Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Men's triple jump explained

Event:Men's triple jump
Games:2000 Summer
Venue:Stadium Australia
Date:23 September 2000 (qualifying)
25 September 2000 (final)
Competitors:40
Nations:27
Win Label:Winning distance
Win Value:17.78
Longnames:yes
Gold:Jonathan Edwards
Goldnoc:GBR
Silver:Yoel García
Silvernoc:CUB
Bronze:Denis Kapustin
Bronzenoc:RUS
Prev:1996
Next:2004

The men's triple jump event at the 2000 Summer Olympics as part of the athletics program was held at the Olympic Stadium. Forty athletes from 27 nations competed. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The triple jump has been ever present since the beginning of the modern Olympic Games in 1896. The event was won by Jonathan Edwards of Great Britain, the nation's first victory in the men's triple jump since 1908 (and only the second overall). Edwards became the 12th man to win two medals in the event, adding gold to his 1996 silver. Yoel García's silver put Cuba on the podium for the second Games in a row.

Background

This was the 24th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The returning finalists from the 1996 Games were silver medalist Jonathan Edwards of Great Britain, bronze medalist Yoelbi Quesada of Cuba, fifth-place finisher Armen Martirosyan of Armenia, sixth-place finisher Brian Wellman of Bermuda (who had also made the final in 1992), and eighth-place finisher Robert Howard of the United States. Edwards (whose 1995 world record still stands in 2020) was the favorite, with Quesada (the 1997 world champion, over Edwards) also a strong contender. Charles Friedek of Germany, the 1999 world champion (Edwards had come in third) was present but injured.[1]

No nations made their first appearance in the event, which had happened before only in 1904 (when the United States was the only nation to compete). The United States competed for the 23rd time, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

See main article: Athletics at the 2000 Summer Olympics – Qualification.

Each National Olympic Committee was permitted to enter up to three athletes that had jumped 16.85 metres or further during the qualification period. The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. If an NOC had no athletes that qualified under that standard, one athlete that had jumped 16.65 metres or further could be entered.[2]

Competition format

The top twelve athletes from the three jumps in qualifying (and all who jumped 16.95 metres) progressed through to the final where the qualifying distances were scrapped and they started afresh with another three jumps. After these the top eight athletes carried their record forward and then had a further three attempts to decide the gold medalist.[3]

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

Schedule

All times are Australian Eastern Standard Time (UTC+10)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 23 September 2000 18:00 Qualifying
Monday, 25 September 2000 20:00 Final

Results

All distances shown are in meters.

Qualifying

Held on 23 September 2000.

The qualifying distance was 16.95m. For all qualifiers who did not achieve the standard, the remaining spaces in the final were filled by the longest jumps until a total of 12 qualifiers.

Rank Athlete Nation Group 1 2 3 Distance Notes
1 Onochie AchikeA16.71 17.30 data-sort-value=1.0017.30,
2Phillips IdowuB17.12 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0017.12,
Allan MortimerB17.12 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0017.12,
4 Jonathan EdwardsB16.90 17.08 data-sort-value=1.0017.08
5Yoel GarcíaB17.08 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0017.08
6 Denis KapustinB17.04 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0017.04
7 Yoelbi QuesadaAdata-sort-value=1.00X 17.03 data-sort-value=1.0017.03,
8 align=left Rostislav Dimitrovalign=left A17.00 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0017.00
9 Charles Michael FriedekB16.93 data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X 16.93
Robert HowardBdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.93 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.93
11Paolo CamossiA15.30 16.87 16.80 16.87
12Walter DavisA16.72 16.75 16.27 16.75
13Ketill HanstveitB16.62 16.62 16.75 16.75
14Ionut PungaB16.72 14.74 16.45 16.72
15Sergey ArzamasovB16.70 16.40 16.42 16.70
16Takanori SugibayashiA16.31 16.44 16.67 16.67
17Christian OlssonA16.45 16.56 16.64 16.64
18Zsolt CzinglerA16.22 16.52 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.52
19LaMark CarterAdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.16 16.47 16.47
20Brian WellmanA16.47 15.87 15.99 16.47
21Lao JianfengB16.43 16.04 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.43
22Ivaylo RusenovB16.24 16.40 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.40
23Rogel NachumB16.38 16.39 16.38 16.39
24Gennadiy MarkovB16.28 16.36 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.36
25 Fabrizio DonatoB 16.34 15.75 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.34
26Zoran ĐurđevićAdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.31 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.31
27Michael CalvoB16.30 16.04 16.15 16.30
28Oleg SakirkinA16.20 15.61 16.09 16.20
29Sergey IzmaylovBdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.10 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.10
30Sergey BochkovBdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.01 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.01
31Hristos MeletoglouBdata-sort-value=1.00X 16.00 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.00
32Salem Mouled Al-AhmadiB15.93 15.99 15.42 15.99
33Igor SpasovkhodskiyA15.79 15.51 13.41 15.79
34 Yevgeniy PetinAdata-sort-value=1.00X 15.27 data-sort-value=1.00X 15.27
35Armen MartirosyanB14.95 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.0014.95
36Colomba FofanaAdata-sort-value=1.00X 14.59 data-sort-value=1.00X 14.59
37Konstadinos ZalaggitisAdata-sort-value=1.00X 14.15 data-sort-value=1.00X 14.15
38Andrew OwusuAdata-sort-value=1.00X 14.12 data-sort-value=1.00X 14.12
Raúl ChapadoAdata-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00No mark
Stamatios LenisB data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00No mark

Final

RankAthlete Nation !123456Distance Notes
17.12 17.37 17.71 17.06 data-sort-value=1.00data-sort-value=1.00X 17.71
17.15 17.19 17.19 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.70 17.47 17.47
data-sort-value=1.00X 17.46 16.73 17.17 data-sort-value=1.00X 17.16 17.46
4 17.19 data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X 17.37 17.37
5 17.29 data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X 17.00 data-sort-value=1.00X 17.29
6 16.97 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.83 17.08 data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X 17.08
7 data-sort-value=1.00X 17.05 16.59 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.75 16.77 17.05
8 16.96 16.60 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.39 16.95 data-sort-value=1.00X 16.96
9 16.95 16.72 data-sort-value=1.00X Did not advance 16.95
10 16.74 16.70 16.80 Did not advance 16.80
11 15.59 16.22 16.61 Did not advance 16.61
data-sort-value=12data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X Did not advance data-sort-value=1.00No mark

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Triple Jump, Men . Olympedia . 10 September 2020.
  2. http://www.trackandfieldnews.com/images/stories/tfn_pdfs/ogqualifying_standards.pdf{{Dead link|date=May 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  3. Web site: Athletics at the 2000 Sydney Summer Games: Men's Triple Jump . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417174808/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/2000/ATH/mens-triple-jump.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . 25 December 2017 . sports-reference.com.