Swimming at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metre freestyle

The men's 100 metre freestyle event at the 1964 Olympic Games took place between October 11 and 12.[1] There were 66 competitors from 33 nations.[2] Nations were again able to bring up to three swimmers each after a one-Games limit of two in 1960. The event was won by Don Schollander of the United States, the nation's first victory in the event since 1952 and eighth overall (most of any nation). Great Britain (Bobby McGregor's silver) and the United Team of Germany (Hans-Joachim Klein's bronze) both earned their first medal in the men's 100 metre freestyle.

Men's 100 metre freestyle
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
Gold medalist Don Schollander and finalists Gary Ilman and Mike Austin with relay teammate Steve Clark
VenueYoyogi National Gymnasium
Dates11–12 October
Competitors66 from 33 nations
Winning time53.4 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Don Schollander
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Bobby McGregor
 Great Britain
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Hans-Joachim Klein
 United Team of Germany
← 1960
1968 →

Background

This was the 14th appearance of the men's 100 metre freestyle. The event has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1900 (when the shortest freestyle was the 200 metres), though the 1904 version was measured in yards rather than metres.[2]

Two of the eight finalists from the 1960 Games returned: fifth-place finisher Gyula Dobay of Hungary and eighth-place finisher Per-Ola Lindberg of Sweden. John Devitt of Australia, the winner of a controversial finish in 1960, had retired, as had silver medalist Lance Larson of the United States. The American team in Tokyo was led by Don Schollander, who was expected to vie with Scotsman Bobby McGregor.[2]

Iran, Puerto Rico, South Korea, and Thailand each made their debut in the event. The United States made its 14th appearance, having competed at each edition of the event to date.

Competition format

The competition used a three-round (heats, semifinals, final) format. The advancement rule followed the format introduced in 1952. A swimmer's place in the heat was not used to determine advancement; instead, the fastest times from across all heats in a round were used. There were 9 heats of 7 or 8 swimmers each. The top 24 swimmers advanced to the semifinals. There were 3 semifinals of 8 swimmers each. The top 8 swimmers advanced to the final. Swim-offs were used as necessary to break ties.

This swimming event used freestyle swimming, which means that the method of the stroke is not regulated (unlike backstroke, breaststroke, and butterfly events). Nearly all swimmers use the front crawl or a variant of that stroke. Because an Olympic size swimming pool is 50 metres long, this race consisted of two lengths of the pool.

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1964 Summer Olympics.

World record  Alain Gottvallès (FRA)52.9 Budapest, Hungary13 September 1964
Olympic record  John Devitt (AUS)
 Lance Larson (USA)
55.2 Rome, Italy27 August 1960

Gary Ilman dropped more than a second off the Olympic record in the very first heat, recording a time of 54.0 seconds. Seven swimmers beat the old record in the heats, with two more tying it. Ilman shaved off another tenth in the first semifinal, finishing in 53.9 seconds. Ten swimmers beat the old record in that round, with another matching it. The new record fell again in the final, with Don Schollander swimming 53.4 seconds and Bobby McGregor 53.5 seconds.

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Sunday, 11 October 196411:50
19:45
Heats
Semifinals
Monday, 12 October 196420:40Final

Results

Heats

Nine heats were held; the fastest 24 swimmers advanced to the semifinals.

