Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's triple jump

The men's triple jump competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, United Kingdom. The event was held at the Olympic Stadium on 7–9 August.[1] Twenty-seven athletes from 21 nations competed.[2] The event was won by Christian Taylor of the United States, the nation's first victory in the event since 1996 and seventh overall. His teammate Will Claye won silver; Claye was the first man to medal in both the long jump and triple jump since 1936. Fabrizio Donato earned Italy's first medal in the men's triple jump since 1968.

Men's triple jump
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
Christian Taylor (2011)
VenueOlympic Stadium
Dates7–9 August
Competitors27 from 21 nations
Winning distance17.81
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Christian Taylor
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Will Claye
 United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Fabrizio Donato
 Italy
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Official video highlights

Summary

In the qualifying round, Christian Taylor made the automatic qualifier on his first attempt, Leevan Sands made the only other auto qualifier. The two Italian jumpers Daniele Greco and Fabrizio Donato anticipated the outcome and let their first attempt marks qualify them to the finals, taking the rest of the other rounds off. Lyukman Adams and Will Claye took all three attempts to get in a sufficient jump. Host team favorite 2009 world champion Phillips Idowu made it to the qualifying round,[3] but could not advance.

In the first round, 35-year-old Fabrizio Donato took the lead over 40 cm ahead of Alexis Copello. In the second round Will Claye took the lead, while Donato improved and his teammate Daniele Greco moved into third. Meanwhile, reigning world champion Christian Taylor was struggling to find the board, taking until his third jump just to get a mark to allow him three more attempts. Donato improved again. In the fourth round Taylor put it all together, jumping 17.81 to take what turned out to be an insurmountable lead. Donato made another improvement for his best attempt 17.48, though any of his four legal jumps would have won the bronze. Then Claye secured another silver medal with a 17.62[4]

Background

This was the 27th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The returning finalists from the 2008 Games were silver medalist Phillips Idowu of Great Britain, bronze medalist Leevan Sands of the Bahamas, and fourth-place finisher Arnie David Giralt of Cuba. Idowu was among the favorites; he had won the 2009 world championship and come in second in 2011. The man who had beaten him was Christian Taylor of the United States, who led a smaller but stronger American team: only two Americans were in London, but both Taylor and Will Claye had made the podium at the 2011 worlds.[2]

Haiti, the United Arab Emirates, and the Virgin Islands each made their first appearance in the event. The United States competed for the 26th time, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could enter up to 3 qualified athletes in the men's triple jump event if all athletes met the A standard, or 1 athlete if they met the B standard. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The qualifying distance standards could be obtained in various meets during the qualifying period that had the approval of the IAAF. Both outdoor and indoor meets were eligible. The A standard for the 2012 men's triple jump was 17.20 metres; the B standard was 16.85 metres. The qualifying period for was from 1 May 2011 to 8 July 2012. NOCs could also have an athlete enter the triple jump through a universality place. NOCs could enter one male athlete in an athletics event, regardless of time, if they had no male athletes meeting the qualifying A or B standards in any men's athletic event.[5][6][7]

Competition format

The competition consisted of two rounds, qualification and final. In qualification, each athlete jumped three times (stopping early if they made the qualifying distance of 17.10 metres). At least the top twelve athletes moved on to the final; if more than twelve reached the qualifying distance, all who did so advanced. Distances were reset for the final round. Finalists jumped three times, after which the eight best jumped three more times (with the best distance of the six jumps counted).[8]

Records

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

World record  Jonathan Edwards (GBR)18.29 Gothenburg, Sweden7 August 1995
Olympic record  Kenny Harrison (USA)18.09 Atlanta, United States27 August 1996
2012 World leading  Christian Taylor (USA)17.63 mEugene, United States30 June 2012
Broken records during the 2012 Summer Olympics
2012 World leading  Christian Taylor (USA)17.81London, United Kingdom9 August 2012

Schedule

All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 7 August 201210:45Qualifying
Thursday, 9 August 201219:20Final

