Pakistan at the 1964 Summer Olympics explained

Noc:PAK
Nocname:National Olympic Committee of Pakistan
Games:Summer Olympics
Year:1964
Location:Tokyo
Competitors:41
Sports:7
Flagbearer:Manzoor Hussain Atif
Rank:30
Gold:0
Silver:1
Bronze:0
Appearances:auto

Pakistan competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. 41 competitors, all men, took part in 29 events in 7 sports.[1] This time round, they won a silver medal in the men's field hockey team competition.

Medalists

Silver medal in the men's field hockey team competition.

Athletics

See main article: Athletics at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Men's 100 metres

Men's 400 metres

Men's 800 metres

Men's 1500 metres

Men's 110 metres hurdles

Men's 400 metres hurdles

Men's long jump

Men's marathon

Boxing

See main article: Boxing at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Men's lightweight (up to 60 kg)

Men's middleweight (up to 75 kg)

Men's light heavyweight (up to 81 kg)

Men's heavyweight (over 81 kg)

Cycling

See main article: Cycling at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Men's 1,000 metres time trial

Men's 4,000 metres team pursuit race

Men's 4,000 metres individual pursuit race

Men's scratch sprint race

Hockey

See main article: Hockey at the 1964 Summer Olympics.

Men's Team Competition

Pool A first round league

Semifinals

Final

Pakistan won the silver medal

Team Roster

Shooting

See main article: Shooting at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Four shooters represented Pakistan in 1964.

25 m pistol
50 m pistol
50 m rifle, three positions
50 m rifle, prone
Trap

Weightlifting

See main article: Weightlifting at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Men's bantamweight (56 kg)

Wrestling

See main article: Wrestling at the 1964 Summer Olympics.

Men's flyweight (52 kg)

Men's bantamweight (57 kg)

Men's featherweight (63 kg)

Men's lightweight (70 kg)

Men's welterweight (78 kg)

Men's middleweight (87 kg)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pakistan at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417090443/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/countries/PAK/summer/1964/ . dead . 17 April 2020 . 2 August 2015 . Sports Reference.