Fencing at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's épée

The men's épée was one of ten fencing events on the fencing at the 1996 Summer Olympics programme. It was the twenty-second appearance of the event. The competition was held on 20 July 1996. 45 fencers from 21 nations competed, a sharply reduced number from prior Games which generally had 60 to 80 fencers.[1] Each nation remained limited to 3 fencers in the event. The event was won by Aleksandr Beketov of Russia, the nation's first victory and first medal in the event in its debut (though it was the third straight Games with a Russian on the podium, with Andrey Shuvalov taking bronze for the Soviet Union in 1988 and Pavel Kolobkov earning silver representing the Unified Team in 1992). Iván Trevejo's silver was Cuba's first medal in the event since Ramón Fonst won the first two gold medals in 1900 and 1904. The bronze went to Géza Imre of Hungary, that nation's first medal in the men's individual épée since 1980. France's four-Games podium streak ended.

Men's épée
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
Georgia World Congress Center (2007)
VenueGeorgia World Congress Center
Dates20 July 1996
Competitors45 from 21 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Aleksandr Beketov Russia
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Iván Trevejo Cuba
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Géza Imre Hungary
← 1992
2000 →

Background

This was the 22nd appearance of the event, which was not held at the first Games in 1896 (with only foil and sabre events held) but has been held at every Summer Olympics since 1900.[2]

All eight quarterfinalists from 1992 returned: gold medalist Éric Srecki of France, silver medalist Pavel Kolobkov of the Unified Team (now representing Russia), bronze medalist Jean-Michel Henry of France, fourth-place finisher Kaido Kaaberma of Estonia, and quarterfinalists Elmar Borrmann of Germany, Iván Kovács of Hungary, Angelo Mazzoni of Italy, and Mauricio Rivas of Colombia. Kolobkov had won the World Championship in 1993 and 1994; Srecki was the reigning World Champion having won in 1995.[2]

Belarus, the Czech Republic, and Russia each made their debut in the event. France, Sweden, and the United States each appeared for the 20th time, tied for most among nations.

Competition format

The 1996 tournament eliminated pool play, a staple of Olympic fencing since 1896. The double-elimination rounds that had been used for the past few Games were also eliminated. For the first time, the format consisted entirely of a single-elimination bracket with a bronze medal match. The 15-touch bout was introduced for the first time, with all bouts being to 15 touches. The number of fencers was also reduced.

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 20 July 1996Round of 64
Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Bronze medal match
Final

Results

Section 1

Round of 64Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals
 Sandro Cuomo (ITA)15
 Valery Zakharevich (RUS)15  Valery Zakharevich (RUS)14
 Fernando de la Peña (ESP)8  Sandro Cuomo (ITA)15
 Andrus Kajak (EST)14
 Andrus Kajak (EST)15
 Krisztián Kulcsár (HUN)14
 Sandro Cuomo (ITA)14
 Géza Imre (HUN)15
 Maurizio Randazzo (ITA)14
 Elmar Borrmann (GER)15  Elmar Borrmann (GER)15
 Lee Sang-Gi (KOR)14  Elmar Borrmann (GER)14
 Géza Imre (HUN)15  Géza Imre (HUN)15
 Paris Inostroza (CHI)12  Géza Imre (HUN)15
 Péter Vánky (SWE)14

Section 2

Round of 64Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals
 Robert Leroux (FRA)15
 Tamir Bloom (USA)15  Tamir Bloom (USA)9
 Olivier Jacquet (SUI)13  Robert Leroux (FRA)14
 Zhao Gang (CHN)15  Kaido Kaaberma (EST)15
 Iliya Mechkov (BUL)12  Zhao Gang (CHN)6
 Kaido Kaaberma (EST)15
 Kaido Kaaberma (EST)14
 Iván Trevejo (CUB)15
 Danek Nowosielski (CAN)14
 Iván Trevejo (CUB)15  Iván Trevejo (CUB)15
 Aurel Bratu (ROU)10  Iván Trevejo (CUB)15
 Jang Tae-Seok (KOR)15  Arnd Schmitt (GER)8
 Roman Jecmínek (CZE)13  Jang Tae-Seok (KOR)13
 Arnd Schmitt (GER)15