Results

Qualifying round

Qual. rule: qualification standard 17.10m (Q) or at least best 12 qualified (q).[9]

RankGroupAthleteNation123DistanceNotes
1BChristian Taylor  United States17.21
(+0.2)
17.21Q
2BLeevan Sands  Bahamas 17.17
(-0.4)
17.17Q
3ABenjamin Compaoré  France16.82
(-0.5)
17.06
(+0.8)
17.06q
4ADaniele Greco  Italy17.00
(+0.6)
17.00q
5BDong Bin  ChinaX16.94
(+0.1)
16.94q
6ALyukman Adams  Russia16.67
(-1.0)
X16.88
(-0.9)
16.88q
7AWill Claye  United States16.56
(-0.5)
16.44
(-1.5)
16.87
(-0.2)
16.87q
8BFabrizio Donato  Italy16.86
(-1.2)
16.86q
9ATosin Oke  Nigeria16.59
(-1.3)
16.83
(-0.3)
X16.83q
10ASamyr Lainé  Haiti16.14
(0.0)
16.81
(+1.4)
X
(+0.1)
16.81q
11BAlexis Copello  CubaX16.70
(-0.7)
16.79
(+1.0)
16.79q
12ADzmitry Platnitski  BelarusX15.66
(-0.4)
16.62
(+0.3)
16.62q
13BSheryf El-Sheryf  Ukraine16.60
(+0.4)
14.83
(-2.5)
X16.60
14APhillips Idowu  Great Britain16.47
(-0.7)
X16.53
(-1.0)
16.53
15BIssam Nima  Algeria15.21
(-0.7)
X16.50
(+0.5)
16.50
16AArnie David Giralt  Cuba15.74
(+1.1)
16.42
(+0.1)
16.45
(+1.1)
16.45
17BHenry Frayne  Australia16.25
(+0.2)
16.35
(+0.2)
16.40
(-0.2)
16.40
18BMuhammad Halim  Virgin Islands15.54
(-0.6)
16.39
(-0.6)
15.31
(+0.5)
16.39
19AYevgeniy Ektov  KazakhstanX16.31
(-0.1)
X16.31
20ACao Shuo  China16.11
(-1.8)
16.26
(+1.2)
16.27
(-1.2)
16.27
21BRoman Valiyev  KazakhstanXX16.23
(-1.0)
16.23
22BKim Deok-Hyeon  South Korea15.35
(-0.8)
X16.22
(-0.3)
16.22
23BYoandris Betanzos  Cuba14.84
(+0.2)
16.22
(+2.9)
X16.22
24BMohamed Abbas Darwish  United Arab EmiratesX16.06
(+1.7)
15.93
(+1.6)
16.06
25AJosé Adrián Sornoza  Ecuador15.61
(-0.5)
16.04
(-2.4)
X16.04
26BJonathan Henrique Silva  Brazil15.59
(-1.3)
XX15.59
ARenjith Maheshwary  IndiaXXXNo mark

Final

[10]

RankAthleteNation123456DistanceNotes
Christian Taylor  United StatesXX17.1517.8117.55X17.81SB
Will Claye  United StatesX17.5417.4317.6217.2516.6617.62
Fabrizio Donato  Italy17.3817.4417.4517.48X17.48
4Daniele Greco  Italy16.9017.34XX16.9217.34
5Leevan Sands  BahamasX17.1917.12X17.19
6Benjamin Compaoré  France15.5317.0814.1616.2713.68X17.08
7Tosin Oke  NigeriaX16.9116.95XXX16.95
8Alexis Copello  Cuba16.92XX14.75X16.6816.92
9Lyukman Adams  Russia16.78XXDid not advance16.78DPG[11]
9Dong Bin  China16.75XXDid not advance16.75
10Samyr Lainé  HaitiX16.6516.59Did not advance16.65
11Dzmitry Platnitski  Belarus16.08X16.19Did not advance16.19

References