Athletics at the 1976 Summer Olympics – Men's triple jump

The men's triple jump event at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, had an entry list of 25 competitors, with two qualifying groups (25 jumpers) before the final (12) took place on Friday July 30, 1976. The top twelve and ties, and all those reaching 16.30 metres advanced to the final. The qualification round was held in Thursday July 29, 1976.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress.

Men's triple jump
at the Games of the XXI Olympiad
Viktor Saneyev (1972)
VenueOlympic Stadium
Date29 July 1976 (qualifying)
30 July 1976 (final)
Competitors25 from 18 nations
Winning distance17.29
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Viktor Saneyev
 Soviet Union
2nd place, silver medalist(s) James Butts
 United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) João Carlos de Oliveira
 Brazil
← 1972
1980 →

The event was won by Viktor Saneyev of the Soviet Union, the first man to win three gold medals in the triple jump. He matched Vilho Tuulos of Finland in 1920 through 1928 as the only men to have three medals of any color in the event (Tuulos had one gold, two bronze). It was the seventh consecutive Games that the Soviet Union had reached the podium, and third consecutive gold medal for the Soviets, in the event. James Butts's silver put the United States on the men's triple jump podium for the first time since 1928. Brazil won a triple jump medal for the third consecutive Games with João Carlos de Oliveira's bronze.

Summary edit

Three world record holders came to compete; João Carlos de Oliveira was the current record holder at the 1975 Pan American Games; two time defending champion Viktor Saneyev and Pedro Pérez who had taken Saneyev's record and held it for a year until Saneyev took it back.

All but two finalists hit the 16.30 automatic qualifier, de Oliveira the leader in that round. In the final, Pérez took the early lead with a 16.81 in the first round, James Butts was in second at 16.69, while Saneyev and de Oliveira fouled. In the second round, Saneyev landed a 16.71 but was only third as Butts improved to 16.76. The order switched in the third round when Saneyev jumped 17.06 and de Oliveira went 16.85 to take over the top two spots. In the fourth round, Butts leaped into the lead with 17.18. Saneyev jumped the winner 17.29 m (56 ft 8+12 in) in the fifth round. On his final attempt, de Oliveira improved to 16.90, but couldn't improve enough to change his medal from bronze.[2]

Saneyev became the third man to win the same event three times in a row, after John Flanagan in the hammer throw and Al Oerter in the discus.

Background edit

This was the 18th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Half of the finalists from the 1972 Games returned: two-time gold medalist Viktor Saneyev of the Soviet Union, bronze medalist (and 1968 silver medalist) Nelson Prudêncio of Brazil, fourth-place finisher Carol Corbu of Romania, seventh-place finisher Michał Joachimowski of Poland, tenth-place finisher Bernard Lamitié of France, and twelfth-place finisher Toshiaki Inoue of Japan. Saneyev was the favorite to win a third gold, with world record holder João Carlos de Oliveira of Brazil his most significant challenger.[3]

Antigua and Barbuda made its first appearance in the event. The United States competed for the 18th time, having competed at each of the Games so far.

Competition format edit

The competition used the two-round format introduced in 1936. In the qualifying round, each jumper received three attempts to reach the qualifying distance of 16.30 metres; if fewer than 12 men did so, the top 12 (including all those tied) would advance. In the final round, each athlete had three jumps; the top eight received an additional three jumps, with the best of the six to count.[3][4]

Records edit

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

World record   João Carlos de Oliveira (BRA) 17.89 Mexico City, Mexico 15 October 1975
Olympic record   Viktor Saneyev (URS) 17.39 Mexico City, Mexico 17 October 1968

No new world and Olympic records were set during this competition.

Schedule edit

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Thursday, 29 July 1976 10:00 Qualifying
Friday, 30 July 1976 15:00 Final

Results edit

Qualifying edit

Rank Athlete Nation 1 2 3 Distance Notes
1 João Carlos de Oliveira   Brazil 16.81 16.81 Q
2 Viktor Saneyev   Soviet Union 16.77 16.77 Q
3 Wolfgang Kolmsee   West Germany 16.68 16.68 Q
4 Tommy Haynes   United States 16.62 16.62 Q
5 James Butts   United States 16.55 16.55 Q
6 Jiří Vyčichlo   Czechoslovakia X 16.00 16.54 16.54 Q
7 Pedro Pérez   Cuba 16.51 16.51 Q
8 Rayfield Dupree   United States 14.29 16.20 16.50 16.50 Q
9 Eugeniusz Biskupski   Poland 16.46 16.46 Q
10 Bernard Lamitié   France 16.39 16.39 Q
11 Pentti Kuukasjärvi   Finland 16.31 16.31 Q
12 Carol Corbu   Romania 16.30 16.30 Q
13 Michał Joachimowski   Poland 16.08 16.29 X 16.29
14 Nélson Prudêncio   Brazil 16.18 16.22 14.79 16.22
15 Valentyn Shevchenko   Soviet Union 16.15 15.97 16.00 16.15
16 Toshiaki Inoue   Japan 16.06 X 15.99 16.06
17 Janoš Hegediš   Yugoslavia 15.50 16.03 16.00 16.03
18 Ramón Cid   Spain 16.00 X X 16.00
19 Armando Herrera   Cuba 15.98 X X 15.98
20 Andrzej Sontag   Poland 15.72 15.30 15.82 15.82
21 Maxwell Peters   Antigua and Barbuda 14.94 X X 14.94
22 Apostolos Kathiniotis   Greece 14.13 X X 14.13
23 Mohamed Al-Bouhairi   Saudi Arabia 13.85 X X 13.85
Aston Moore   Great Britain X X X No mark
Phil Robins   Bahamas X X X No mark

Final edit

Rank Athlete Nation 1 2 3 4 5 6 Distance
  Viktor Saneyev   Soviet Union X 16.71 17.06 X 17.29 X 17.29
  James Butts   United States 16.69 16.76 14.80 17.18 16.55 16.61 17.18
  João Carlos de Oliveira   Brazil X 16.15 16.85 14.91 16.69 16.90 16.90
4 Pedro Pérez   Cuba 16.81 16.24 16.48 16.47 X X 16.81
5 Tommy Haynes   United States 15.46 X 16.68 16.78 16.71 16.71 16.78
6 Wolfgang Kolmsee   West Germany 16.23 X 16.68 16.58 16.31 X 16.68
7 Eugeniusz Biskupski   Poland 15.91 X 16.49 X 15.79 X 16.49
8 Carol Corbu   Romania 16.07 16.18 16.43 X 16.00 X 16.43
9 Jiří Vyčichlo   Czechoslovakia X X 16.28 Did not advance 16.28
10 Pentti Kuukasjärvi   Finland 16.15 16.14 16.23 Did not advance 16.23
11 Bernard Lamitié   France X 16.23 15.93 Did not advance 16.23
12 Rayfield Dupree   United States X 16.23 15.90 Did not advance 16.23

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1976 Montreal Summer Games: Men's Triple Jump". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
  2. ^ "Montreal 1976 triple jump men Results - Olympic athletics".
  3. ^ a b "Triple Jump, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  4. ^ Official Report, vol. 3, p. 73.