Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's long jump
Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Track events | ||||
100 m | men | women | ||
200 m | men | women | ||
400 m | men | women | ||
800 m | men | women | ||
1500 m | men | women | ||
5000 m | men | women | ||
10,000 m | men | women | ||
100 m hurdles | women | |||
110 m hurdles | men | |||
400 m hurdles | men | women | ||
3000 m steeplechase |
men | |||
4×100 m relay | men | women | ||
4×400 m relay | men | women | ||
Road events | ||||
Marathon | men | women | ||
10 km walk | women | |||
20 km walk | men | |||
50 km walk | men | |||
Field events | ||||
Long jump | men | women | ||
Triple jump | men | women | ||
High jump | men | women | ||
Pole vault | men | |||
Shot put | men | women | ||
Discus throw | men | women | ||
Javelin throw | men | women | ||
Hammer throw | men | |||
Combined events | ||||
Heptathlon | women | |||
Decathlon | men | |||
Wheelchair races | ||||
These are the official results of the men's long jump athletics event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There were a total of 54 competitors, with one non-starter.
Carl Lewis was on the edge of making history, to equal the unique accomplishment of Al Oerter by winning four Olympic championships in the same event. However, now 35 years old, he was comparatively quite old for a sprinter-long jumper. Lewis barely made it to the Olympics, only finishing third at the 1996 Olympic Trials behind world record holder Mike Powell (at 33, also five years beyond his peak) and 29-year-old Joe Greene. These same three American jumpers had swept the event four years earlier.
While Lewis was ranked number one from the qualifying round, it took him three jumps to make the automatic qualifier. Lewis gained some notoriety by winning the 1984 Olympics on his single, first attempt. Powell, Greene and Iván Pedroso made their automatic qualifier (8.05 m) on their first attempt.
In the first round Emmanuel Bangué took the lead with 8.19 m. Powell moved into second place in the second round at 8.17 m, with Lewis jumping 8.10 m to move into third. Greene moved into the lead in the third round with a 8.24 m, until Lewis made his 8.50 jump. Lewis' jump equalled former rival Larry Myricks' still standing Masters M35 World Record.
While Pedroso was the reigning world champion and had jumped significantly better just a year earlier, he didn't get into the final eight to get three remaining jumps. No other jumper improved in his final jumps except James Beckford, whose final-round 8.29 m lifted him into the silver medal, pushing Greene to bronze.
Medalists
Gold | Carl Lewis United States |
Silver | James Beckford Jamaica |
Bronze | Joe Greene United States |
Abbreviations
- All results shown are in metres
Q | automatic qualification |
q | qualification by rank |
DNS | did not start |
NM | no mark |
OR | olympic record |
WR | world record |
AR | area record |
NR | national record |
PB | personal best |
SB | season best |
Records
Standing records prior to the 1996 Summer Olympics | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
World Record | Mike Powell (USA) | 8.95 m | August 30, 1991 | Tokyo, Japan |
Olympic Record | Bob Beamon (USA) | 8.90 m | October 18, 1968 | Mexico City, Mexico |
Non-qualifiers
RANK | NON-QUALIFIERS | DISTANCE |
---|---|---|
14 | Spyridon Vasdekis (GRE) | 7.98m |
15 | Bogdan Ţărus (ROU) | 7.96m |
16 | Andrew Owusu (GHA) | 7.91m |
17 | Nai Hui-Fang (TPE) | 7.91m |
18 | Cheikh Tidiane Touré (SEN) | 7.91m |
19 | Bogdan Tudor (ROU) | 7.88m |
20 | Milan Gombala (CZE) | 7.88m |
21 | Georg Ackermann (GER) | 7.86m |
22 | János Uzsoki (HUN) | 7.82m |
22 | Kostas Koukodimos (GRE) | 7.82m |
24 | Carlos Calado (POR) | 7.81m |
25 | Simone Bianchi (ITA) | 7.79m |
26 | Vitaliy Kyrylenko (UKR) | 7.77m |
27 | Nelson Ferreira (BRA) | 7.76m |
28 | Robert Emmiyan (ARM) | 7.76m |
29 | Chen Jing (CHN) | 7.70m |
30 | Chao Chih-Kuo (TPE) | 7.67m |
31 | Jaime Jefferson (CUB) | 7.65m |
32 | Jesús Oliván (ESP) | 7.64m |
33 | Douglas de Souza (BRA) | 7.61m |
34 | Richard Duncan (CAN) | 7.61m |
35 | Aleksey Petrukhnov (RUS) | 7.50m |
36 | Nobuharu Asahara (JPN) | 7.46m |
37 | Remmy Limo (KEN) | 7.46m |
38 | Francois Fouche (RSA) | 7.44m |
39 | Kenny Lewis (GRN) | 7.41m |
40 | Keita Cline (IVB) | 7.26m |
41 | Andreja Marinković (YUG) | 7.17m |
42 | Marcio da Cruz (BRA) | 7.12m |
43 | Victor Shabangu (SWZ) | 5.79m |
— | Siniša Ergotić (CRO) | NM |
— | Benny Fernando (SRI) | NM |
— | Hans-Peter Lott (GER) | NM |
— | Sung Hee-Jun (KOR) | NM |
— | Franck Zio (BUR) | NM |
— | Vladimir Malyavin (TKM) | NM |
— | Ellsworth Manuel (AHO) | NM |
— | Ivaylo Mladenov (BUL) | NM |
— | Ousman Sallah (GAM) | NM |
— | Craig Hepburn (BAH) | DNS |
Final
Rank | Athlete | Mark | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carl Lewis (USA) | 8.50 | x | 8.14 | 8.50 | - | 8.06 | x | SB | |
James Beckford (JAM) | 8.29 | x | 8.02 | 8.13 | x | x | 8.29 | ||
Joe Greene (USA) | 8.24 | 7.80 | 7.79 | 8.24 | x | x | x | SB | |
4 | Emmanuel Bangué (FRA) | 8.19 | 8.19 | 8.10 | x | 7.88 | 6.46 | 6.87 | |
5 | Mike Powell (USA) | 8.17 | 7.89 | 8.17 | 7.99 | x | x | x | SB |
6 | Gregor Cankar (SLO) | 8.11 | x | x | 8.11 | x | x | 5.33 | |
7 | Aleksandr Glovatskiy (BLR) | 8.07 | 8.07 | x | 8.07 | x | x | x | |
8 | Mattias Sunneborn (SWE) | 8.06 | 7.89 | 7.97 | 8.06 | 8.04 | 8.03 | 7.75 | |
9 | Huang Geng (CHN) | 7.99 | 7.99 | 7.87 | 7.89 | ||||
10 | Yuriy Naumkin (RUS) | 7.96 | 7.96 | 7.88 | 7.95 | ||||
11 | Andrey Ignatov (RUS) | 7.83 | x | 7.83 | 7.58 | ||||
12 | Iván Pedroso (CUB) | 7.75 | x | 7.57 | 7.75 | ||||
13 | Erik Nys (BEL) | 7.72 | 7.59 | x | 7.72 |
See also
- 1994 Men's European Championships Long Jump (Helsinki)
- 1995 Men's World Championships Long Jump (Gothenburg)
- 1996 Long Jump Year Ranking
- 1997 Men's World Championships Long Jump (Athens)
- 1998 Men's European Championships Long Jump (Budapest)