Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's 1500 metres

The men's 1500 metres event at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea had an entry list of 59 competitors from 46 nations, with four qualifying heats (59) and two semi-finals (26), before the final (12) took place on Saturday October 1, 1988.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Peter Rono of Kenya, the nation's first title in the event since 1968 and second overall.

Men's 1500 metres
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
Olympic Athletics
VenueSeoul Olympic Stadium
Dates29 September – 1 October
Competitors59 from 46 nations
Winning time3:35.96
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Peter Rono
 Kenya
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Peter Elliott
 Great Britain
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Jens-Peter Herold
 East Germany
← 1984
1992 →

Summary edit

This race typified the tactical running of miles and 1500s of this era. Nobody really cared about leading early or pushing the pace. Marcus O'Sullivan took the point by default. The British new guard of Peter Elliott and Steve Cram were just behind Omer Khalifa marking the lead. Just before two laps to go, the Kenyan team decided to change position led by Peter Rono moving out to lane 2 and from dead last running past the entire field into first place. He was soon joined by Joseph Chesire, who served as a Kenyan wall at the front. The first challenge to the wall was Jeff Atkinson, who managed to get around Chesire but could not get past Rono. Cheshire's weakness exposed, the entire pack went around him, everybody aiming to be just off the lead at the bell, the ever-present Steve Scott behind Atkinson, the Britons, with Jens-Peter Herold, Han Kulker and Kipkoech Cheruiyot all jockeying for position behind Rono on the backstretch. Atkinson faded while Elliott, Cram and Herold emerged toward the front, still behind Rono who was watching over his shoulder. Cram poised himself on Elliott's shoulder to make the big move coming off the turn with Scott, Kulker and Cheruiyot showing similar aspirations a step behind. But the only big move was Herold sneaking past Elliott on the inside while Elliott was concerned with Cram on his outside. Nobody's big move really advanced their position, Elliott using his best sprinting to just edge back ahead of Herold by the finish line for silver, Rono untested ahead of everyone.

Background edit

This was the 21st appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Five finalists from 1984 returned: silver medalist Steve Cram of Great Britain, fourth-place finisher Joseph Chesire of Kenya, sixth-place finisher Peter Wirz of Switzerland, eighth-place finisher Omar Khalifa of Sudan, and tenth-place finisher Steve Scott of the United States. Sebastian Coe, the two-time defending gold medalist, "was not chosen for the British team" after the British trials. Abdi Bile of Somalia, the 1987 World Champion, withdrew due to a tibial stress fracture. Saïd Aouita of Morocco, who had set the world record in 1985, did compete.[2]

Andorra, Angola, the People's Republic of China, Cyprus, Djibouti, Fiji, Mauritania, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Qatar, and North Yemen each made their first appearance in the event. The United States made its 20th appearance, most of all nations (having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games).

Competition format edit

The competition was again three rounds (used previously in 1952 and since 1964). The "fastest loser" system introduced in 1964 was used for both the first round and semifinals. The 12-man finals introduced in 1984 continued to be used, but the semifinals expanded to 13 runners each.

There were four heats in the first round, each with 15 runners (before one withdrawal left a heat with 14 runners). The top five runners in each heat, along with the next six fastest overall, advanced to the semifinals. The 26 semifinalists were divided into two semifinals, each with 13 runners. The top five men in each semifinal, plus the next two fastest overall, advanced to the 12-man final.[2][3]

Records edit

These were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1988 Summer Olympics.

World record   Saïd Aouita (MAR) 3:29.46 West Berlin, West Germany 23 August 1985
Olympic record   Sebastian Coe (GBR) 3:32.53 Los Angeles, United States 11 August 1984

No new world or Olympic records were set during the competition.

Schedule edit

All times are Korea Standard Time adjusted for daylight savings (UTC+10)

Date Time Round
Thursday, 29 September 1988 15:15 Round 1
Friday, 30 September 1988 12:40 Semifinals
Saturday, 1 October 1988 13:10 Final

Results edit

Round 1 edit

First 5 of each heat (Q) and next 6 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.

