Athletics at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Men's 1500 metres

The men's 1500 metres event at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City was held on 18 to the 20 of October. Fifty-four athletes from 37 nations competed.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Kenyan Kip Keino, who beat World record holder Jim Ryun, who struggled to adapt to the altitude of Mexico City.[2] It was the first medal for Kenya in the 1500 metres. Ryun's silver was the United States's first medal in the event since 1952. Bodo Tümmler took bronze, the first medal for West Germany as a separate nation.

Men's 1500 metres
at the Games of the XIX Olympiad
Olympic Athletics
VenueEstadio Olímpico Universitario, Mexico City
Date18 October 1968 to 20 October 1968
Competitors54 from 37 nations
Winning time3:34.91 OR
Medalists
Kip Keino
 Kenya
Jim Ryun
 United States
Bodo Tümmler
 West Germany

Summary

While this Olympics was the emergence of Kenyan runners, Kip Keino was not an unknown quantity, he had won the 1966 Commonwealth Games and 1965 African Championships. In the final, it was Ben Jipcho who took the first lap out fast, with Keino lagging to the back of the field. Keino moved up toward the front, but didn't take the lead until two laps to go. When he moved forward, he did so decisively, creating a 30-meter gap on the field. Ryun was known for his last lap kicks. He held back waiting for the bell. At the bell he took off in chase, but Bodo Tümmler was also intent on racing. Ryun was able to beat Tümmler down the backstretch but his last lap kick was no match for the still more than 20 meter lead Keino held onto the final straightaway.

Background

This was the 16th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Two finalists from 1964 returned: silver medalist Josef Odložil of Czechoslovakia and eighth-place finisher Michel Bernard of France. The "heavy favorite" at the start of the year was Jim Ryun of the United States, a 1964 Olympic semifinalist who had beaten the world record by 2.5 seconds in 1967. But Ryun had a case of mononucleosis during training (particularly damaging because the 1968 Games were at high altitude, requiring specific training and acclimatization), and was only a "slight favorite" by the time of the race. Kip Keino of Kenya had been beaten by Ryun by 4 seconds in a dual meet in July 1967 (the race where Ryun took the world record).[1]

Bermuda, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Morocco, Puerto Rico, and Senegal each made their first appearance in the event; West Germany made its first appearance as a separate nation. The United States made its 16th appearance, the only nation to have competed in the men's 1500 metres at each Games to that point.

Competition format

The competition was again three rounds (a format used previously in 1952 and 1964). The 1968 competition did not use the "fastest loser" system introduced in 1964, resulting in uneven semifinals. The competition also returned to a 12-man final, after two Games used 9 in 1960 and 1964.

There were five heats in the first round, each with 11 or 12 runners (before withdrawals). The top five runners in each heat advanced to the semifinals. The 25 semifinalists were divided into two semifinals, one of 12 runners and one of 13. The top six men in each semifinal advanced to the 12-man final.[1][3]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1968 Summer Olympics.

World record Jim Ryun (USA)3:33.1Los Angeles, United States8 July 1967
Olympic record Herb Elliott (AUS)3:35.6Rome, Italy6 September 1960

In the final, Kip Keino set a new Olympic record at 3:34.91.

Schedule

All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6)

Date Time Round
Friday, 18 October 196811:00Round 1
Saturday, 19 October 196817:20Semifinals
Sunday, 20 October 196815:30Final

Results

Round 1

Top 5 in each heat advance to semifinal.

Heat 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Kip Keino Kenya3:46.96Q
2Bodo Tümmler West Germany3:51.59Q
3John Boulter Great Britain3:51.63Q
4Jorge Grosser Chile3:51.79Q
5Franco Arese Italy3:51.86Q
6Dave Bailey Canada3:52.11
7Róbert Honti Hungary3:54.95
8Rudolf Klaban Austria3:59.11
9Julio Quevedo Guatemala4:03.13
10Édouard Sagna Senegal4:04.12
11Emilio Barahona Honduras4:56.08

