Athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The marathon at the 1952 Summer Olympics was held on 27 July on a course running from the Helsinki Olympic Stadium to Korso, Helsinki Rural Municipality (now Vantaa) and back.[1] Sixty-six athletes from 32 nations competed.[2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at three since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The winning margin was 2 minutes 31.8 seconds.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
Zátopek and Gorno
VenueHelsinki Olympic Stadium, Helsinki
DatesJuly 27
Competitors66 from 32 nations
Winning time2:23:03.2 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Emil Zátopek
 Czechoslovakia
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Reinaldo Gorno
 Argentina
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Gustaf Jansson
 Sweden
← 1948
1956 →

The event was won by Emil Zátopek of Czechoslovakia, the nation's first Olympic marathon medal. Zátopek completed a long distance triple that has never been matched: the 5,000 metres, 10,000 metres, and marathon golds in a single Games. Reinaldo Gorno's silver medal put Argentina on the marathon podium for the second straight Games, and the third of the four times Argentina had competed. Sweden took its first marathon medal since 1900, as Gustaf Jansson matched the nation's best result to date in the event. Great Britain's three-Games marathon medal streak ended.

Official Video

Approximately halfway through the race, Zátopek famously pulled alongside pre-race favorite Jim Peters and asked him, "Jim, is this pace too fast?" Peters replied, "No, it isn't fast enough." Peters later said he was joking, but Zátopek accelerated into the lead and won by more than two and a half minutes. Peters failed to finish. [3]

Background

This was the 12th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Returning runners from the 1948 marathon included defending champion Delfo Cabrera of Argentina and sixth- through eighth-place finishers Syd Luyt of South Africa, Gustav Östling of Sweden, and John Systad of Norway. The favorite was Jim Peters of Great Britain, the 1951 and 1952 Polytechnic Marathon winner who had broken the world record at the 1952 race. Emil Zátopek of Czechoslovakia had never run a marathon before, but had won the 5000 metres and 10000 metres earlier in the Games and decided to enter the marathon.[2]

Egypt, Guatemala, Pakistan, and the Soviet Union each made their first appearance in Olympic marathons. The United States made its 12th appearance, the only nation to have competed in each Olympic marathon to that point.

Competition format and course

As all Olympic marathons, the competition was a single race. The marathon distance of 26 miles, 385 yards was run over a "straight out-and-back course, starting and finishing at the Olympic Stadium" and going to Korso.[2] The full length of the road was hard-surfaced.[4]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1952 Summer Olympics.[5]

World record  Jim Peters (GBR)2:20:42 Shepherd's Bush, England14 June 1952
Olympic record  Sohn Kee-chung (JPN)2:29:19.2 Berlin, Germany9 August 1936

Emil Zátopek set a new Olympic best at 2:23:03.2.

Schedule

The day was "fairly cool."[2]

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 27 July 195215:25Final

Results

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Emil Zátopek  Czechoslovakia2:23:03.2OR
Reinaldo Gorno  Argentina2:25:35.0
Gustaf Jansson  Sweden2:26:07.0
4Choi Yun-Chil  South Korea2:26:36.0
5Veikko Karvonen  Finland2:26:41.8
6Delfo Cabrera  Argentina2:26:42.4
7József Dobronyi  Hungary2:28:04.8
8Erkki Puolakka  Finland2:29:35.0
9Geoffrey Iden  Great Britain2:30:42.0
10Wally Hayward  South Africa2:31:50.2
11Syd Luyt  South Africa2:32:41.0
12Gustaf Östling  Sweden2:32:48.4
13Victor Dyrgall  United States2:32:52.4
14Luis Celedón  Chile2:33:45.8
15Adrien van de Zande  Netherlands2:33:50.0
16Viktor Olsen  Norway2:33:58.4
17Mikko Hietanen  Finland2:34:01.0
18Charles Dewachtere  Belgium2:34:32.0
19William Keith  South Africa2:34:38.0
20Yakov Moskachenkov  Soviet Union2:34:43.8
21Mihály Esztergomi  Hungary2:35:10.0
22Doroteo Flores  Guatemala2:35:40.0
23Jean Simonet  Belgium2:35:43.0
24Jakob Kjersem  Norway2:36:14.0
25Katsuo Nishida  Japan2:36:19.0
26Keizo Yamada  Japan2:38:11.2
27Feodosy Vanin  Soviet Union2:38:22.0
28Grigory Suchkov  Soviet Union2:38:28.8
29Henry Norrström  Sweden2:38:57.4
30Dieter Engelhardt  Germany2:39:37.2
31Cristea Dinu  Romania2:39:42.2
32Jean Leblond  Belgium2:40:37.0
33Choi Chung-Sik  South Korea2:41:23.0
34John Systad  Norway2:41:29.8
35Jaroslav Šourek  Czechoslovakia2:41:40.4
36Tom Jones  United States2:42:50.0
37Robert Prentice  Australia2:43:13.4
38Muhammad Havlidar Aslam  Pakistan2:43:38.2
39Adolf Gruber  Austria2:45:02.0
40Paul Collins  Canada2:45:58.0
41Vasile Teodosiu  Romania2:46:00.8
42Erik Simonsen  Denmark2:46:41.4
43Ludwig Warnemünde  Germany2:50:00.0
44Ted Corbitt  United States2:51:09.0
45Claude Smeal  Australia2:52:23.0
46Asfò Bussotti  Italy2:52:55.0
47Winand Osiński  Poland2:54:38.2
48Olaf Sørensen  Denmark2:55:21.0
49Joseph West  Ireland2:56:22.8
50Rudolf Morgenthaler  Switzerland2:56:33.0
51Abdelgani Abdel Fattah  Egypt2:56:56.0
52Surat Mathur  India2:58:09.2
53Artidoro Berti  Italy2:58:36.2
Ahmet Aytar  TurkeyDNF
Franjo Krajčar  YugoslaviaDNF
Hong Jong-O  South KoreaDNF
Muhammad Ben Aras  PakistanDNF
Lionel Billas  FranceDNF
Constantin Radu  RomaniaDNF
Corsino Fernández  ArgentinaDNF
Raúl Inostroza  ChileDNF
Luis Velásquez  GuatemalaDNF
Stan Cox  Great BritainDNF
Jim Peters  Great BritainDNF
Egilberto Martufi  ItalyDNF
Yoshitaka Uchikawa  JapanDNF
Hans Frischknecht  SwitzerlandDNS
Les Perry  AustraliaDNS

References


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