Heat 1 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Steve Cram   Great Britain 3:40.89 Q
2 Steve Scott   United States 3:41.57 Q
3 Rémy Geoffroy   France 3:41.68 Q
4 Joseph Chesire   Kenya 3:41.72 Q
5 Gennaro Di Napoli   Italy 3:41.85 Q
6 Marcus O'Sullivan   Ireland 3:42.01 q
7 Ari Suhonen   Finland 3:43.61
8 José Luíz Barbosa   Brazil 3:44.46
9 Branko Zorko   Yugoslavia 3:45.52
10 Michael Watson   Bermuda 3:46.49
11 Melford Homela   Zimbabwe 3:47.38
12 Hoche Yaya Aden   Djibouti 3:51.56
13 Eugénio Katombi   Angola 3:54.25
14 Modupe Jonah   Sierra Leone 3:55.15
15 Mohamed Ould Khayar   Mauritania 4:12.18

Heat 2 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Kipkoech Cheruiyot   Kenya 3:39.98 Q
2 Mark Deady   United States 3:41.91 Q
3 Mogens Guldberg   Denmark 3:42.01 Q
4 Saïd Aouita   Morocco 3:42.18 Q
5 Mario Silva   Portugal 3:42.24 Q
6 Marcus Rapp   Switzerland 3:42.64
7 David Campbell   Canada 3:42.97
8 Mohamed Suleiman   Qatar 3:44.43
9 Duan Xiuquan   China 3:44.88
10 Pat Scammell   Australia 3:45.21
11 Jama Aden   Somalia 3:49.84
12 Ramón López   Paraguay 3:53.31
13 Kenneth Dzekedzeke   Malawi 4:02.61
14 Bernardo Elonga   Equatorial Guinea 4:16.40
Nimley Twegbe   Liberia DNS

Heat 3 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Peter Rono   Kenya 3:37.65 Q
2 Jeff Atkinson   United States 3:38.33 Q
3 Peter Elliott   Great Britain 3:38.60 Q
4 Markus Hacksteiner   Switzerland 3:39.05 Q
5 Mostafa Lachal   Morocco 3:39.20 Q
6 Rachid Kram   Algeria 3:39.90 q
7 Joaquim Cruz   Brazil 3:40.92 q
8 Mbiganyi Thee   Botswana 3:41.97 q
9 Spyros Spyrou   Cyprus 3:42.32 q
10 Gerry O'Reilly   Ireland 3:43.23
11 Jo Jin-Saeng   South Korea 3:45.63
12 Jan Kubista   Czechoslovakia 3:46.41
13 Moses Zarak Khan   Fiji 4:03.20
14 Awad Saleh Ahmed   North Yemen 4:03.86
15 Johnd Siguria   Papua New Guinea 4:07.04

Heat 4 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Jens-Peter Herold   East Germany 3:40.87 Q
2 Han Kulker   Netherlands 3:40.90 Q
3 Steve Crabb   Great Britain 3:41.12 Q
4 Peter Wirz   Switzerland 3:41.26 Q
5 Omer Khalifa   Sudan 3:41.46 Q
6 Abdelmajide Moncif   Morocco 3:41.73 q
7 Mahmoud Kalboussi   Tunisia 3:43.72
8 Dale Jones   Antigua and Barbuda 3:51.22
9 Hameed Al-Dousari   Saudi Arabia 3:51.53
10 Eulucane Ndagijimana   Rwanda 3:51.61
11 Josep Graells   Andorra 3:52.68
12 Zeki Öztürk   Turkey 3:54.26
13 Douglas Consiglio   Canada 3:55.31
14 Seid Gayaplé   Chad 3:58.46
15 Haribahadur Rokaya   Nepal 4:01.17

