Athletics at the 1992 Summer Olympics – Women's 10,000 metres explained

Event:Women's 10,000 metres
Games:1992 Summer
Venue:Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc
Dates:1 August 1992 (heats)
7 August 1992 (final)
Competitors:48
Nations:33
Win Value:31:06.02
Longnames:yes
Gold:Derartu Tulu
Goldnoc:ETH
Silver:Elana Meyer
Silvernoc:RSA
Bronze:Lynn Jennings
Bronzenoc:USA
Prev:1988
Next:1996

The official results of the Women's 10,000 metres at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, with the final held on Friday August 7, 1992. Derartu Tulu became the first black African woman to win an Olympic Gold medal.[1]

Liz McColgan came into the race as the returning silver medalist, the reigning world champion and a reputation behind it. Elana Meyer came from South Africa with long distance road records. She was considered a good chance to become the first African woman to win a gold medal. Zhong Huandi was the silver medalist behind McColgan in the world championships but not much was known about the Chinese program. The following year, they would scream their superiority at women's distance running, with Zhong running the second fastest 10,000 metres in history.

From the gun, McColgan assumed the lead and the rest of the field respected that. McColgan's pace dropped many runners but Meyer, Zhong, Hellen Kimaiyo and relatively unknown 20 year old Derartu Tulu led a small pack that stayed right behind McColgan. With 9 laps to go, Meyer, going around McColgan and running for daylight. The only one to chase was Tulu, quickly making up the gap and running in Meyer's shadow. Lynn Jennings made an attempt to follow but couldn't bridge the ever-widening gap. And so it stayed until the bell, Tulu made her break, Meyer didn't have the speed and the gold medal was settled. Tulu dropped the pace down to 67 seconds for the last lap, Meyer who had been running 73's ran another 73 taking silver by 8 seconds over Jennings who won the battle for bronze.

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in minutes) prior to the 1992 Summer Olympics.

World Record30:13.74 Ingrid KristiansenOslo (NOR)July 5, 1986
Olympic Record31:05.21 Olga BondarenkoSeoul (KOR)September 30, 1988

Final

RANKFINALTIME
31:06.02
31:11.75
31:19.89
4.31:21.08
5.31:26.11
6.31:28.06
7.31:36.45
8.31:38.04
9.31:38.91
10.31:46.49
11.31:47.38
12.31:55.06
13.32:03.93
14.32:09.58
15.32:14.17
16.32:37.91
17.32:53.09
18.34:05.56
- DNF
- DNF

Heats

RANKHEAT 1TIME
1.31:58.63
2.32:04.46
3.32:07.25
4.32:07.28
5.32:07.42
6.32:07.91
7.32:13.99
8.32:14.42
9.32:15.05
10.32:17.01
11.32:52.83
12.33:00.66
13.33:13.13
14.33:16.96
15.33:22.43
16.33:23.02
17.34:29.03
18.34:29.64
19.34:48.21
20.42:02.79
- DNF
- DNF
- DNF
- DNF
- DNS

RANKHEAT 2TIME
1.31:55.67
2.32:05.45
3.32:18.06
4.32:18.34
5.32:31.91
6.32:31.95
7.32:34.07
8.32:38.16
9.32:40.59
10.32:45.47
11.32:53.61
12.32:57.29
13.33:17.88
14.33:34.05
15.33:42.26
16.33:42.74
17.33:51.06
18.33:55.93
19.34:06.66
20.34:09.42
21.34:12.16
22.34:29.47
- DNF
- DNF
- DNS

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Athletics at the 1992 Barcelona: Women's 10,000 metres . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417174613/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1992/ATH/womens-10000-metres.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . 18 November 2017 . sports-reference.com.