Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metres

The men's 100 meters at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea saw world champion Ben Johnson of Canada defeat defending Olympic champion Carl Lewis of the United States in a world record time of 9.79, breaking his own record of 9.83 that he had set at the 1987 World Championships in Rome. Two days later, Johnson was stripped of his gold medal and world record by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) after he tested positive for stanozolol. The gold medal was then awarded to the original silver medalist Lewis, who had run 9.92. On 30 September 1989, following Johnson's admission to steroid use between 1981 and 1988, the IAAF rescinded his world record of 9.83 from the 1987 World Championship Final and stripped Johnson of his World Championship gold medal, which was also awarded to Lewis, who initially finished second.[1][2][3][4] This made Lewis the first man to repeat as Olympic champion in the 100 metres (second, if Archie Hahn's 1906 Intercalated Games title is recognized).

Men's 100 meters
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
VenueOlympic Stadium
Date23 & 24 September
Competitors102 from 69 nations
Winning time9.92 WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Carl Lewis
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Linford Christie
 Great Britain
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Calvin Smith
 United States
← 1984
1992 →

Lewis's 9.92 from the Olympic final was also recognized as the official world record, breaking the 9.93 mark that Calvin Smith had set in 1983 and Lewis had since equalled twice. Smith also participated in this race and originally finished fourth, but was elevated to third place and awarded the bronze medal, and Linford Christie of the United Kingdom, who originally won the bronze medal, was elevated to silver. It would take eleven years for an athlete to run a "clean" 9.79 in the 100 meters, which was accomplished by Maurice Greene in Athens, Greece in 1999.

The other participants in this race, in order of finish, were Dennis Mitchell of the United States, who would go on to win the bronze medal in this event in Barcelona; Robson da Silva of Brazil, who won bronze in the 200 meters in Seoul; Johnson's teammate Desai Williams, a bronze medalist in the 4 x 100 meter relay in Los Angeles four years earlier; and Ray Stewart of Jamaica, who won a silver medal in the same relay at the Los Angeles Olympics.[5]

102 competitors from 69 countries competed.[6] Each nation was limited to three athletes under the rules laid down at the 1930 Olympic Congress.

Aftermath

Johnson was not the only participant whose success was questioned: Lewis had tested positive at the Olympic Trials for pseudoephedrine, ephedrine and phenylpropanolamine. Lewis defended himself, claiming that he had accidentally consumed the banned substances. After the supplements that he had taken were analyzed to prove his claims, the USOC accepted his claim of inadvertent use, since a dietary supplement he ingested was found to contain "Ma huang", the Chinese name for Ephedra (ephedrine is known to help weight loss).[7] Fellow Santa Monica Track Club teammates Joe DeLoach and Floyd Heard were also found to have the same banned stimulants in their systems, and were cleared to compete for the same reason.[8][9]

The highest level of the stimulants Lewis recorded was 6 ppm, which was regarded as a positive test in 1988 but is now regarded as negative test. The acceptable level has been raised to ten parts per million for ephedrine and twenty-five parts per million for other substances.[7] According to the IOC rules at the time, positive tests with levels lower than 10 ppm were cause of further investigation but not immediate ban. Neal Benowitz, a professor of medicine at UC San Francisco who is an expert on ephedrine and other stimulants, agreed that "These [levels] are what you'd see from someone taking cold or allergy medicines and are unlikely to have any effect on performance."[7]

Christie was found to have metabolites of pseudoephedrine in his urine after a 200m heat at the same Olympics, but was later cleared of any wrongdoing.[1][10][11][12] Of the top five competitors in the race, only former world record holder and eventual bronze medalist Smith never failed a drug test during his career. Smith later said: "I should have been the gold medalist."[13][14]

The CBC radio documentary, Rewind, "Ben Johnson: A Hero Disgraced" broadcast on September 19, 2013, for the 25th anniversary of the race, stated 20 athletes tested positive for drugs but were cleared by the IOC at this 1988 Seoul Olympics. An IOC official stated that endocrine profiles done at those games indicated that 80 percent of the track and field athletes tested showed evidence of long-term steroid use, although not all were banned.

