Athletics at the 2024 Summer Olympics – Men's javelin throw explained

Event:Men's javelin throw
Games:2024 Summer
Venue:Stade de France, Paris, France
Win Label:Winning distance
Win Value:92.97 m
Gold:Arshad Nadeem
Goldnoc:PAK
Silver:Neeraj Chopra
Silvernoc:IND
Bronze:Anderson Peters
Bronzenoc:GRN
Prev:2020
Next:2028

The men's javelin throw at the 2024 Summer Olympics was held in Paris, France, on 6 and 8 August 2024. This is the 27th time that the event was contested at the Summer Olympics since its introduction in 1908.

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing World and Olympic records were as follows.[1] [2]

Area records before the 2024 Summer Olympics[3] !Area Record!Athlete (Nation)!Distance (m)
92.72
91.36
98.48
93.07
89.02
85.57

The following new Olympic and area records were set during this competition:

Date Event Athlete Time Notes
8 August Final 92.97 ,
6 August Qualification 85.91

Schedule

All times are UTC+2

The men's javelin throw took place over two separate days.[4]

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 6 August 2024 10:10 Qualifying
Thursday, 8 August 2024 20:30Final

Qualification

For the men's javelin throw event, 32 athletes were eligible to qualify for the event with a maximum of three athletes per nation. The qualification could be secured either by achieving the entry standard of 85.50 m in the qualification period is between 1 July 2023 and 30 June 2024 or by the World Athletics Ranking for the event.[5] A total of 11 athletes qualified by achieving the qualification standard and a further 21 athletes were granted entries based on their individual rankings.[6]

The top two from the previous Olympics qualified for the event. Neeraj Chopra was the reigning Olympic and World champion, having won gold at the previous Olympics and 2023 World Championships respectively. The silver medalist from Tokyo 2020 and reigning European champion Jakub Vadlejch also qualified for the event. The bronze medalist from three years earlier, Vítězslav Veselý had retired. Julius Yego, who was the 2016 Olympics silver medalist and 2015 World champion, and 2012 Olympic champion Keshorn Walcott also made the cut for the event. Other notable athletes who qualified included 2022 World champion and current NCAC record holder Anderson Peters, reigning Commonwealth Games champion and 2023 World championships silver medalist Arshad Nadeem, 2024 World leader Max Dehning, former European champion Julian Weber and South American record holder Luiz Maurício da Silva.[6]

Results

Qualification

The qualification was held on 6 August, starting at 10:10 (UTC+2) for Group A and 11:35 (UTC+2) for Group B with 32 athletes participating.[4] [6] As per the qualification rules, athletes achieving the qualifying standard of 84 m (Q) directly qualified for the final with other spots being filled by the best performers (q) for a field of 12 athletes.[7]

In the qualifying rounds, nine athletes including Chopra, Nadeem, Peters, Silva Vadlejch and Weber qualified for the final directly after achieving the qualification standard. Dehning did not make it out of the qualifying round. Silva improved on his own South American record in qualifying.[7] [8]

RankGroupAthleteNationalityDistance (m)Notes
  1. 1
  1. 2
  1. 3
Final
1BNeeraj Chopra89.3489.34,
2BAnderson Peters88.6388.63,
3AJulian Weber87.7687.76
4BArshad Nadeem86.5986.59,
5AJulius Yego78.8480.7685.9785.97,
6BLuiz Maurício da Silva81.6283.2185.9185.91,
7AJakub Vadlejch85.6385.63
8AToni Keränen79.04x85.2785.27,
9BAndrian Mardarex76.7684.1384.13,
10AOliver Helander83.8183.81
11AKeshorn Walcott74.8983.0282.5783.02
12BLassi Etelätalo82.91x78.4282.91
13AGenki Dean82.48x77.4082.48
14BMarcin Krukowski81.37x82.3482.34
15BArtur Felfnerx81.8474.5481.84
16BCameron McEntyre76.33x81.1881.18
17AAlexandru Novacx77.3581.0881.08
18AKishore Jena80.73x80.2180.73
19APedro Henrique Rodrigues76.2379.4675.6979.46
20BTimothy Herman79.4278.82x79.42
21BEdis Matusevičiusxx79.4079.40
22BMax Dehning74.5875.1079.2479.24
23BCyprian Mrzyglód78.50x77.1678.50
24BChinecherem Nnamdi77.53x76.4577.53
25APatriks Gailumsx77.26x77.26
26ADawid Wegnerx75.5376.8976.89
27ACurtis Thompson76.79x74.2476.79
28ALeandro Ramos75.73xx75.73
29BMoustafa Mahmoud74.87xx74.87
30AIhab Abdelrahman72.98xx72.98
BGatis Cakšsxxx
ATeuraiterai Tupaiaxxx
Source:

Final

The final was held on 8 August, starting at 20:30 (UTC+2) in the evening.[4] In the finals, Peters registered the first throw of above 84 metres with a 84.7 m effort, which was bettered only by Walcott with a 86.16 m attempt. In the second round of attempts, Vadlejch threw 84.52 m and rose to third in the classification, before Peters took the lead with a 87.87 m throw. Nadeem registered a huge 92.97 m throw in his second attempt to set a new Olympic Record and moved into first place.[9] Weber threw 87.33 m and moved into third place, which was soon taken over by Yego with an improved throw of 87.72 m.[10]

