Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's discus throw

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Men's discus throw
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
Virgilijus Alekna 2007.jpg
Virgilijus Alekna (2007)
Venue Olympic Stadium
Dates21–23 August
Competitors39 from 26 nations
Winning distance69.89 OR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Virgilijus Alekna
Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania
Silver medal icon.svg Zoltán Kővágó
Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary
Bronze medal icon.svg Aleksander Tammert
Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia
  2000
2008  

The men's discus throw competition at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens was held at the Olympic Stadium on 21–23 August. It was originally planned to hold the discus throw at the Ancient Olympia Stadium, but it was discovered that the field was not large enough to accommodate the range of modern discus throwers, and would have posed a danger to spectators. As such, it was decided to move the discus throw and to hold the shot put at the ancient stadium, despite the fact that the shot put was not contested at the Ancient Olympic Games. [1] Thirty-nine athletes from 26 nations competed. [2]

Hungary's Róbert Fazekas had initially finished first in the final but committed an anti-doping breach for failing to submit a proper urine sample during the drug test and was thereby not allowed to present his gold in the medal ceremony, resulting in his disqualification. [3] Lithuania's Virgilijus Alekna, who originally placed second in the final, eventually defended his Olympic title at the time of the medal ceremony and was followed by Fazekas' teammate Zoltán Kővágó for the silver and Estonia's Aleksander Tammert for the bronze. [4] Alekna became the 14th man to win multiple medals in the discus throw, and the 4th to win multiple gold medals—matching Martin Sheridan and Bud Houser, but still well behind Al Oerter's four championships. Kővágó's medal was Hungary's first medal in the event since Rudolf Bauer won gold in 1900. Tammert's bronze was Estonia's first men's discus throw medal.

Background

This was the 25th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The returning finalists from the 2000 Games were gold medalist (and 1996 finalist) Virgilijus Alekna of Lithuania, silver medalist (and 1996 gold medalist) Lars Riedel of Germany, bronze medalist Frantz Kruger of South Africa, fourth-place finisher Vasiliy Kaptyukh of Belarus, sixth-place finisher Jason Tunks of Canada, ninth-place finisher Aleksander Tammert of Estonia, tenth-place finisher Michael Möllenbeck of Germany, and eleventh-place finisher Dmitriy Shevchenko of Russia. Alekna was also the reigning world champion and runner-up in the 2002 European championship. The European winner was Hungarian Róbert Fazekas; he and Alekna were the favorites in Athens. [2]

Moldova made its debut in the men's discus throw. The United States made its 24th appearance, most of any nation, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Qualification

The qualification period for Athletics was 1 January 2003 to 9 August 2004. For the men's discus throw, each National Olympic Committee was permitted to enter up to three athletes who had thrown 64.00 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 who had thrown 62.55 metres or further could be entered. [5]

Competition format

Each athlete received three throws in the qualifying round. All who achieved the qualifying distance progressed to the final. If fewer than twelve athletes achieved this mark, then the twelve furthest throwing athletes reached the final. Each finalist was allowed three throws in the last round, with the top eight athletes after that point being given three further attempts. [6]

Records

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

World recordFlag of East Germany.svg  Jürgen Schult  (GDR)74.08 Neubrandenburg, East Germany 6 June 1986
Olympic recordFlag of Germany.svg  Lars Riedel  (GER)69.40 Atlanta, United States 31 July 1996

Virgilijus Alekna broke the Olympic record with his first throw in the final, marked at 69.89 metres. His only other legal throw, his fifth, surpassed the old record but not the new one, at 69.49 metres. Róbert Fazekas was the first man to throw over 70 metres in Olympic competition, but his disqualification for doping meant that his 70.93 metres throw was not counted as a record.

Schedule

All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 21 August 20049:00Qualifying
Monday, 23 August 200420:20Final

Results

Qualifying round

Rule: Qualifying standard 64.50 (Q) or at least best 12 qualified (q).