Background

This was the twenty-first time the event was held, having appeared at every Olympics since the first in 1896. For the first time, the number of competitors topped 100.

Algeria, Bahrain, Burkina Faso, Hong Kong, the Maldives, Papua New Guinea, San Marino, Togo, Tonga, Vanuatu, South Yemen, and Zimbabwe appeared in the event for the first time. It was also the first appearance of "Chinese Taipei," though the Republic of China had competed before. The United States made its 20th appearance in the event, the most of any country, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format

The event retained the same basic four round format introduced in 1920: heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. The "fastest loser" system, introduced in 1968, was used again to ensure that the quarterfinals and subsequent rounds had exactly 8 runners per heat; this time, the system was used in both the preliminaries and quarterfinals.

The first round consisted of 13 heats, each with 7 or 8 athletes. The top three runners in each heat advanced, along with the next nine fastest runners overall. This made 48 quarterfinalists, who were divided into 6 heats of 8 runners. The top two runners in each quarterfinal advanced, with four "fastest loser" places. The 16 semifinalists competed in two heats of 8, with the top four in each semifinal advancing to the eight-man final.[6][15]

Records

These were the then-recognized world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1988 Summer Olympics.

World Record9.831 Ben JohnsonRome (ITA)August 30, 1987
Olympic Record9.95 Jim HinesMexico City (MEX)October 14, 1968

1 This time was rescinded by the IAAF Council in September 1989 after Johnson admitted to using steroids between 1981 and 1988.

The following Olympic records were set during this competition.

DateAthleteTimeORWR
September 24, 1988  Carl Lewis (USA)9.92ORWR

Following Johnson's disqualification, Carl Lewis's time of 9.92 was recognized as a new Olympic record, and also became a new world record after Johnson's time was rescinded.

Results

Heats

Heat 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Robson da Silva  Brazil10.37Q
2Ezio Madonia  Italy10.40Q
3Cheng Hsin-fu  Chinese Taipei10.48Q
4Thierry Lauret  France10.56q
5Boevi Lawson  Togo10.59
6Leung Wing Kwong  Hong Kong10.82
7Mohamed Fahd Al-Bishi  Saudi Arabia10.85
8Jerry Jeremiah  Vanuatu10.96
Wind: +0.6 m/s

Heat 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Calvin Smith  United States10.28Q
2Attila Kovács  Hungary10.39Q
3Mardi Lestari  Indonesia10.40Q
4Andrey Razin  Soviet Union10.58
5Henri Ndinga  Republic of the Congo10.74
6Fabian Muyaba  Zimbabwe10.75
7Moustafa Kamel Salmi  Algeria11.08
8Markus Büchel  Liechtenstein11.21
Wind: +0.9 m/s

Heat 3

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Talal Mansour  Qatar10.42Q
2Juan Núñez  Dominican Republic10.47Q
3Amadou M'Baye  Senegal10.64Q
4Fabian Whymns  Bahamas10.70
5Neville Hodge  Virgin Islands10.73
6Horace Dove-Edwin  Sierra Leone10.89
7Alexandre Yougbare  Burkina Faso10.90
8Henrico Atkins  Barbados11.01
Wind: +0.7 m/s

Heat 4

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Emmanuel Tuffour  Ghana10.31Q
2Koji Kurihara  Japan10.46Q
3Andrew Smith  Jamaica10.49Q
4Zheng Chen  China10.51q
5István Tatár  Hungary10.52q
6Christian Haas  West Germany10.54q
7John Hou  Papua New Guinea10.96
8Ehab Fuad Ahmed Nagi  South Yemen11.53
Wind: +0.8 m/s

