergat, and Mebrahtom Keflezighi. After 35k was passed, Tergat (the world record holder) cracked, leaving two runners to chase behind. Baldini then closed the gap to De Lima after the latter was attacked while dropping Keflezighi. Baldini moved into the lead and took it home for the gold medal in 2:10:55.[2] Keflezighi caught the fading De Lima as well to take the silver in 2:11:29. Finishing at 2:12:11, De Lima was able to hold off Jon Brown, beating him by 15 seconds for the bronze.[3]

As with the previous Games, the marathon also marked the end of the 2004 Summer Olympics and the medal ceremony took place during the closing ceremony at the Olympic Stadium.

Incident

The event was marked by an incident in which Cornelius Horan, an Irish priest, grappled Vanderlei de Lima of Brazil while de Lima was leading the event with around 7 kilometers remaining. Greek spectator Polyvios Kossivas helped de Lima free from Horan's grasp and back into his running. De Lima lost about 15 to 20 seconds of time because of the interruption, and finished third in the event with a time of 2:12:11, winning the bronze medal. De Lima received the rarely awarded Pierre de Coubertin Medal for sportsmanship in addition to his bronze. Despite the fact that the incident had seriously hindered his chances of winning the gold or silver medal, he did not complain and graciously acknowledged the crowd's cheers in the home straight. The protester had a sign on his back that read "The Grand Prix Priest. Israel Fulfilment of Prophecy Says The Bible. The Second Coming is Near."[4]

The phrase "Grand Prix Priest" refers to Horan's previous protest, in which he ran onto the track at the Silverstone Circuit during the 2003 British Grand Prix, intentionally running directly into the path of oncoming cars.

Records

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

World record Paul Tergat (KEN)2:04:55Berlin, Germany28 September 2003
Olympic record Carlos Lopes (POR)2:09:21Los Angeles, United States12 August 1984

No new records were set during the competition.

Qualification

The qualification period for athletics was 1 January 2003 to 9 August 2004. For the men's marathon, each National Olympic Committee was permitted to enter up to three athletes that had run the race in 2:15:00 or faster during the qualification period. If an NOC had no athletes that qualified under that standard, one athlete that had run the race in 2:18:00 or faster could be entered.

Schedule

All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 29 August 200418:00Final

