Swimming at the 1976 Summer Olympics – Men's 200 metre backstroke

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Men's 200 metre backstroke
at the Games of the XXI Olympiad
John Naber 1976b.jpg
Gold medalist John Naber
Venue Olympic Pool, Montreal
Date24 July (heats, final)
Competitors33 from 23 nations
Winning time1:59.19 WR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg John Naber Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Silver medal icon.svg Peter Rocca Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Bronze medal icon.svg Dan Harrigan Flag of the United States.svg  United States
  1972
1980  

The men's 200 metre backstroke event for the 1976 Summer Olympics was held in Montreal. The event took place on 24 July. [1] There were 33 competitors from 23 nations, with each nation having up to 3 swimmers. The event was won by John Naber of the United States in world-record time; he was the first person to swim the event in under 2 minutes (1:59.19). It was Naber's fifth medal (fourth gold) of the Games: completing a double in the backstroke events as well as golds in the medley relay and the 4×200 free relay, along with a silver in the 200 free. It was the second American victory and second American medal sweep in the men's 200 metre backstroke, after 1968; of the 12 medals from 1968 through 1976, 10 were won by Americans and the other two (both gold) by Roland Matthes. Peter Rocca (silver) and Dan Harrigan (bronze) were the other two Americans, along with Naber, to reach the podium in 1976. The rules changed in 1984 to limit nations to two swimmers each, preventing further sweeps. [2]

Background

This was the fifth appearance of the 200 metre backstroke event. It was first held in 1900. The event did not return until 1964; since then, it has been on the programme at every Summer Games. From 1904 to 1960, a men's 100 metre backstroke was held instead. In 1964, only the 200 metres was held. Beginning in 1968 and ever since, both the 100 and 200 metre versions have been held. [2]

One of the 8 finalists from the 1972 Games returned: seventh-place finisher Zoltán Verrasztó of Hungary. Two-time reigning Olympic champion, world champion, and world record holder from 1970 to a month before the Games Roland Matthes of East Germany was entered in the event but did not start. The favourite was John Naber of the United States, who had broken Matthes' world record at the U.S. Olympic trials as well as beating Matthes in the 100 metre backstroke event five days earlier. [2] Matthes had won the inaugural World Championship in 1973, with Verrasztó second and Naber third; Verrasztó was the World Champion in 1975.

Bulgaria, Poland, and Portugal each made their debut in the event. The Netherlands made its fifth appearance, the only nation to have competed at each appearance of the event to that point (Italy did not compete in the event for the first time).

Competition format

The competition used a two-round (heats and final) format. The advancement rule followed the format introduced in 1952. A swimmer's place in the heat was not used to determine advancement; instead, the fastest times from across all heats in a round were used. There were 5 heats of up to 8 swimmers each. The top 8 swimmers advanced to the final. Swim-offs were used as necessary to break ties.

This swimming event used backstroke. Because an Olympic-size swimming pool is 50 metres long, this race consisted of four lengths of the pool.

Records

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1964 Summer Olympics.

World recordFlag of the United States.svg  John Naber  (USA)2:00.64 Long Beach, United States 19 June 1976
Olympic recordFlag of East Germany.svg  Roland Matthes  (GDR)2:02.82 Munich, West Germany 2 September 1972

The heats saw two swimmers break the Olympic record: Dan Harrigan in heat 2, with 2:02.25, then John Naber in heat 5 with 2:02.01. In the final, Naber broke the world record and the 2-minute barrier, swimming 1:59.19. Peter Rocca, in second-place, was also under the previous world record time.

Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

DateTimeRound
Saturday, 24 July 19769:30
20:30
Heats
Final

Results

Heats

RankHeatSwimmerNationTimeNotes
15 John Naber Flag of the United States.svg  United States 2:02.01Q, OR
22 Dan Harrigan Flag of the United States.svg  United States 2:02.25Q, OR
34 Peter Rocca Flag of the United States.svg  United States 2:03.31Q
41 Mark Kerry Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 2:03.54Q
54 Mark Tonelli Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 2:05.10Q
65 Miloslav Roľko Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg  Czechoslovakia 2:05.33Q
73 Zoltán Verrasztó Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 2:05.93Q
85 Róbert Rudolf Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 2:06.37Q
94 Mike Scarth Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 2:07.16
105 Rômulo Arantes Filho Flag of Brazil (1968-1992).svg  Brazil 2:07.38
112 Leif Ericsson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 2:07.57
121 Daryl Skilling Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 2:07.77
131 Igor Omelchenk'o Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 2:07.95
142 Lutz Wanja Flag of East Germany.svg  East Germany 2:08.02
153 Jim Carter Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain 2:08.05
163 Steve Hardy Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 2:08.56
171 Santiago Esteva Flag of Spain (1945-1977).svg  Spain 2:08.63
182 Reinhold Becker Flag of Germany.svg  West Germany 2:09.54
193 Krasimir Stoykov Flag of Bulgaria (1971-1990).svg  Bulgaria 2:09.67
204José UruetaFlag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 2:09.74
215 Conrado Porta Flag of Argentina.svg  Argentina 2:09.75
222 Ivan Mikolutsky Flag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union 2:09.78
235 Peter Lerpiniere Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  Great Britain 2:09.88
243 Ignacio Álvarez Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 2:11.08
251 Carlos Berrocal Flag of Puerto Rico (1952-1995).svg  Puerto Rico 2:11.14
262 Nenad Miloš Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg  Yugoslavia 2:11.25
273 Karim Ressang Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands 2:11.25
284 Predrag Miloš Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg  Yugoslavia 2:12.21
291 Ryszard Żugaj Flag of Poland (1928-1980).svg  Poland 2:12.53
304 Thomas Hofer Flag of Switzerland.svg  Switzerland 2:12.75
315 Gerardo Rosario Flag of the Philippines (1936-1985, 1986-1998).svg  Philippines 2:13.89
322 Chiang Jin Choon Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia 2:21.04
331 António de Melo Flag of Portugal.svg  Portugal 2:26.65

Final

Naber set a strong pace to start, hitting the 50-metre turn at 27.73—already a full second ahead of Rocca and Harrigan. Naber's second turn, at 100 metres, came at 57.45 (which would have been 5th place in the 100 metre final) and pushed his lead further. In the final 50 metres, Rocca closed the lead somewhat; he finished with what would have been a new world record except that he was still 1.36 seconds behind Naber. [2]

RankSwimmerNationTimeNotes
Gold medal icon.svg John Naber Flag of the United States.svg  United States 1:59.19 WR
Silver medal icon.svg Peter Rocca Flag of the United States.svg  United States 2:00.55
Bronze medal icon.svg Dan Harrigan Flag of the United States.svg  United States 2:01.35
4 Mark Tonelli Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 2:03.17
5 Mark Kerry Flag of Australia.svg  Australia 2:04.07
6 Miloslav Roľko Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg  Czechoslovakia 2:05.81
7 Róbert Rudolf Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 2:07.30
8 Zoltán Verrasztó Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 2:08.23

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References

  1. "Swimming at the 1976 Montreal Summer Games: Men's 200 metres Backstroke". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "200 metres Backstroke, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 9 July 2021.