Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's hammer throw

The men's hammer throw at the 2000 Summer Olympics as part of the athletics program was held at the ANZ Stadium on Saturday, 23 September and Sunday, 24 September.[1] There were 44 competitors from 24 nations.[2] The event was won by Szymon Ziółkowski of Poland, the nation's first victory in the event and first medal of any color in the men's hammer throw since 1960. Silver went to Nicola Vizzoni, the first medal winner in the event for Italy. Igor Astapkovich, who had won a silver medal on the Unified Team in 1992, took bronze for the first medal credited to Belarus in the event. Astapkovich was the 11th man to win multiple medals in the hammer throw.

Men's hammer throw
at the Games of the XXVII Olympiad
Szymon Ziółkowski (2001)
VenueANZ Stadium
Dates23 September 2000 (qualifying)
24 September 2000 (final)
Competitors44 from 24 nations
Winning distance80.02
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Szymon Ziółkowski
 Poland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Nicola Vizzoni
 Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Igor Astapkovich
 Belarus
← 1996
2004 →

Background

This was the 23rd appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1896. Seven of the 12 finalists from the 1996 Games returned: silver medalist (and 1992 finalist) Lance Deal of the United States, fourth-place finisher Andriy Skvaruk of Ukraine, fifth-place finisher (and 1988 and 1992 finalist) Heinz Weis of Germany, sixth-place finisher Ilya Konovalov of Russia, seventh-place finisher (and 1992 silver medalist) Igor Astapkovich of Belarus, tenth-place finisher Szymon Ziółkowski of Poland, and twelfth-place finisher Vasiliy Sidorenko of Russia. Also returning was 1992 Olympic champion Andrey Abduvaliyev, now competing for Uzbekistan. Weis (1997) and Karsten Kobs (199), also of Germany, were the last two World Champions.[2]

Croatia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Slovakia, and Slovenia each made their debut in the event. The United States appeared for the 22nd time, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

Each National Olympic Committee was permitted to enter up to three athletes that had thrown 75.50 metres or further during the qualification period. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. If an NOC had no athletes that qualified under that standard, one athlete that had thrown 72.50 metres or further could be entered.[3]

Competition format

The competition used the two-round format introduced in 1936, with the qualifying round completely separate from the divided final. In qualifying, each athlete received three attempts; those recording a mark of at least 77.50 metres advanced to the final. If fewer than 12 athletes achieved that distance, the top 12 would advance. The results of the qualifying round were then ignored. Finalists received three throws each, with the top eight competitors receiving an additional three attempts. The best distance among those six throws counted.[2][4]

Records

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

World record  Yuriy Sedykh (URS)86.74 Stuttgart, West Germany30 August 1986
Olympic record  Sergey Litvinov (URS)84.80 Seoul, South Korea26 September 1988

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

Schedule

All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 23 September 200010:00Qualifying
Sunday, 24 September 200020:50Final

Results

Qualifying

RankAthleteNation123DistanceNotes
1Igor Astapkovich  Belarus79.8179.81Q
2Andriy Skvaruk  Ukraine79.5579.55Q
3Koji Murofushi  Japan78.4978.49Q
4Szymon Ziółkowski  Poland77.8177.81Q
5Nicola Vizzoni  Italy75.3177.5677.56Q
6Tibor Gécsek  Hungary75.97X77.3377.33q
7David Chaussinand  France77.12XX77.12q
8Ilya Konovalov  Russia77.0776.9374.2977.07q
9Loris Paoluzzi  ItalyX73.6376.9176.91q
10Ivan Tikhon  Belarus76.4376.90X76.90q
11Vladimír Maška  Czech RepublicX76.7075.6276.70q
12Alexandros Papadimitriou  Greece76.6174.77X76.61q
13Maciej Pałyszko  Poland76.33X70.1176.33
14Vladyslav Piskunov  Ukraine75.9576.0076.0876.08
15Andrey Abduvaliyev  UzbekistanX75.6474.1975.64
16Lance Deal  United States73.8475.6173.9375.61
17Adrián Annus  Hungary74.0175.41X75.41
18Pavel Sedláček  Czech Republic74.6672.7175.3375.33
19Gilles Dupray  FranceX74.7175.0575.05
20Oleksandr Krykun  Ukraine74.8372.4974.1774.83
21Vasiliy Sidorenko  Russia74.7273.97X74.72
22Aleksey Zagornyi  Russia70.5874.0074.6374.63
23Christophe Épalle  France70.4672.7074.2274.22
24Hristos Polihroniou  GreeceXX74.0274.02
25Zsolt Nemeth  Hungary73.95XX73.95
26Heinz Weis  Germany73.5173.19X73.51
27Juan Ignacio Cerra  ArgentinaX72.86X72.86
28Stuart Rendell  Australia67.6772.78X72.78
29András Haklits  CroatiaXX72.6672.66
30Libor Charfreitag  Slovakia71.1072.52X72.52
31Karsten Kobs  Germany72.29X71.6572.29
32Miloslav Konopka  Slovakia70.55XX70.55
33Jan Bielecki  Denmark68.5670.46X70.46
34Olli-Pekka Karjalainen  Finland69.64XX69.64
35Markus Esser  GermanyX69.51X69.51
36Kevin McMahon  United States69.4865.97X69.48
37Vitor Costa  Portugal67.0768.7968.8968.89
38Primož Kozmus  Slovenia68.83X67.0268.83
39Jud Logan  United States68.4268.05X68.42
40Roman Rozna  MoldovaX68.0162.4668.01
41Paddy McGrath  Ireland67.0064.0964.3567.00
42Vitaly Khojatelev  Uzbekistan60.5564.5365.0465.04
43Victor Ustinov  UzbekistanX60.60X60.60
Nikolay Davydov  KyrgyzstanXXXNM

Final

The tie for bronze medal at 79.17 metres was broken by second-best throw, with Astapkovich's 79.06 metres beating Tikhon's 78.85 metres.

RankAthleteNation123456DistanceNotes
Szymon Ziółkowski  Poland74.8979.87X80.0278.6878.3280.02
Nicola Vizzoni  Italy76.3576.5779.6476.0776.99X79.64PB
Igor Astapkovich  Belarus74.98X77.08X79.1779.0679.17
4Ivan Tikhon  Belarus78.8578.1179.17X75.93X79.17
5Ilya Konovalov  Russia78.5678.12XX72.78X78.56
6Loris Paoluzzi  Italy78.18XXX76.19X78.18
7Tibor Gécsek  Hungary75.2576.9977.7075.8177.0676.8277.70
8Vladimír Maška  Czech Republic77.3275.3776.3973.86X75.5277.32
9Koji Murofushi  JapanX76.2476.60Did not advance76.60
10Andriy Skvaruk  Ukraine71.6075.50XDid not advance75.50
11David Chaussinand  France74.74X75.26Did not advance75.26
12Alexandros Papadimitriou  GreeceX73.30XDid not advance73.30

See also

References