1983 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 5000 metres explained

Event:Men's 5000 metres
Competition:1983 World Championships
Venue:Helsinki Olympic Stadium
Dates:10 August (heats)
12 August (semi-finals)
14 August (final)
Competitors:39
Win Value:13:28.53
Gold:Eamonn Coghlan
Goldnoc:IRL
Silver:Werner Schildhauer
Silvernoc:GDR
Bronze:Martti Vainio
Bronzenoc:FIN
Next:1987

These are the official results of the men's 5000 metres event at the 1983 IAAF World Championships in Helsinki, Finland. There were a total of 39 participating athletes, with three qualifying heats, two semi-finals and the final held on Sunday 14 August 1983.[1]

Records

Existing records at the start of the event.

World Record13:00.41Oslo, NorwayJuly 7, 1982
Championship RecordNew event

Results

Qualifying heats

The qualifying heats took place on 10 August, with the 39 athletes involved being split into 3 heats. The first 8 athletes in each heat ( 

Q ) and the next 6 fastest ( q ) qualified for the semifinals.
Heat 1
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1Markus Ryffel13:43.36Q,
2Wodajo Bulti13:43.53Q
3Eamonn Martin13:43.57Q
4Thomas Wessinghage13:43.66Q
5Anatoliy Krokhmalyuk13:43.78Q
6Salvatore Antibo13:44.05Q
7Charles Cheruiyot13:44.43Q
8Doug Padilla13:44.71Q
9Filippos Filippou13:45.24q
10Abderrazak Bounour13:57.93q
11Justin Gloden14:26.02q
12Mohamed Bakheet14:52.26
13Ramón López15:10.29
Heat 2
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1Paul Kipkoech14:18.73Q
2Fethi Baccouche14:23.79Q
3Julian Goater14:23.93Q
4António Leitão14:28.63Q
5Dmitriy Dmitriyev14:37.75Q
6Ronald Lanzoni14:49.20Q
7Werner Schildhauer14:49.22Q
8Jim Hill14:58.21Q
9Antoine Nivyobizi15:14.60
10José Jaime Hernández15:29.86
11Alden Morris18:06.35
Christoph Herle
Mohamed Kedir
Heat 3
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1Valeriy Abramov14:12.61Q
2Seyoum Nigatu14:13.22Q
3Dietmar Millonig14:13.65Q
4Eamonn Coghlan14:13.80Q
5Dave Clarke14:13.97Q
6Jorge García14:14.57Q
7Paul Williams14:15.10Q
8Jim Spivey14:15.70Q
9Ricardo Vera14:17.26q
10Kenji Ide14:18.34q
11Martti Vainio14:18.74q
12Masini Situ-Kubanza Zaire (ZAI)15:02.26
Hansjörg Kunze

Semifinals

The semifinals took place on 12 August, with the 30 athletes involved being split into 2 heats. The first 5 athletes in each heat ( 

Q ) and the next 5 fastest ( q ) qualified for the final.
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1Markus Ryffel13:32.34Q,
2Thomas Wessinghage13:32.37Q
3Werner Schildhauer13:32.49Q
4Dietmar Millonig13:32.86Q
5Doug Padilla13:32.90Q
6Paul Kipkoech13:33.33q
7Julian Goater13:36.21q
8Anatoliy Krokhmalyuk13:37.24q
9Filippos Filippou13:40.81
10Paul Williams13:50.30
11Dave Clarke13:58.37
12Seyoum Nigatu14:02.23
13Kenji Ide14:04.94
14Justin Gloden14:12.25
15Ronald Lanzoni14:47.30
Heat 2
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1Dmitriy Dmitriyev13:31.40Q,
2Eamonn Coghlan13:31.66Q
3António Leitão13:32.33Q
4Wodajo Bulti13:33.03Q
5Salvatore Antibo13:33.12Q
6Valeriy Abramov13:33.37q
7Martti Vainio13:34.18q
8Jim Hill13:38.56
9Jim Spivey13:43.17
10Jorge García13:46.36
11Eamonn Martin13:48.60
12Charles Cheruiyot13:52.61
13Abderrazak Bounour14:00.78
14Fethi Baccouche14:19.64
15Ricardo Vera14:20.20

