Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's long jump

The men's long jump was an athletics event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. There were 54 competitors from 41 nations, with one athlete not starting.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by 21cm by Carl Lewis of the United States, the nation's fourth consecutive and 20th overall gold medal in the men's long jump. Lewis himself had won the four straight victories, becoming the third Olympian to win the same event four times in a row (after Al Oerter and Paul Elvstrøm, counting the latter's wins in the Firefly and Finn sailing classes as the same event) as well as the only man to win four long jump medals. It was the ninth and final Olympic gold of Lewis's career. James Beckford earned Jamaica's first medal in the event. Joe Greene matched his bronze from 1992, becoming the ninth two-medal winner in the event.

Men's long jump
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
Pictogram for athletics
VenueCentennial Olympic Stadium
Date28 July 1996 (qualifying)
29 July 1996 (finals)
Competitors52 from 40 nations
Winning distance8.50
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Carl Lewis
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)James Beckford
 Jamaica
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Joe Greene
 United States
← 1992
2000 →
Official Video Highlights @ 1:50:32

Summary

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 an 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.

Background

This was the 23rd appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The top six finishers from the 1992 Games returned: the American medal-sweeping team of Carl Lewis, Mike Powell, and Joe Greene, fourth-place finisher Iván Pedroso and fifth-place finisher Jaime Jefferson of Cuba, and sixth-place finisher Konstantinos Koukodimos of Greece; other returning finalists were eighth-place finisher Geng Huang of China and twelfth-place finisher Bogdan Tudor of Romania. Pedroso had surpassed Powell as the world's best jumper in 1995, winning the world championship. Both men, however, struggled with hamstring injuries coming into the Games. Lewis, the three-time Olympic champion, barely qualified for the American team behind Powell and Greene.[2]

Armenia, Belarus, the British Virgin Islands, Croatia, the Czech Republic, the Gambia, the Netherlands Antilles, Sri Lanka, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine each made their first appearance in the event. The United States appeared for the 22nd time, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format

The 1996 competition used the two-round format with divided final introduced in 1952. The qualifying round gave each competitor three jumps to achieve a distance of 8.05 metres; if fewer than 12 men did so, the top 12 (including all those tied) would advance. The final provided each jumper with three jumps; the top eight jumpers received an additional three jumps for a total of six, with the best to count (qualifying round jumps were not considered for the final).[2][3]

Records

The standing world and Olympic records prior to the event were as follows.

World record  Mike Powell (USA)8.95 Tokyo, Japan30 August 1991
Olympic record  Bob Beamon (USA)8.90 Mexico City, Mexico18 October 1968

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

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 28 July 199617:15Qualifying
Monday, 29 July 199619:10Final

Results

Qualifying

RankAthleteNation123DistanceNotes
1Carl Lewis  United States7.93X8.298.29Q
2Joe Greene  United States8.288.28Q
3Yuriy Naumkin  Russia7.838.218.21Q
4Mike Powell  United States8.208.20Q
5Erik Nys  Belgium7.80X8.168.16Q
6Huang Geng  China7.708.128.12Q
7Emmanuel Bangué  France7.88X8.098.09Q
8Aliaksandar Hlavatski  Belarus7.908.078.07Q
9Iván Pedroso  Cuba8.058.05Q
10James Beckford  JamaicaX8.02X8.02q
Mattias Sunneborn  Sweden8.028.02q
12Gregor Cankar  SloveniaXX8.008.00q
Andrey Ignatov  RussiaXX8.008.00q
14Spyridon Vasdekis  Greece7.987.907.967.98
15Bogdan Ţărus  RomaniaX7.967.927.96
16Andrew Owusu  Ghana7.917.88X7.91
17Nai Hui-Fang  Chinese Taipei7.817.487.917.91
18Cheikh Tidiane Touré  Senegal7.91X7.767.91
19Bogdan Tudor  Romania7.887.727.877.88
20Milan Gombala  Czech Republic7.88XX7.88
21Georg Ackermann  GermanyXX7.867.86
22János Uzsoki  HungaryXX7.827.82
22Kostas Koukodimos  Greece7.82XX7.82
24Carlos Calado  Portugal7.367.81X7.81
25Simone Bianchi  ItalyXX7.797.79
26Vitaliy Kyrylenko  Ukraine7.77X7.627.77
27Nelson Ferreira  Brazil7.767.697.76
28Robert Emmiyan  Armenia7.767.52X7.76
29Chen Jing  ChinaX7.70X7.70
30Chao Chih-Kuo  Chinese Taipei7.67XX7.67
31Jaime Jefferson  Cuba7.617.477.657.65
32Jesús Oliván  Spain7.597.64X7.64
33Douglas de Souza  Brazil7.59X7.617.61
34Richard Duncan  Canada7.517.567.617.61
35Aleksey Petrukhanov  RussiaX7.257.507.50
36Nobuharu Asahara  Japan5.497.46X7.46
37Remmy Limo  KenyaX7.46X7.46
38François Fouché  South Africa7.297.307.447.44
39Kenny Lewis  Grenada7.417.22X7.41
40Keita Cline  British Virgin IslandsXX7.267.26
41Andreja Marinković  FR YugoslaviaX7.17X7.17
42Márcio da Cruz  Brazil7.12XX7.12
43Victor Shabangu  Swaziland6.79XX6.79
Siniša Ergotić  CroatiaXXXNo mark
Benny Fernando  Sri LankaXXXNo mark
Hans-Peter Lott  GermanyXXXNo mark
Vladimir Malyavin  TurkmenistanXXXNo mark
Ellsworth Manuel  Netherlands AntillesXXXNo mark
Ivaylo Mladenov  BulgariaXXXNo mark
Ousman Sallah  The GambiaXXXNo mark
Sung Hee-Jun  South KoreaXXXNo mark
Franck Zio  Burkina FasoXXXNo mark
Craig Hepburn  BahamasDNS

Final

RankAthleteNation123456Distance
Carl Lewis  United StatesX8.148.50 SB =MWR8.06X8.50
James Beckford  JamaicaX8.028.13XX8.298.29
Joe Greene  United States7.807.798.24 SBXXX8.24
4Emmanuel Bangué  France8.198.10X7.886.466.878.19
5Mike Powell  United States7.898.17 SB7.99XXX8.17
6Gregor Cankar  SloveniaXX8.11XX5.338.11
7Aliaksandar Hlavatski  Belarus8.07X8.07XXX8.07
8Mattias Sunneborn  Sweden7.897.978.068.048.037.758.06
9Huang Geng  China7.997.877.89Did not advance7.99
10Yuriy Naumkin  Russia7.967.887.95Did not advance7.96
11Andrey Ignatov  RussiaX7.837.58Did not advance7.83
12Iván Pedroso  CubaX7.577.75Did not advance7.75
13Erik Nys  Belgium7.59X7.72Did not advance7.72

See also

References