Two more throws later, Chopra registered a 89.45 m throw on his first valid attempt and moved into the silver medal position in the overall classification.[11] [12] Vadlejch started the third series of attempts with a 88.50 m throw, which moved him into third place again. But Peters took it off him later with a 88.54 m throw in his fourth attempt. Chopra fouled out on his remaining throws and no one else registered a legal throw beyond 89 m. Though Nadeem's gold was confirmed after Chopra's last fouled attempt, he registered another long throw of 91.79 m in his final attempt to close the proceedings.[13] [10]

RankAthleteNationalityDistance (m)Notes
  1. 1
  1. 2
  1. 3
  1. 4
  1. 5
  1. 6
Final
data-sort-value=1.00X 92.97 88.72 79.40 84.87 91.79 92.97 , ,
data-sort-value=1.00X 89.45 data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X data-sort-value=1.00X X 89.45
84.70 87.87 data-sort-value=1.00X 88.5487.38 81.83 88.54
4 80.15 84.52 88.50 data-sort-value=1.00X 84.98 83.27 88.50
5 80.29 87.72 data-sort-value=1.00X 84.90 83.20 81.58 87.72
6 Julian Weberdata-sort-value=1.00X 87.33 data-sort-value=1.00X 86.85 87.40 84.09 87.40
7 86.16 data-sort-value=1.00X 82.89 78.96 76.86 - 86.16
8 78.81 77.60 84.58 82.02 data-sort-value=1.00X 81.69 84.58
9 81.24 82.68 data-sort-value=1.00X colspan=3 82.68
10 80.92 75.33 78.90 colspan=3 80.92
11 80.67 78.67 data-sort-value=1.00X colspan=3 80.67
12 79.14 80.10 77.77 colspan=3 80.10
Source:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: All time Top lists – Senior – Javelin throw men. World Athletics. 29 June 2024.
  2. Web site: Season Top Lists – Senior 2024 – Javelin throw men. https://web.archive.org/web/20240721174345/https://worldathletics.org/records/toplists/throws/javelin-throw/all/men/senior/2024?regionType=world&page=1&bestResultsOnly=true&maxResultsByCountry=all&eventId=10229636&ageCategory=senior. 21 July 2024. World Athletics. 29 June 2024.
  3. Web site: 3 July 2024 . Records – Javelin throw men . 3 July 2024 . . 20 July 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240720132451/https://worldathletics.org/records/by-discipline/throws/javelin-throw/all/men . live .
  4. Web site: Paris 2024 - Olympic Schedule - Athletics. https://web.archive.org/web/20240324202545/https://olympics.com/en/paris-2024/schedule/athletics . 24 March 2024. Paris 2024. 28 June 2024.
  5. News: Sean McAlister. How to qualify for athletics at Paris 2024 The Olympics qualification system explained. https://web.archive.org/web/20221222042637/https://olympics.com/en/news/how-to-qualify-paris-2024-athletics-qualification-system-explained . 22 December 2022. Olympics.com. 20 December 2022. 29 June 2024.
  6. Web site: Road To World Athletics . 7 July 2024 . . 2 June 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240602084228/https://worldathletics.org/stats-zone/road-to/7153115?eventId=10229511 . live .
  7. Web site: Men's Javelin Throw - Qualification results. Paris 2024. 7 August 2024. 6 August 2024.
  8. News: Paris Olympics 2024: Neeraj Chopra qualifies for men's javelin throw finals with season's best 89.34m in first attempt. Financial Express. 6 August 2024. 6 August 2024. 6 August 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240806104921/https://www.financialexpress.com/sports/paris-olympics-2024-neeraj-chopra-qualifies-for-mens-javelin-throw-finals-with-seasons-best-89-34m-in-first-attempt/3575216/. live.
  9. News: Arshad Nadeem creates new Olympic record with 92.97 meter throw in javelin throw final. 8 August 2024. 8 August 2024. CNBC TV18. 8 August 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240808194715/https://www.cnbctv18.com/sports/arshad-nadeem-creates-new-olympic-record-with-92-97-meter-throw-in-javelin-throw-final-19457197.htm. live.
  10. Web site: Men's Javelin Throw - Final results . Paris 2024. 8 August 2024 . 8 August 2024.
  11. News: Tokyo Gold, Paris Silver: Neeraj Chopra achieves another Olympic first for India. 8 August 2024. 8 August 2024. India Today. 8 August 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240808210042/https://www.indiatoday.in/sports/olympics/story/neeraj-chopra-first-indian-to-win-track-and-field-medals-in-consecutive-olympics-2579449-2024-08-09. live.
  12. News: Olympics: Neeraj Chopra wins silver but sets the gold standard for Indian sport. 8 August 2024. 8 August 2024. ESPN.
  13. News: Arshad Nadeem throws his way into history for Pakistan with javelin gold. 8 August 2024. The Guardian. 9 August 2024.