Athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's 110 metres hurdles

The men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place between 15–16 August at the Olympic Stadium.[1] Forty athletes from 27 nations competed.[2] The event was won by Omar McLeod of Jamaica, the nation's first gold medal and second medal overall (after a bronze four years earlier) in the event. Orlando Ortega's silver was Spain's first medal in the men's high hurdles; Dimitri Bascou's bronze was France's first medal in the event since 1976. For the first time, American hurdlers contested the event but did not make the podium; the only time before that the United States did not win a 110 metres hurdles medal was the boycotted 1980 Games.

Men's 110 metres hurdles
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
Interior view of the Estádio Olímpico João Havelange, where the Men's 110m hurdles took place.
VenueOlympic Stadium
Dates15 August 2016
(heats)
16 August 2016
(semi-final & final)
Competitors40 from 27 nations
Winning time13.05
Medalists
Omar McLeod  Jamaica
Orlando Ortega  Spain
Dimitri Bascou  France

Background

This was the 28th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The 2012 Olympic champion Aries Merritt did not return after failing at the American Olympic Trials primarily due to a congenital kidney issue diagnosed in 2013 and undergoing kidney transplant in 2015. Olympic medallists David Oliver and Jason Richardson also did not compete. With Sergey Shubenkov absent due to the Russian team's doping ban and an injury to Hansle Parchment, none of the 2012 Olympic or 2015 World Championships podium athletes was present. The top entrant was Omar McLeod, who held the season-leading time of 12.98 seconds and won 60 m hurdles gold at the 2016 World Indoor Championships. Devon Allen, an American college football player, was his nation's trials winner and ranked second globally on 13.03 seconds, just ahead of Cuban-Spaniard Orlando Ortega. France and the United States provided the next fastest entrants in Dimitri Bascou, Pascal Martinot-Lagarde, Ronnie Ash and Jeff Porter.[3][4][5][2]

Laos and Serbia each made their first appearance in the event. The United States made its 27th appearance, most of any nation (having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games).

Summary

The final started with all eight competitors reaching the first hurdle virtually at the same time. In the center of the track Omar McLeod touching down fractionally ahead of Dimitri Bascou and Pascal Martinot-Lagarde the two Frenchmen who sandwiched him and Milan Trajkovic in lane 8. Going into the second hurdle Bascou gained the fractional edge, but the three in the center of the track ran almost in synchronization for five hurdles, pulling away from the rest of the field. By the sixth hurdle, McLeod had again gained the fractional edge. McLeod continued smoothly but Martinot-Lagarde hit the sixth hurdle and Bascou was awkward going into the seventh hurdle giving McLeod the break away. Over the next two hurdles, McLeod extended his lead as Orlando Ortega and Ronnie Ash began to emerge ahead of the row of hurdlers across the track. Ash hit the ninth hurdle so badly when he arrived at the tenth hurdle he was short, his lead foot hitting the barrier at toe level, knocking the hurdle over and knocking Ash off balance, still in third place but falling. McLeod continued to finish with more than a metre lead over Ortega. Bascou had the lead over his teammate Martinot-Lagarde and American footballer Devon Allen. Ash took several awkward steps and somersaulted over the finish line in last, only to be disqualified for not properly clearing the hurdle.

The following evening the medals were presented by Richard Peterkin, IOC member, Saint Lucia and Bernard Amsalem, Council Member of the IAAF.

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could enter up to 3 qualified athletes in the men's 110 metres hurdles event if all athletes meet the entry standard during the qualifying period. (The limit of 3 has been in place since the 1930 Olympic Congress.) The qualifying standard was 13.47 seconds. The qualifying period was from 1 May 2015 to 11 July 2016. The qualifying time standards could be obtained in various meets during the given period that have the approval of the IAAF. Only outdoor meets were accepted. NOCs could also use their universality place—each NOC could enter one male athlete regardless of time if they had no male athletes meeting the entry standard for an athletics event—in the 110 metres hurdles.[6][7] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress.

Competition format

The competition was divided into three rounds: a heats stage with five races, three semifinal races, and a final. The top three from each heat qualified for the semifinal, plus the nine fastest non-qualifiers. The top two finishers from each of the semifinals qualified for the final, as did the next two fastest hurdlers.

The first two heats in the first round were run in the rain. It was determined the non-qualifiers from those heats were disadvantaged in time comparison, and those athletes were allowed to run in a repechage round to improve their qualifying time. Two athletes, Deuce Carter and Alexander John, had been disqualified for failure to properly clear hurdles in those earlier races and were allowed to re-enter. Carter qualified for the semifinals from the special race.

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Olympic, and area records were as follows.

World record Aries Merritt (USA)12.80Brussels, Belgium7 September 2012
Olympic record Liu Xiang (CHN)12.91Athens, Greece27 August 2004
Area Time (s) Wind Athlete Nation
Africa (records)13.24+0.3Lehann Fourie South Africa
Asia (records)12.88+1.1Liu Xiang China
Europe (records)12.91+0.5Colin Jackson Great Britain
North, Central America
and Caribbean
(records)
12.80 WR+0.3Aries Merritt United States
Oceania (records)13.29+0.6Kyle Vander Kuyp Australia
South America (records)13.27+1.6Paulo Villar Colombia

Schedule

All times are Brasilia Time (UTC-3)

Date Time Round
Monday, 15 August 201620:40Heats
Tuesday, 16 August 201620:40
22:45
Semifinals
Finals

Results

Round 1

Qualification rule: first 4 of each heat (Q) plus the 4 fastest times (q) qualified.