Section 3

Round of 64Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals
 Iván Kovács (HUN)15
 Michael Marx (USA)15  Michael Marx (USA)6
 James Ransom (CAN)9  Iván Kovács (HUN)15
 Pavel Kolobkov (RUS)11
 Yang Noe-Seong (KOR)14
 Pavel Kolobkov (RUS)15
 Iván Kovács (HUN)15
 Marius Strzalka (GER)13
 Jean-Marc Chouinard (CAN)12
 Marius Strzalka (GER)15  Marius Strzalka (GER)15
 Gabriel Pantelimon (ROU)12  Marius Strzalka (GER)15
 Vitaly Zakharov (BLR)15  Angelo Mazzoni (ITA)13
 Nuno Frazão (POR)11  Vitaly Zakharov (BLR)11
 Angelo Mazzoni (ITA)15

Section 4

Round of 64Round of 32Round of 16Quarterfinals
 Jean-Michel Henry (FRA)15
 Gheorghe Epurescu (ROU)15  Gheorghe Epurescu (ROU)9
 Oscar Fernández (ESP)10  Jean-Michel Henry (FRA)15
 Jim Carpenter (USA)15  Mauricio Rivas (COL)11
 Juan Miguel Paz (COL)11  Jim Carpenter (USA)9
 Mauricio Rivas (COL)15
 Jean-Michel Henry (FRA)13
 Aleksandr Beketov (RUS)15
 Nic Bürgin (SUI)12
 Aleksandr Beketov (RUS)15
 Aleksandr Beketov (RUS)15
 Cesar González (ESP)15  Éric Srecki (FRA)10
 Meelis Loit (EST)14  Cesar González (ESP)11
 Éric Srecki (FRA)15

Finals

 
SemifinalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Géza Imre (HUN) 10
 
 
 
 Iván Trevejo (CUB) 15
 
 Iván Trevejo (CUB) 14
 
 
 
 Aleksandr Beketov (RUS) 15
 
 Iván Kovács (HUN) 8
 
 
 Aleksandr Beketov (RUS) 15
 
Bronze medal match
 
 
 
 
 
 Géza Imre (HUN) 15
 
 
 Iván Kovács (HUN) 9

Results summary

RankFencerNation
Aleksandr Beketov  Russia
Iván Trevejo  Cuba
Géza Imre  Hungary
4Iván Kovács  Hungary
5Sandro Cuomo  Italy
6Jean-Michel Henry  France
7Kaido Kaaberma  Estonia
8Marius Strzalka  Germany
9Éric Srecki  France
10Arnd Schmitt  Germany
11Angelo Mazzoni  Italy
12Robert Leroux  France
13Mauricio Rivas  Colombia
14Pavel Kolobkov  Russia
15Andrus Kajak  Estonia
16Elmar Borrmann  Germany
17Péter Vánky  Sweden
18Maurizio Randazzo  Italy
19Jean-Marc Chouinard  Canada
20Danek Nowosielski  Canada
21Nic Bürgin  Switzerland
22Krisztián Kulcsár  Hungary
23Yang Noe-Seong  South Korea
24Zhao Gang  China
25Jim Carpenter  United States
26Vitaly Zakharov  Belarus
27Jang Tae-Seok  South Korea
28Mike Marx  United States
29César González  Spain
30Valery Zakharevich  Russia
31Tamir Bloom  United States
32Gheorghe Epurescu  Romania
33Oscar Fernández  Spain
34Olivier Jacquet  Switzerland
35Meelis Loit  Estonia
36Fernando de la Peña  Spain
37Roman Ječmínek  Czech Republic
38James Ransom  Canada
39Nuno Frazão  Portugal
40Paris Inostroza  Chile
41Juan Miguel Paz  Colombia
42Lee Sang-Gi  South Korea
43Gabriel Pantelimon  Romania
44Iliya Mechkov  Bulgaria
45Aurel Bratu  Romania

References