Overall results for round 1 edit

Rank Heat Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3 Peter Rono   Kenya 3:37.65 Q
2 3 Jeff Atkinson   United States 3:38.33 Q
3 3 Peter Elliott   Great Britain 3:38.60 Q
4 3 Markus Hacksteiner   Switzerland 3:39.05 Q
5 3 Mostafa Lachal   Morocco 3:39.20 Q
6 3 Rachid Kram   Algeria 3:39.90 q
7 2 Kipkoech Cheruiyot   Kenya 3:39.98 Q
8 4 Jens-Peter Herold   East Germany 3:40.87 Q
9 1 Steve Cram   Great Britain 3:40.89 Q
10 4 Han Kulker   Netherlands 3:40.90 Q
11 3 Joaquim Cruz   Brazil 3:40.92 q
12 4 Steve Crabb   Great Britain 3:41.12 Q
13 4 Peter Wirz   Switzerland 3:41.26 Q
14 4 Omer Khalifa   Sudan 3:41.46 Q
15 1 Steve Scott   United States 3:41.57 Q
16 1 Rémy Geoffroy   France 3:41.68 Q
17 1 Joseph Chesire   Kenya 3:41.72 Q
18 4 Abdelmajide Moncif   Morocco 3:41.73 q
19 1 Gennaro Di Napoli   Italy 3:41.85 Q
20 2 Mark Deady   United States 3:41.91 Q
21 3 Mbiganyi Thee   Botswana 3:41.97 q
22 1 Marcus O'Sullivan   Ireland 3:42.01 q
22 2 Mogens Guldberg   Denmark 3:42.01 Q
24 2 Saïd Aouita   Morocco 3:42.18 Q
25 2 Mario Silva   Portugal 3:42.24 Q
26 3 Spyros Spyrou   Cyprus 3:42.32 q
27 2 Marcus Rapp   Switzerland 3:42.64
28 2 David Campbell   Canada 3:42.97
29 3 Gerry O'Reilly   Ireland 3:43.23
30 1 Ari Suhonen   Finland 3:43.61
31 4 Mahmoud Kalboussi   Tunisia 3:43.72
32 2 Mohamed Suleiman   Qatar 3:44.43
33 1 José Luíz Barbosa   Brazil 3:44.46
34 2 Duan Xiuquan   China 3:44.88
35 2 Pat Scammell   Australia 3:45.21
36 1 Branko Zorko   Yugoslavia 3:45.52
37 3 Jo Jin-Saeng   South Korea 3:45.63
38 3 Jan Kubista   Czechoslovakia 3:46.41
39 1 Michael Watson   Bermuda 3:46.49
40 1 Melford Homela   Zimbabwe 3:47.38
41 2 Jama Aden   Somalia 3:49.84
42 4 Dale Jones   Antigua and Barbuda 3:51.22
43 4 Hameed Al-Dousari   Saudi Arabia 3:51.53
44 1 Hoche Yaya Aden   Djibouti 3:51.56
45 4 Eulucane Ndagijimana   Rwanda 3:51.61
46 4 Josep Graells   Andorra 3:52.68
47 2 Ramón López   Paraguay 3:53.31
48 1 Eugénio Katombi   Angola 3:54.25
49 4 Zeki Öztürk   Turkey 3:54.26
50 1 Modupe Jonah   Sierra Leone 3:55.15
51 4 Douglas Consiglio   Canada 3:55.31
52 4 Seid Gayaplé   Chad 3:58.46
53 4 Haribahadur Rokaya   Nepal 4:01.17
54 2 Kenneth Dzekedzeke   Malawi 4:02.61
55 3 Moses Zarak Khan   Fiji 4:03.20
56 3 Awad Saleh Ahmed   North Yemen 4:03.86
57 3 Johnd Siguria   Papua New Guinea 4:07.04
58 1 Mohamed Ould Khayar   Mauritania 4:12.18
59 2 Bernardo Elonga   Equatorial Guinea 4:16.40
2 Nimely Twegbe   Liberia DNS

Semifinals edit

The semifinals were held on Friday September 30, 1988.

Semifinal 1 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Kipkoech Cheruiyot   Kenya 3:38.09 Q
2 Steve Cram   Great Britain 3:38.30 Q
3 Peter Elliott   Great Britain 3:38.56 Q
4 Han Kulker   Netherlands 3:39.06 Q
5 Jeff Atkinson   United States 3:39.12 Q
6 Joseph Chesire   Kenya 3:39.17 q
7 Mogens Guldberg   Denmark 3:39.86
8 Remi Geoffroy   France 3:40.96
9 Rachid Kram   Algeria 3:41.39
10 Spyros Spyrou   Cyprus 3:43.49
Abdelmajide Moncif   Morocco DNF
Peter Wirz   Switzerland DNF
Joaquim Cruz   Brazil DNS

Semifinal 2 edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 Steve Scott   United States 3:38.20 Q
2 Peter Rono   Kenya 3:38.25 Q
3 Omer Khalifa   Sudan 3:38.40 Q
4 Mario Silva   Portugal 3:38.56 Q
5 Jens-Peter Herold   East Germany 3:38.59 Q
6 Marcus O'Sullivan   Ireland 3:38.84 q
7 Markus Hacksteiner   Switzerland 3:39.18
8 Mark Deady   United States 3:39.47
9 Steve Crabb   Great Britain 3:39.55
10 Mbiganyi Thee   Botswana 3:42.62
11 Gennaro Di Napoli   Italy 3:43.58
12 Mostafa Lachal   Morocco 3:45.65
Saïd Aouita   Morocco DNS

Final edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time
  Peter Rono   Kenya 3:35.96
  Peter Elliott   Great Britain 3:36.15
  Jens-Peter Herold   East Germany 3:36.21
4 Steve Cram   Great Britain 3:36.24
5 Steve Scott   United States 3:36.99
6 Han Kulker   Netherlands 3:37.08
7 Kipkoech Cheruiyot   Kenya 3:37.94
8 Marcus O'Sullivan   Ireland 3:38.39
9 Mario Silva   Portugal 3:38.77
10 Jeff Atkinson   United States 3:40.80
11 Joseph Chesire   Kenya 3:40.82
12 Omer Khalifa   Sudan 3:41.07

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1988 Seoul Games: Men's 1500 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b "1500 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  3. ^ Official Report, vol. 2, pp. 226–27.

External links edit