Athletics at the 1924 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

The men's marathon event was part of the track and field athletics programme at the 1924 Summer Olympics, in Paris, France. The marathon was held on Sunday, July 13, 1924.[1] It was only the second Olympic marathon to use the distance of 42.195 km (26 miles, 385 yards) which was first used in 1908 and is now the standard marathon distance. Fifty-eight runners from 20 nations competed, with no more than 6 runners per nation. The event was won by Albin Stenroos of Finland, the nation's second consecutive Olympic marathon victory.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the VIII Olympiad
Albin Stenroos entering the stadium
VenueStade Olympique Yves-du-Manoir and nearby roads
DateJuly 13
Competitors58 from 20 nations
Winning time2:41:22.6
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Albin Stenroos
 Finland
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Romeo Bertini
 Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Clarence DeMar
 United States
← 1920
1928 →

Background edit

This was the seventh appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The Finnish team included defending champion Hannes Kolehmainen as well as Albin Stenroos, who had won two medals in other events in 1912; Ville Kyrönen had been the winner in the Finnish Olympic trials, however. 1920 silver medalist Jüri Lossmann of Estonia also returned. Boughera El Ouafi of France, who would win gold in 1928, competed for the first time. The American team had Clarence DeMar, the Boston Marathon winner in 1911, 1922, 1923, and 1924, Charles Mellor, who had run the Olympic marathon in 1920 and would win the Boston marathon in 1925, and Frank Zuna, the 1921 Boston winner. Great Britain had Dunky Wright. Shizo Kanakuri of Japan, still considered a missing person in Sweden after disappearing during the 1912 Olympic marathon, competed (as he had in 1920 as well).[2]

Czechoslovakia, Ecuador, and Spain each made their first appearance in Olympic marathons. The United States made its seventh appearance, the only nation to have competed in each Olympic marathon to that point.

Records edit

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows:[3]

World record   Hannes Kolehmainen (FIN) 2:32:35.8 Antwerp, Belgium 22 August 1920
Olympic record   Hannes Kolehmainen (FIN) 2:32:35.8 Antwerp, Belgium 22 August 1920

Schedule edit

The race was delayed due to concerns about heat.[2]

Date Time Round
Sunday, 13 July 1924 17:00 Final

Results edit

The race was held on Sunday, July 13, 1924.

Rank Athlete Nation Time
  Albin Stenroos   Finland 2:41:22.6
  Romeo Bertini   Italy 2:47:19.6
  Clarence DeMar   United States 2:48:14.0
4 Lauri Halonen   Finland 2:49:47.4
5 Sam Ferris   Great Britain 2:52:26.0
6 Manuel Plaza   Chile 2:52:54.0
7 Boughéra El-Ouafi   France 2:54:19.6
8 Gustav Kinn   Sweden 2:54:33.4
9 Dionisio Carreras   Spain 2:57:18.4
10 Jüri Lossman   Estonia 2:57:54.6
11 Axel Jensen   Denmark 2:58:44.8
12 Jean-Baptiste Manhès   France 3:00:34.0
13 John Cuthbert   Canada 3:00:44.6
14 Victor McAuley   Canada 3:02:05.4
15 Marcel Alavoine   Belgium 3:03:20.0
16 Frank Wendling   United States 3:05:09.8
17 Arthur Farrimond   Great Britain 3:05:15.0
18 Frank Zuna   United States 3:05:52.2
19 Harry Phillips   South Africa 3:07:13.0
20 Augustinus Broos   Belgium 3:14:03.0
21 Waldemar Karlsson   Sweden 3:14:21.4
22 Tullio Biscuola   Italy 3:19:05.0
23 William Churchill   United States 3:19:18.0
24 Mohammed Ghermati   France 3:20:27.0
25 Charles Mellor   United States 3:24:07.0
26 Pierre-Georges LeClercq   Belgium 3:27:54.0
27 Jack McKenna   Great Britain 3:30:40.0
28 Antal Lovas   Hungary 3:35:24.0
29 Mahadeo Singh   India 3:37:36.0
30 Elmar Reimann   Estonia 3:40:52.0
Ernesto Alciati   Italy DNF
Vyron Athanasiadis   Greece DNF
Belisario Villacís   Ecuador DNF
Ettore Blasi   Italy DNF
Cornelis Brouwer   Netherlands DNF
Alberto Cavallero   Italy DNF
Josef Eberle   Czechoslovakia DNF
Henrik Hietakari   Finland DNF
Bohumil Honzátko   Czechoslovakia DNF
Ján Kalous   Czechoslovakia DNF
Shizo Kanakuri   Japan DNF
Pál Király   Hungary DNF
Hannes Kolehmainen   Finland DNF
Alexandros Kranis   Greece DNF
Ville Kyrönen   Finland DNF
Ernest Letherland   Great Britain DNF
Angelo Malvicini   Italy DNF
Albert Mills   Great Britain DNF
Yahei Miura   Japan DNF
Gabriel Ruotsalainen   Finland DNF
Iraklis Sakellaropoulos   Greece DNF
Teunis Sprong   Netherlands DNF
Théophilus Steurs   Belgium DNF
Kikunosuke Tashiro   Japan DNF
Félicien Van De Putte   Belgium DNF
Georges Verger   France DNF
Ralph Williams   United States DNF
Dunky Wright   Great Britain DNF
José Andía   Spain DNS
József Bese   Hungary DNS
Helge Breckwoldt   Denmark DNS
Josef Franz   Austria DNS
János Hrenvoyszky   Hungary DNS
A. Kadar   Hungary DNS
Rudolf Kühnel   Austria DNS
J. Polspoel dit Standaert   Belgium DNS
Sofus Rose   Denmark DNS
Trygve Tangen   Norway DNS
R. Uri   Austria DNS
B. Zapletal   Czechoslovakia DNS
František Zyka   Czechoslovakia DNS

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1924 Paris Summer Games: Men's Marathon". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
  2. ^ a b "Marathon, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  3. ^ Olympic.org

External links edit