RankGroupAthleteNation123DistanceNotes
1B Róbert Fazekas Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 63.8868.1068.10Q, DPG
2A Virgilijus Alekna Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania X63.8067.7967.79Q
3A Aleksander Tammert Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia 65.7065.70Q
4B Lars Riedel Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 64.2064.20Q
5A Hannes Hopley Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 62.7162.5063.8963.89q
6A Gabor Mate Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 57.4062.4363.4163.41q
7A Torsten Schmidt Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 56.8660.6363.4063.40q
8B Casey Malone Flag of the United States.svg  United States 59.9963.2761.8363.27q
9B Vasiliy Kaptyukh Flag of Belarus (1995-2012).svg  Belarus 63.04X62.9363.04q
10B Frantz Kruger Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 60.9162.32X62.32q
11A Libor Malina Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 60.54X62.1262.12q
12B Zoltán Kővágó Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary X61.9160.7761.91q
13B Mario Pestano Flag of Spain.svg  Spain XX61.6961.69
14A Jarred Rome Flag of the United States.svg  United States 59.35X61.5561.55
15B Vikas Gowda Flag of India.svg  India 61.3561.3959.8761.39
16A Jason Tunks Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 61.2160.0260.3461.21
17B Rutger Smith Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands X61.11X61.11
18A Frank Casañas Flag of Cuba (3-2).svg  Cuba 60.1560.6057.2760.60
19B Wu Tao Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 48.96X60.6060.60
20A Gerd Kanter Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia X60.05X60.05
21B Michael Möllenbeck Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 56.4259.79X59.79
22A Ian Waltz Flag of the United States.svg  United States 58.9758.5557.5258.97
23B Savvas Panavoglou Flag of Greece.svg  Greece 57.2658.4757.6258.47
24B Aliaksandr Malashevich Flag of Belarus (1995-2012).svg  Belarus X57.6758.4558.45
25A Emeka Udechuku Flag of the United Kingdom (3-2).svg  Great Britain X58.4155.7958.41
26B Aleksandr Borichevskiy Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 58.1258.1957.8658.19
27B Ercüment Olgundeniz Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 57.1358.17X58.17
28A Leonid Cherevko Flag of Belarus (1995-2012).svg  Belarus 57.98X57.8957.98
29B Abbas Samimi Flag of Iran.svg  Iran 57.57X56.2457.57
30B Lois Maikel Martínez Flag of Cuba (3-2).svg  Cuba 57.1857.10X57.18
31B Igor Primc Civil Ensign of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia 55.7056.3355.4356.33
32A Marcelo Pugliese Flag of Argentina (1861-2010).svg  Argentina X56.0654.4556.06
33A Vadim Hranovschi Flag of Moldova (3-2).svg  Moldova 53.7752.3055.6455.64
34B Omar Ahmed El Ghazaly Flag of Egypt.svg  Egypt X55.5355.2755.53
35A Dragan Mustapic Civil ensign of Croatia.svg  Croatia 54.66XX54.66
36A Jaroslav Žitňanský Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 53.30X51.8753.30
37B Shaka Sola Flag of Samoa.svg  Samoa 50.3651.1050.9751.10
A Anil Kumar Flag of India.svg  India xxxNo mark
A Dmitriy Shevchenko Flag of Russia.svg  Russia xxxNo mark

Final

RankAthleteNation123456DistanceNotes
Gold medal icon.svg Virgilijus Alekna Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania 69.89 OR XXX69.49X69.89 OR
Silver medal icon.svg Zoltán Kővágó Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 57.3166.4066.0367.0458.25X67.04
Bronze medal icon.svg Aleksander Tammert Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia 66.66X64.2863.9564.04X66.66
4 Vasiliy Kaptyukh Flag of Belarus (1995-2012).svg  Belarus 65.1059.8262.8863.4464.8963.6365.10
5 Frantz Kruger Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 64.34X61.0162.53X60.7364.34
6 Casey Malone Flag of the United States.svg  United States 62.8060.34X64.3362.7363.6564.33
7 Lars Riedel Flag of Germany.svg  Germany X62.80X62.80
8 Hannes Hopley Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 60.1861.9962.58Did not advance62.58
9 Torsten Schmidt Flag of Germany.svg  Germany x61.1861.10Did not advance61.18
10 Libor Malina Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 57.39x58.78Did not advance58.78
11 Gabor Mate Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 57.02x57.84Did not advance57.84
Róbert Fazekas Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 66.3970.9369.3568.9267.6470.93DPG [3]

References

  1. "Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics". Athens 2004 . IAAF . Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Discus Throw, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  3. 1 2 "Discus champion thrown out of Games after doping breach". ABC News Australia. 25 August 2004. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
  4. Hersh, Philip (25 August 2004). "Hungarian Stripped of Discus Title". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  5. "2004 OLYMPIC GAMES - ATHLETICS QUALIFYING STANDARDS". GBR Athletics. Retrieved 21 October 2020.
  6. "Athletics at the 2004 Athens Summer Games: Men's Discus Throw". Athens 2004 . Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 15 February 2015.