Athletics at the 1920 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The men's marathon event was part of the track and field athletics programme at the 1920 Summer Olympics. The distance of this race was 42.75 kilometres. The competition was held on Sunday, 22 August 1920.[1] 48 runners from 17 nations competed. No nation had more than 4 runners, suggesting the limit had been reduced from the 12 maximum in force in 1908 and 1912. The event was won by Hannes Kolehmainen of Finland, the nation's first Olympic marathon medal and victory; Kolehmainen received his fourth gold medal, having won the 5000 metres, 10,000 metres, and individual cross country in 1912. Estonia (Jüri Lossmann's silver) and Italy (Valerio Arri's bronze) also won their first marathon medals.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the VII Olympiad
Hannes Kolehmainen
VenueOlympisch Stadion, Antwerp
Dates22 August
Competitors48 from 17 nations
Winning time2:32:35.8 WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Hannes Kolehmainen
 Finland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Jüri Lossmann
 Estonia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Valerio Arri
 Italy
← 1912
1924 →

Background

This was the sixth appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The field included significant competitors, including the original Flying Finn, Hannes Kolehmainen (who had not run the marathon in 1912, but took gold in three other distance events) and his brother Tatu Kolehmainen (who had competed in the 1912 marathon); South Africa's Christian Gitsham (silver medal in the 1912 marathon); and American Boston Marathon winners Arthur Roth (1916) and Carl Linder (1919), as well as future winner Charles Mellor (1925). Shizo Kanakuri of Japan, still considered a missing person in Sweden after disappearing during the 1912 Olympic marathon, competed.[2]

Chile, Estonia, and India each made their first appearance in Olympic marathons. The United States made its sixth appearance, the only nation to have competed in each Olympic marathon to that point.

Competition format

As all marathons, the competition was a single race. The course for the race was listed as 42.75 kilometres long, making it the longest Olympic marathon ever.[3][2] However, the Association of Road Racing Statisticians estimated the course to be only 40 km, which would make it among the shorter courses in the pre-standardized era.[4] The course included 1.5 laps of the stadium at both the start and finish.[2]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in hours) prior to the 1920 Summer Olympics.

World record  Alexis Ahlgren (SWE)2:36:07 London, United Kingdom31 May 1913
Olympic record  Ken McArthur (RSA)2:36:54.8(*) Stockholm, Sweden14 July 1912

(*) Distance was 40.2 kilometres

Hannes Kolehmainen is recognized as having set a new world best with a time of 2:32:35.8 hours.[5]

Schedule

The weather during the race has been described as "cool".[6] An Associated Press report described the weather as "cold and showery", but "fine running weather for the marathoners".[7]

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 22 August 192016:12Final

Results

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Hannes Kolehmainen  Finland2:32:35.8WR, OR
Jüri Lossmann  Estonia2:32:48.6
Valerio Arri  Italy2:36:32.8
4Auguste Broos  Belgium2:39:25.8
5Juho Tuomikoski  Finland2:40:18.8
6Sofus Rose  Denmark2:41:18.0
7Joseph Organ  United States2:41:30.0
8Rudolf Hansen  Denmark2:41:39.4
9Urho Tallgren  Finland2:42:40.0
10Tatu Kolehmainen  Finland2:44:02.3
11Carl Linder  United States2:44:21.2
12Charles Mellor  United States2:45:30.0
13James Dellow  Canada2:46:47.0
14Bobby Mills  Great Britain2:48:05.0
15Arthur Scholes  Canada2:48:30.0
16Shizo Kanakuri  Japan2:48:45.4
17Gustav Kinn  Sweden2:49:10.4
18Albert Moché  France2:50:00.2
19Phadeppa Chaugle  India2:50:45.4
20Zensaku Motegi  Japan2:51:09.4
21Kenzo Yashima  Japan2:57:02.0
22Norman General  Canada2:58:01.0
23Rudolf Wåhlin  Sweden2:59:23.0
24Yahei Miura  Japan2:59:37.0
25Henri Teyssedou  France3:00:04.0
26Hendricus Wessel  Netherlands3:00:17.0
27Charles Melis  Belgium3:00:51.0
28William Grüner  Sweden3:01:48.0
29George Piper  Great Britain3:02:10.0
30Sinton Hewitt  Australia3:03:27.0
31Leslie Housden  Great Britain3:14:25.0
32Iraklis Sakellaropoulos  Greece3:14:25.0
33Juan Bascuñán  Chile3:17:47.0
34Oscar Blansaer  Belgium3:20:00.0
35Eric Robertson  Great Britain3:55:00.0
Ettore Blasi  ItalyDNF
Louis Ichard  FranceDNF
Antonio Persico  ItalyDNF
Albert Smoke  CanadaDNF
Axel Jensen  DenmarkDNF
Panagiotis Trivoulidas  GreeceDNF
Christiaan Huijgens  NetherlandsDNF
Desiré Van Remortel  BelgiumDNF
Hans Schuster  SwedenDNF
Amédée Trichard  FranceDNF
Sadashir Datar  IndiaDNF
Christian Gitsham  South AfricaDNF
Arthur Roth  United StatesDNF

References

Specific
General
  • Belgium Olympic Committee (1957). Olympic Games Antwerp 1920: Official Report (in French).
  • Wudarski, Pawel (1999). "Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich" (in Polish). Retrieved 12 August 2007.