Athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's 1500 metres explained

Event:Men's 1500 metres
Games:1952 Summer
Venue:Helsinki Olympic Stadium
Dates:July 24 (heats)
July 25 (semifinals)
July 26 (final)
Competitors:52
Nations:26
Win Value:3:45.2
Longnames:yes
Gold:Josy Barthel
Goldnoc:LUX
Silver:Bob McMillen
Silvernoc:USA
Bronze:Werner Lueg
Bronzenoc:GER
Prev:1948
Next:1956

The men's 1500 metres event at the 1952 Olympics took place between July 24 and July 26.[1] Fifty-two athletes from 26 nations competed. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Josy Barthel of Luxembourg; to date, this is the only Olympic gold medal won by a Luxembourger, though Luxembourg-born Michel Théato is credited for winning the 1900 Marathon for France. Germany won its first medal in the 1500 metres with Werner Lueg's bronze.

Summary

The early leaders of the final were Audun Boysen followed by Warren Druetzler. Towards the end of the first lap, Werner Lueg began to move up to take the lead, with Rolf Lamers on his shoulder to place a wall to control the pack. Patrick El Mabrouk was next in line but unable to get by. On the third lap Lamers was unable to maintain the pace as Josy Barthel and Roger Bannister exchanging elbows with El Mabrouk lined up behind Leug. With 300 metres to go, Leug accelerated, opening up a 5-metre gap down the backstretch but through the final turn, Leug was unable to hold the pace allowing Barthel to catch back up. Bob McMillen moved up from eighth place to catch the group of leaders at the head of the final straight. Barthel went around Leug and sprinted to victory. McMillen ran the long way around El Mabrouk and Bannister and was chasing Barthel down the straight. Leug maintained his gap on Bannister and El Mabrouk, but looked helplessly as McMillen sprinted past, but he didn't have enough race left to catch Barthel, finishing half a metre behind but also being credited with the same time, a new Olympic record.

Background

This was the 12th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Six of the finalists from the 1948 Games returned: bronze medalist Willem Slijkhuis of the Netherlands, fourth-place finisher Václav Čevona of Czechoslovakia, fifth-place finisher Bill Nankeville of Great Britain, and later places (the 1948 final's places after sixth are disputed) Sándor Garay of Hungary, Josy Barthel of Luxembourg, and Denis Johansson of Finland. Werner Lueg of Germany had tied the world record a month before the Games. "There was no favorite for the 1952 1,500 [metres], but the field had outstanding depth."[2]

The Soviet Union, Thailand, and Venezuela each made their first appearance in the event. The United States made its 12th appearance, the only nation to have competed in the men's 1500 metres at each Games to that point.

Competition format

For the first time, the competition expanded to three rounds. There were six heats of between 7 and 10 runners each, with the top four runners in each advancing to the semifinals. This allowed the number of semifinals to be reduced to two and the number of runners in each to be standardized at 12. The top six runners in each semifinal advanced to the final, resulting in the typical 12-man final race.[2] [3]

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records prior to the 1952 Summer Olympics.

During the final, Josy Barthel set a new Olympic record at 3:45.2. The top eight men in the final all surpassed the old (pre-World War II) Olympic record.

Schedule

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

DateTimeRound
Thursday, 24 July 1952 17:10 Round 1
Friday, 25 July 1952 17:40 Semifinals
Saturday, 26 July 1952 16:30 Final

Results

Round 1

The first round was held on July 24. The fastest four runners in each heat advanced to the final round.

Heat 1

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:51.6
2 Günter Dohrow3:51.8
3Ingvar Ericsson3:52.0
4Don MacMillan3:52.0
5Sándor Iharos3:56.0
6Mieczysław Długoborski3:57.8
7Filemón Camacho4:18.0
8Pierre Gillet4:26.6
data-sort-value=9Hans Hartingdata-sort-value=9:99.99

Heat 2

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:51.4
2 Sture Landqvist3:52.2
3Stanislav Jungwirth3:52.4
4Mihail Velsvebel3:52.6
5Aulis Pystynen3:53.0
6Len Eyre3:53.2
7Fred Lüthi3:56.4
8Turhan Göker4:00.6

Heat 3

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:51.0
2 Denis Johansson3:51.2
3Rolf Lamers3:52.4
4Bill Parnell3:53.4
5Fritz Prossinagg3:54.2
6Athol Jennings3:55.4
7Daniel Janssens3:55.8
8Cahit Önel3:58.4
data-sort-value=9Willem Slijkhuisdata-sort-value=9:99.99

Heat 4

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:55.8
2 Bob McMillen3:55.8
3Roger Bannister3:56.0
4Vilmos Tölgyesi3:56.0
5John Landy3:57.0
6Andrija Otenhajmer3:57.8
7Maurice Marshall4:01.0
8Nikolay Kuchurin4:03.6
9Vasilios Mavroidis4:07.8

Heat 5

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:56.2
2 Frans Herman3:56.2
3Bill Nankeville3:56.4
4Mykola Belokurov3:56.4
5Urpo Vähäranta3:56.8
6Javier Montez3:58.2
7Stefan Lewandowski4:00.8

Heat 6

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:52.0
2 Václav Čevona3:53.4
3Audun Boysen3:55.0
4John Ross3:55.2
5Jean Vernier3:56.8
6Edmund Potrzebowski3:56.8
7Sándor Garay4:01.2
8Ekrem Koçak4:01.4
9William Fahmy Hanna4:11.2
10Satid Leangtanom4:32.6

Semifinals

The fastest six runners in each heat advanced to the final round.

Semifinal 1

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:49.4
2 Werner Lueg3:49.8
3Don MacMillan3:50.8
4Warren Druetzler3:50.8
5Patrick El Mabrouk3:51.0
6Audun Boysen3:51.0
7Václav Čevona3:51.4
8Sture Landqvist3:51.4
9Bill Nankeville3:52.0
10Bill Parnell3:52.4
11Mihail Velsvebel3:52.6
12George Hoskins3:53.0

Semifinal 2

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3:50.4
2 Olle Åberg3:50.6
3Ingvar Ericsson3:50.6
4Bob McMillen3:50.6
5Roger Bannister3:50.6
6Rolf Lamers3:50.8
7Stanislav Jungwirth3:51.0
8Vilmos Tölgyesi3:53.2
9Frans Herman3:53.8
10Günter Dohrow3:55.2
11Mykola Belokurov3:55.6
12John Ross4:00.6

Final

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
3:45.2
Bob McMillen3:45.2
Werner Lueg3:45.4
4 Roger Bannister3:46.0
5 Patrick El Mabrouk3:46.0
6 3:46.8
7 Olle Åberg3:47.0
8 Ingvar Ericsson3:47.6
9 Don MacMillan3:49.6
10 3:49.8
11 Audun Boysen3:51.4
12 Warren Druetzler3:56.0

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Athletics at the 1952 Helsinki Games: Men's 1500 metres . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417171542/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1952/ATH/mens-1500-metres.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . 28 October 2017 . sports-reference.com.
  2. Web site: 1500 metres, Men . Olympedia . 13 August 2020.
  3. Official Report, pp. 281–82.