Heat 5

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Linford Christie  Great Britain10.19Q
2Max Morinière  France10.34Q
3Sven Matthes  East Germany10.35Q
4Li Tao  China10.47q
5Samuel Nchinda-Kaya  Cameroon10.60
6Lee Shiunn-long  Chinese Taipei10.69
7Bill Trott  Bermuda10.69
8Frank Maziya  Swaziland11.52
Wind: +1.1 m/s

Heat 6

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Chidi Imoh  Nigeria10.62Q
2Charles-Louis Seck  Senegal10.64Q
3Issa Alassane-Ousséni  Benin10.72Q
4John Regis  Great Britain10.76
5Mothobi Kharitse  Lesotho10.97
6Robert Loua  Guinea11.20
7Samuel Birch  Liberia11.68
Pedro Agostinho  PortugalDNF
Wind: +1.4 m/s

Heat 7

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ray Stewart  Jamaica10.22Q
2Pierfrancesco Pavoni  Italy10.36Q
3Vitaliy Savin  Soviet Union10.52Q
4György Fetter  Hungary10.54q
5Khaled Ibrahim Jouma  Bahrain10.80
6Muhammad Afzal  Pakistan10.91
7Claude Roumain  Haiti11.22
Wind: +1.8 m/s

Heat 8

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ben Johnson  Canada10.37Q
2Cai Jianming  China10.55Q
3Sim Deok-Seop  South Korea10.56Q
4Carlos Moreno  Chile10.70
5Abdullah Salem Al-Khalidi  Oman10.90
6Mohamed Shah Jalal  Bangladesh10.94
7Joseph Ssali  Uganda10.95
8St. Clair Soleyne  Antigua and Barbuda11.17
Wind: +2.0 m/s

Heat 9

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Desai Williams  Canada10.24Q
2Peter Wekesa  Kenya10.50Q
3Olapade Adeniken  Nigeria10.56Q
4Eduardo Nava  Mexico10.68
5Jailto Bonfim  Brazil10.75
6Lindel Hodge  British Virgin Islands10.79
7Visut Watanasin  Thailand10.88
8Arménio Fernandes  Angola10.92
Wind: +1.0 m/s

Heat 10

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Vladimir Krylov  Soviet Union10.34Q
2Arnaldo da Silva  Brazil10.44Q
3Michele Lazazzera  Italy10.47Q
4Kennedy Ondiek  Kenya10.51q
5Takahiko Kasahara  Japan10.62
6Jimmy Flemming  Virgin Islands10.70
7Jihad Salame  Lebanon11.49
8Gilbert Bessi  Monaco11.55
Wind: +1.4 m/s

Heat 11

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Dennis Mitchell  United States10.37Q
2Isiaq Adeyanju  Nigeria10.45Q
3Ousmane Diarra  Mali10.53Q
4Oliver Daniels  Liberia10.68
5Luís Cunha  Portugal10.80
6Evaristo Ortíz  Dominican Republic11.01
7Nguyễn Đình Minh  Vietnam11.09
8Secundino Borabota  Equatorial Guinea11.52
Wind: +1.0 m/s

Heat 12

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1John Myles-Mills  Ghana10.31Q
2Andreas Berger  Austria10.40Q
3Barrington Williams  Great Britain10.51Q
4Patrick Stevens  Belgium10.51q
5Enrique Talavera  Spain10.61
6Tomohiro Osawa  Japan10.71
7Dominique Canti  San Marino11.11
8Ismail Asif Waheed  Maldives11.49
Wind: +1.4 m/s

Heat 13

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Carl Lewis  United States10.14Q
2Jean-Charles Trouabal  France10.39Q
3José Javier Arqués  Spain10.44Q
4John Mair  Jamaica10.44
5Harouna Pale  Burkina Faso10.76
6Peauope Suli  Tonga10.94
7Maloni Bole  Fiji11.19
Wind: +0.9 m/s