Heat 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Tom Von Ruden United States3:59.15Q
2André Dehertoghe Belgium3:59.33Q
3Henryk Szordykowski Poland3:59.34Q
4Claude Nicolas France3:59.35Q
5Arnd Krüger West Germany3:59.40Q
6Renzo Finelli Italy3:59.51
7Ove Berg Sweden4:00.42
8Tom Hansen Denmark4:01.47
9Ramasamy Subramaniam Malaysia4:06.49
10Miguel Núñez Dominican Republic4:23.67
Blagoi Kostov BulgariaDNS

Heat 3

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ben Jipcho Kenya3:46.51Q
2Oleg Rayko Soviet Union3:46.84Q
3Harald Norpoth West Germany3:47.00Q
4Josef Odložil Czechoslovakia3:47.49Q
5Jacky Boxberger France3:47.55Q
6José Neri Mexico3:47.88
7Jorge González Spain3:50.49
8Ioannis Virvilis Greece3:55.57
9Xaver Frick, Jr. Liechtenstein4:15.38
10Alfredo Cubías El Salvador4:32.58
Jean Wadoux FranceDNS

Heat 4

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Jim Ryun United States3:45.80Q
2Hamadi Haddou Morocco3:47.01Q
3Edgard Salvé Belgium3:47.17Q
4Arne Kvalheim Norway3:47.50Q
5Norm Trerise Canada3:47.67Q
6Gianni Del Buono Italy3:48.41
7Peter Watson Australia3:55.41
8Maurice Benn Great Britain3:56.43
9Pekka Vasala Finland4:08.51
10Willie Ríos Puerto Rico4:14.47
11Jeff Payne Bermuda4:18.92
Guillermo Cuello ArgentinaDNS

Heat 5

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Marty Liquori United States3:52.78Q
2Hansrüedi Knill Switzerland3:52.87Q
3John Whetton Great Britain3:53.04Q
4Ahmed Issa Chad3:53.13Q
5Mikhail Zhelobovsky Soviet Union3:53.23Q
6Matias Habtemichael Ethiopia3:53.27
7Anders Gärderud Sweden3:54.28
8Byron Dyce Jamaica3:54.65
9Jerzy Maluśki Poland3:54.83
10Frank Murphy Ireland3:54.85
11Rudi Simon Belgium4:06.97
12Arturo Córdoba Honduras5:18.92

Semifinals

Top six in each heat advance to final.

Semifinal 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Bodo Tümmler West Germany3:53.66Q
2Jacky Boxberger France3:54.00Q
3Tom Von Ruden United States3:54.12Q
4Henryk Szordykowski Poland3:54.24Q
5Harald Norpoth West Germany3:54.34Q
6Ben Jipcho Kenya3:54.69Q
7Franco Arese Italy3:54.85
8Arne Kvalheim Norway3:55.32
9John Boulter Great Britain3:56.13
10Edgard Salvé Belgium3:58.16
11Mikhail Zhelobovsky Soviet Union3:59.08
12Hamadi Haddou Morocco4:01.70

Semifinal 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Jim Ryun United States3:51.25Q
2Kip Keino Kenya3:51.50Q
3John Whetton Great Britain3:52.05Q
4Marty Liquori United States3:52.17Q
5Josef Odložil Czechoslovakia3:52.53Q
6André Dehertoghe Belgium3:52.57Q
7Oleg Rayko Soviet Union3:52.73
8Ahmed Issa Chad3:53.26
9Hansrüedi Knill Switzerland3:53.65
10Norm Trerise Canada3:57.30
11Claude Nicolas France4:04.47
12Arnd Krüger West Germany4:05.40
Jorge Grosser ChileDNF

Final

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Kip Keino Kenya3:34.91OR
Jim Ryun United States3:37.89
Bodo Tümmler West Germany3:39.08
4Harald Norpoth West Germany3:42.57
5John Whetton Great Britain3:43.90
6Jacky Boxberger France3:46.65
7Henryk Szordykowski Poland3:46.69
8Josef Odložil Czechoslovakia3:48.69
9Tom Von Ruden United States3:49.27
10Ben Jipcho Kenya3:51.22
11André Dehertoghe Belgium3:53.63
12Marty Liquori United States4:18.22

References

  1. "1500 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  2. "Athletics at the 1968 Mexico City Games: Men's 1500 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  3. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 523.
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