Heat 1

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
12Omar McLeod Jamaica0.16813.27Q
27Jeff Porter United States0.14713.50Q
39Jeffrey Julmis Haiti0.14913.66Q
48Antwon Hicks Nigeria0.15113.70Q
54Yeison Rivas Colombia0.14313.84R
66Wataru Yazawa Japan0.14413.89R
73Kame Ali Madagascar0.15214.89R, SB
5Alexander John Germany0.173DQR168.7, R
Wind: +0.1 m/s

Heat 2

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
18Orlando Ortega Spain0.12413.32Q
23Balázs Baji Hungary0.15113.52Q
35Milan Trajkovic Cyprus0.14313.59Q
42Johnathan Cabral Canada0.15313.63Q
59Jhoanis Portilla Cuba0.12213.81R
66Matthias Buhler Germany0.14513.82R
74Xaysa Anousone Laos0.13414.40R
7Deuce Carter Jamaica0.176DQR168.7, R
Wind: +0.4 m/s

Heat 3

Petr Svoboda was originally disqualified under Rule 168.7. His advancement later to the semifinals indicates a reversal of that decision.[8]

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
14Dimitri Bascou France0.15113.31Q
29Andrew Pozzi Great Britain0.12713.50Q
36Andrew Riley Jamaica0.13613.52Q
48João Vítor de Oliveira Brazil0.12113.63Q, SB
53Antonio Alkana South Africa0.12813.64q
62Petr Svoboda Czech Republic0.13213.65q
77Mikel Thomas Trinidad and Tobago0.13113.68
85Eddie Lovett Virgin Islands0.14313.77
Wind: +1.4 m/s

Heat 4

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
12Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece0.12413.41Q
29Devon Allen United States0.12713.41Q
35Gregor Traber Germany0.14913.50Q
46Yordan O'Farrill Cuba0.13013.56Q
57Yidiel Contreras Spain0.13713.62q
64Ronald Forbes Cayman Islands0.13114.67
78Ahmad Hazer Lebanon0.14415.50
3Wilhem Belocian FranceDQR162.7
Wind: +0.1 m/s

Heat 5

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
19Ronnie Ash United States0.14913.31Q
23Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France0.14813.36Q
35Lawrence Clarke Great Britain0.14613.55Q
48Éder Antônio Souza Brazil0.13413.61Q, SB
52Damian Czykier Poland0.16213.63q
67Milan Ristic Serbia0.13313.66
74Xie Wenjun China0.16613.69
86Sekou Kaba Canada0.14113.70
Wind: −0.2 m/s

Repechage

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
19Deuce Carter Jamaica0.17413.51q
24Yeison Rivas Colombia0.16513.87
36Wataru Yazawa Japan0.14113.88
48Matthias Buhler Germany0.14113.90
52Alexander John Germany0.16514.13
7Jhoanis Portilla Cuba0.137DQR168.7
3Kame Ali MadagascarDNS
5Xaysa Anousone LaosDNS
Wind: −0.1 m/s

Semifinal 1

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
17Orlando Ortega Spain0.13813.32Q
25Ronnie Ash United States0.18313.36Q
32Damian Czykier Poland0.15413.50
46Balázs Baji Hungary0.12913.52
54Andrew Pozzi Great Britain0.12713.67
63Deuce Carter Jamaica0.17113.69
78Yordan O'Farrill Cuba0.15313.70
9Jeffrey Julmis Haiti0.156DQR168.7
Wind: +0.5 m/s

Semifinal 2

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
17Omar McLeod Jamaica0.14713.15Q
25Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France0.14913.25Q
36Devon Allen United States0.12013.36q
49Johnathan Cabral Canada0.13413.41q
54Gregor Traber Germany0.18113.43
68Lawrence Clarke Great Britain0.16913.46
72Antonio Alkana South Africa0.12613.55
81Petr Svoboda Czech Republic0.18113.67
93João Vítor de Oliveira Brazil0.19413.85
Wind: −0.1 m/s

Semifinal 3

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
15Dimitri Bascou France0.15213.23Q
28Milan Trajkovic Cyprus0.13513.31Q
34Jeff Porter United States0.15013.45
46Andrew Riley Jamaica0.15013.46
57Konstadinos Douvalidis Greece0.14513.47
63Yidiel Contreras Spain0.14213.54
72Antwon Hicks Nigeria0.17014.26
9Éder Antônio Souza Brazil0.137DQR168.7
Wind: +0.3 m/s

Final

RankLaneAthleteNationReactionTimeNotes
5Omar McLeod Jamaica0.14213.05
7Orlando Ortega Spain0.12713.17
6Dimitri Bascou France0.13113.24
44Pascal Martinot-Lagarde France0.14213.29
53Devon Allen United States0.13513.31
62Johnathan Cabral Canada0.14613.40
78Milan Trajkovic Cyprus0.13613.41
9Ronnie Ash United States0.160DQR168.7
Wind: +0.2 m/s

References

  1. "Men's 110m hurdles". Rio 2016 Organisation. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  2. "110 metres Hurdles, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  3. Landells, Steve (2016-08-10). Preview: men's 110m hurdles – Rio 2016 Olympic Games. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-14.
  4. Senior outdoor 2016 110 Metres Hurdles men. IAAF. Retrieved on 2016-08-14.
  5. Andrew Riley to replace Parchment. Jamaica Observer (2016-08-12). Retrieved on 2016-08-14.
  6. "IAAF approves entry standards for Rio 2016 Olympic Games". Athletics Weekly. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  7. "Qualification System – Games of the XXXI Olympiad – Athletics". IAAF. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  8. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 17 August 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.