RankHeatSwimmerNationTimeNotes
11Gary Ilman  United States54.0Q, OR
25Don Schollander  United States54.3Q
35Yukiaki Okabe  Japan54.4Q
49Bobby McGregor  Great Britain54.7Q
52Mike Austin  United States54.9Q
62David Dickson  Australia55.1Q
3Per-Ola Lindberg  Sweden55.1Q
86Alain Gottvallès  France55.2Q
6Daniel Sherry  Canada55.2Q
104Hans-Joachim Klein  United Team of Germany55.3Q
118Ron Kroon  Netherlands55.5Q
6John Ryan  Australia55.5Q
8Jindřich Vágner  Czechoslovakia55.5Q
145Uwe Jacobsen  United Team of Germany55.6Q
6Horst Löffler  United Team of Germany55.6Q
9Bengt Nordwall  Sweden55.6Q
178Bob Lord  Great Britain55.7Q
183Pietro Boscaini  Italy55.8Q
7Gyula Dobay  Hungary55.8Q
7Tatsuo Fujimoto  Japan55.8Q
7Sandy Gilchrist  Canada55.8Q
3Tadaharu Goto  Japan55.8Q
1Gérard Gropaiz  France55.8Q
246Vladimir Shuvalov  Soviet Union55.9Q
251Athos de Oliveira  Brazil56.0
263Luis Nicolao  Argentina56.1
4Peter Phelps  Australia56.1
282Jean-Pascal Curtillet  France56.2
4Lester Eriksson  Sweden56.2
9Viktor Semchenkov  Soviet Union56.2
318József Gulrich  Hungary56.3
2Matti Kasvio  Finland56.3
4Yury Sumtsov  Soviet Union56.3
345Petr Lohnický  Czechoslovakia56.4
357Gert Kölli  Austria56.5
361Bruno Bianchi  Italy56.8
9Sergio De Gregorio  Italy56.8
2Álvaro Pires  Brazil56.8
4François Simons  Belgium56.8
9Antal Száll  Hungary56.8
1Vinus van Baalen  Netherlands56.8
5Gerhard Wieland  Austria56.8
432Téodoro Capriles  Venezuela57.2
443José Miguel Espinosa  Spain57.4
454Carlos van der Maath  Argentina57.5
468Tuomo Hämäläinen  Finland57.6
477David Haller  Great Britain57.7
1Ralph Hutton  Canada57.7
495Antonio Pérez  Spain57.8
507Bert Sitters  Netherlands58.1
517Luis Paz  Peru58.5
526Georges Welbes  Luxembourg58.6
532Tan Thuan Heng  Malaysia58.7
6Hannu Vaahtoranta  Finland58.7
558Salvador Ruiz  Mexico58.8
568Pano Capéronis  Switzerland58.9
576Guðmundur Gíslason  Iceland59.0
3Herlander Ribeiro  Portugal59.0
595Mauri Fonseca  Brazil59.6
603Somchai Limpichat  Thailand59.8
617Robert Loh  Hong Kong1:00.4
624Nguyễn Ðình Lê  Vietnam1:01.1
9Phan Hữu Dong  Vietnam1:01.1
641Kim Bong-jo  South Korea1:01.2
659Celestino Pérez  Puerto Rico1:01.3
669Haydar Shonjani  Iran1:02.1

Semifinals

Three heats were held; the fastest eight swimmers advanced to the final.

RankHeatSwimmerNationTimeNotes
11Gary Ilman  United States53.9Q, OR
22Don Schollander  United States54.0Q
31Mike Austin  United States54.3Q
2Alain Gottvallès  France54.3Q
3Bobby McGregor  Great Britain54.3Q
63Hans-Joachim Klein  United Team of Germany54.4Q
73Gyula Dobay  Hungary54.8Q
2Uwe Jacobsen  United Team of Germany54.8Q
93David Dickson  Australia54.9
102Per-Ola Lindberg  Sweden55.1
111Yukiaki Okabe  Japan55.2
121Daniel Sherry  Canada55.5
2Jindřich Vágner  Czechoslovakia55.5
141Tadaharu Goto  Japan55.6
152Gérard Gropaiz  France55.7
1Ron Kroon  Netherlands55.7
173Tatsuo Fujimoto  Japan55.8
3Vladimir Shuvalov  Soviet Union55.8
191Horst Löffler  United Team of Germany56.0
201Pietro Boscaini  Italy56.1
212Sandy Gilchrist  Canada56.4
3Bengt Nordwall  Sweden56.4
232Bob Lord  Great Britain56.5
3John Ryan  Australia56.5

Final

The officials used unofficial electronic scoring to determine which swimmer won the bronze medal - Klein had finished one one-thousandth of a second sooner than Ilman.[3]

RankSwimmerNationTimeNotes
Don Schollander  United States53.4OR
Bobby McGregor  Great Britain53.5
Hans-Joachim Klein  United Team of Germany54.0
4Gary Ilman  United States54.0
5Alain Gottvallès  France54.2
6Mike Austin  United States54.5
7Gyula Dobay  Hungary54.9
8Uwe Jacobsen  United Team of Germany56.1

References