Final

As in most other major international championships, also this 5,000-metre final was mostly slow and tactical. The Soviet Union's Anatoliy Krokhmaliuk led at 1,000 metres in 2:43.30. During the second kilometre, he and his team mate Dmitriy Dmitriyev alternated in the lead, with Dmitriyev clocking 5:34.15 at 2,000 metres. One lap later, Britain's Julian Goater suddenly accelerated, but over 200 metres after the start of his surge, Dmitriyev caught him. Soon thereafter, Dmitriyev again took the lead, and clocked 8:19.52 at 3,000 metres. During the fourth kilometre, Dmitriyev, Ethiopia's Wodajo Bulti, and Switzerland's Markus Ryffel took turns leading the race. With over three laps left, Krokhmaliuk dropped from the lead group. Bulti took the lead for the second and the last time just before 4,000 metres, which he passed in 11:03.27. At the start of the third-last home straight, Dmitriyev accelerated past Bulti. West Germany's Thomas Wessinghage and Ireland's Eamonn Coghlan positioned themselves behind Dmitriyev and Bulti. With two laps left, twelve men were still in the lead group, with Goater and Italy's Salvatore Antibo having dropped from Dmitriyev's pace. On the second-last back straight, the Soviet Union's Valeriy Abramov lost contact with the lead group. Dmitriyev launched his final kick's decisive stage at 4,400 metres. Immediately Ryffel, Portugal's Antonio Leitao, and Austria's Dietmar Millonig dropped from Dmitriyev's pace. At the start of the second-last home straight, Dmitriyev was already sprinting about five metres ahead of Bulti. Later on that home straight, Wessinghage and Coghlan kicked past Bulti, and Coghlan passed Wessinghage. At 4,600 metres, Dmitriyev led in about 12:30. In other words, he had sprinted the second-last lap in about 57 seconds! Coghlan was running about six or seven metres behind this Soviet runner, with Wessinghage, Bulti, Finland's Martti Vainio, the United States' Doug Padilla, East Germany's Werner Schildhauer, and Kenya's Paul Kipkoech still in the lead group. To the surprise of many spectators, Wessinghage dropped from Coghlan's pace on the final lap's front bend. This astonishing event - Wessinghage was a world-class runner at both 1,500 and 5,000 metres - probably inspired Vainio to start his final kick, and to pass Bulti. Further back, Kipkoech dropped from Padilla's and Schildhauer's pace. Early on the final back straight, Coghlan easily caught the tiring Dmitriyev. Vainio kicked past the exhausted Wessinghage. At 4,800 metres, Dmitriyev and Coghlan were running about nine metres ahead of Vainio. On the final bend, Schildhauer passed Padilla and Wessinghage, and dashed after Vainio. Coghlan triumphantly raised his right hand, glanced at the worn out Dmitriyev, and then began his final sprint. By the start of the home straight, Coghlan had already stretched his lead over Dmitriyev to four metres. Vainio was sprinting ten metres behind the Irishman, while Schildhauer was kicking a couple of metres behind the Finn. On the final home straight, without even sprinting as fast as he could, Coghlan moved into a wide lead, crossing the finish line in 13:28.53. In other words, he had run the final 1,000 metres in 2:24.77! Schildhauer passed Vainio with about 25 metres left, and caught Dmitriyev over 10 metres later. The exhausted Soviet runner was no match for the fast-finishing East German. Vainio leaned forward, and lunged across the finish line, crossing it just 0.04 seconds before Dmitriyev. Two of the strongest pre-race favourites, Padilla and Wessinghage, had to settle for the fifth and sixth places, respectively. (The World Track and Field Championships / Yleisurheilun MM-kisat 1983, the Juoksija-lehti / Runner Magazine, Helsinki, Finland, 1983; another book on the IAAF World Championships 1983; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIy0Jpm9moE&t=510s Eamonn Coghlan - World Athletics Championship 5000m Gold, Helsinki 1983.)

The final took place on August 14.

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
Eamonn Coghlan13:28.53
Werner Schildhauer13:30.20
Martti Vainio13:30.34
4Dmitriy Dmitriyev13:30.38
5Doug Padilla13:32.08
6Thomas Wessinghage13:32.46
7Wodajo Bulti13:34.03
8Dietmar Millonig13:36.08
9Paul Kipkoech13:37.44
10António Leitão13:38.55
11Valeriy Abramov13:39.80
12Markus Ryffel13:39.98
13Salvatore Antibo13:40.76
14Julian Goater13:48.13
15Anatoliy Krokhmalyuk14:00.27

Notes and References

  1. https://iaafmedia.s3.amazonaws.com/misc/Oregon22/Oregon%20stats%20book.pdf World Athletics Statistics HandBook Oregon 2022