Results

Rank[5]NameNationalityResultNotes
Stefano Baldini Italy2:10:55
Mebrahtom Keflezighi United States2:11:29SB
Vanderlei de Lima Brazil2:12:11
4Jon Brown Great Britain2:12:26SB
5Shigeru Aburaya Japan2:13:11
6Toshinari Suwa Japan2:13:24
7Erick Wainaina Kenya2:13:30
8Alberto Chaíça Portugal2:14:17
9Alberico di Cecco Italy2:14:34
10Paul Tergat Kenya2:14:45
11Jaouad Gharib Morocco2:15:12
12Alan Culpepper United States2:15:26
13Leonid Shvetsov Russia2:15:28
14Lee Bong-ju South Korea2:15:33
15Ambesse Tolosa Ethiopia2:15:39
16Gert Thys South Africa2:16:08
17Ji Young-joon South Korea2:16:14
18Antoni Peña Spain2:16:38
19Grigoriy Andreyev Russia2:16:55
20Haile Satayin Israel2:17:25
21Jonathan Wyatt New Zealand2:17:45
22Janne Holmen Finland2:17:50
23Dan Robinson Great Britain2:17:53
24Nikolaos Polias Greece2:17:56
25Ndabili Bashingili Botswana2:18:09
26Pavel Loskutov Estonia2:18:09
27José Rios Spain2:18:40
28Lee Troop Australia2:18:46
29Michael Buchleitner Austria2:19:19
30Anuradha Cooray Sri Lanka2:19:24
31Li Zhuhong China2:19:26
32Joachim Nshimirimana Burundi2:19:31
33Dale Warrender New Zealand2:19:42
34Waldemar Glinka Poland2:19:43
35Jong Myong-chol North Korea2:19:47
36El-Hassan Lahssini France2:19:50
37Michał Bartoszak Poland2:20:20
38Ahmed Jumaa Jaber Qatar2:20:27
39Ali Mabrouk El Zaidi Libya2:20:31
40Samson Ramadhani Tanzania2:20:38
41Lee Myong-seung South Korea2:21:01
42Tomoaki Kunichika Japan2:21:13
43José Alirio Carrasco Colombia2:21:14
44Ernest Ndjissipou Central African Republic2:21:23
45Nicholas Harrison Australia2:21:42
46Tereje Wodajo Ethiopia2:21:53
47Aguelmis Rojas Cuba2:21:59
48Abel Chimukoko Zimbabwe2:22:09
49Saïd Belhout Algeria2:22:32
50Matthew O'Dowd Great Britain2:22:37
51Juan Carlos Cardona Colombia2:22:49
52Daniele Caimmi Italy2:23:07
53João N'Tyamba Angola2:23:26
54Roman Kejžar Slovenia2:23:34
55Procopio Franco Mexico2:23:34
56Wu Wen-chien Chinese Taipei2:23:54
57Antoni Bernado Andorra2:23:55
58Julio Rey Spain2:24:54
59Asaf Bimro Israel2:25:20
60Sisay Bezabeh Australia2:25:26
61Silvio Guerra Ecuador2:25:29
62Mathias Ntawulikura Rwanda2:26:05
63Róbert Štefko Czech Republic2:27:12
64José Amado García Guatemala2:27:13
65Dan Browne United States2:27:17
66Han Gang China2:27:31
67Eduardo Buenavista Philippines2:28:18
68Driss El Himer France2:29:07
69Andrés Espinosa Mexico2:29:43
70Mpesela Ntlot Soeu Lesotho2:30:19
71Franklin Tenorio Ecuador2:31:12
72José Ernani Palalia Mexico2:31:41
73Dmitriy Burmakin Russia2:31:51
74Mindaugas Pukštas Lithuania2:33:02
75Bat-Ochiryn Ser-Od Mongolia2:33:24
76Zhu Ronghua China2:34:02
77Alfredo Arevalo Guatemala2:34:02
78António Zeferino Cape Verde2:36:22
79Valery Pisarev Kyrgyzstan2:40:10
80Zepherinus Joseph Saint Lucia2:44:19
81Marcel Matanin Slovakia2:50:26
Hendrick Ramaala South AfricaDNF
Zebedayo Bayo TanzaniaDNF
Hailu Negussie EthiopiaDNF
Viktor Röthlin SwitzerlandDNF
Al Mustafa Riyadh BahrainDNF
Rômulo Wagner BrazilDNF
Ian Syster South AfricaDNF
Zsolt Bácskai HungaryDNF
Azat Rakipov BelarusDNF
Dmytro Baranovskyy UkraineDNF
Rachid Ghanmouni MoroccoDNF
Rachid Ziar AlgeriaDNF
Mustapha Bennacer AlgeriaDNF
André Luiz Ramos BrazilDNF
Luis Fonseca VenezuelaDNF
Khalid El-Boumlili MoroccoDNF
John Nada Saya TanzaniaDNF
Gil da Cruz Trindade East TimorDNF
Jussi Utriainen FinlandDNF
Jean-Paul Gahimbaré BurundiDNF
Luc Krotwaar NetherlandsDNS

References

  1. "IAAF Athens 2004: Men's Marathon Final". Athens 2004. IAAF. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  2. Clarey, Christopher (29 August 2004). "Summer 2004 Games: Marathon, A Spectator Disrupts The Marathon With a Shove". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  3. Patrick, Dick (30 August 2004). "Italy's Baldini wins men's marathon". USA Today. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  4. "Protester ruins marathon". BBC Sport. 29 August 2004. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  5. "Athletics at the 2004 Athens Summer Games: Men's Marathon". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
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