Quarterfinals

Quarterfinal 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Linford Christie  Great Britain10.11Q
2Dennis Mitchell  United States10.13Q
3Ben Johnson  Canada10.17q
4John Mair  Jamaica10.41
5Charles-Louis Seck  Senegal10.42
6Li Tao  China10.53
7Kennedy Ondiek  Kenya10.57
8Ousmane Diarra  Mali10.61
Wind: +1.2 m/s

Quarterfinal 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Desai Williams  Canada10.16Q
2Arnaldo da Silva  Brazil10.25Q
3Vladimir Krylov  Soviet Union10.26q
4Attila Kovács  Hungary10.27q
5Michele Lazazzera  Italy10.50
6Thierry Lauret  France10.51
7Zheng Chen  China10.72
8Chidi Imoh  Nigeria11.44
Wind: +1.7 m/s

Quarterfinal 3

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ray Stewart  Jamaica10.25Q
2Juan Núñez  Dominican Republic10.33Q
3Sven Matthes  East Germany10.36
4Jean-Charles Trouabal  France10.41
5José Javier Arqués  Spain10.43
6Amadou M'Baye  Senegal10.45
7Barrington Williams  Great Britain10.55
8Christian Haas  West Germany10.57
Wind: +0.9 m/s

Quarterfinal 4

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Calvin Smith  United States10.16Q
2Olapade Adeniken  Nigeria10.30Q
3Andreas Berger  Austria10.34
4Emmanuel Tuffour  Ghana10.37
5Talal Mansour  Qatar10.38
6Patrick Stevens  Belgium10.50
7Cheng Hsin-Fu  Chinese Taipei10.54
8György Fetter  Hungary10.55
Wind: +0.2 m/s

Quarterfinal 5

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Carl Lewis  United States9.99Q
2Robson da Silva  Brazil10.24Q
3Isiaq Adeyanju  Nigeria10.32q
4Pierfrancesco Pavoni  Italy10.33
5Vitaliy Savin  Soviet Union10.36
6Koji Kurihara  Japan10.49
7István Tatár  Hungary10.68
8Issa Alassane-Ousséni  Benin10.83
Wind: +1.4 m/s

Quarterfinal 6

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1John Myles-Mills  Ghana10.21Q
2Mardi Lestari  Indonesia10.32Q
3Max Morinière  France10.37
4Ezio Madonia  Italy10.38
5Peter Wekesa  Kenya10.43
6Sim Deok-Seop  South Korea10.55
7Andrew Smith  Jamaica10.63
8Cai Jianming  China10.76
Wind: +0.3 m/s

Semifinals

Semifinal 1

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Carl Lewis  United States9.97Q
2Calvin Smith  United States10.15Q
3Ray Stewart  Jamaica10.18Q
4Desai Williams  Canada10.24Q
5Arnaldo da Silva  Brazil10.32
6Olapade Adeniken  Nigeria10.33
7Mardi Lestari  Indonesia10.39
8John Myles-Mills  Ghana10.43
Wind: +0.6 m/s

Semifinal 2

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Ben Johnson  Canada10.03Q
2Linford Christie  Great Britain10.11Q
3Dennis Mitchell  United States10.23Q
4Robson da Silva  Brazil10.24Q
5Attila Kovács  Hungary10.31
6Juan Núñez  Dominican Republic10.35
7Isiaq Adeyanju  Nigeria10.60
Vladimir Krylov  Soviet UnionDNS
Wind: -1.2 m/s

Final

RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Carl Lewis  United States9.92WR
Linford Christie  Great Britain9.97NR
Calvin Smith  United States9.99
4Dennis Mitchell  United States10.04
5Robson da Silva  Brazil10.11
6Desai Williams  Canada10.11
7Ray Stewart  Jamaica12.26
DQBen Johnson  Canada9.79
Wind: +1.1 m/s

See also

References

Works cited