Athletics at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's shot put

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Men's shot put
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
Olympic Stadium
Date17 October
Competitors22 from 13 nations
Winning time20.33 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Dallas Long
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Randy Matson
 United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
Vilmos Varju
 Hungary
YouTube

The men's shot put was one of four men's throwing events on the

Vilmos Varju of Hungary took third over American Parry O'Brien
. Long was the sixth man to win two shot put medals (adding to his 1960 bronze); Matson would later become the seventh (winning gold in 1968). O'Brien's fourth place finish kept him from being the first man to win four—he had taken gold in 1952 and 1956 and silver in 1960.

Background

This was the 15th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Returning finalists from the 1960 Games were silver medalist (and 1952 and 1956 gold medalist) Parry O'Brien and bronze medalist Dallas Long of the United States, fourth-place finisher Viktor Lipsnis of the Soviet Union, fifth-place finisher Mike Lindsay and eighth-place finisher Martyn Lucking of Great Britain, sixth-place finisher Alfred Sosgórnik of Poland, eleventh-place finisher Les Mills of New Zealand, thirteenth-place finisher (and 1956 finalist) Silvano Meconi of Italy, and fourteenth-place finisher Zsigmond Nagy of Hungary. O'Brien was attempting to be the first man to win three gold medals or four medals overall in the shot put, though he was not as dominant as he had been in the 1950s. Long had broken the world record four times since the Rome Games and was favored, with the third American (teenager Randy Matson) a strong challenger.[2]

The Ivory Coast, South Korea, and Morocco each made their debut in the men's shot put. The United States appeared for the 15th time, the only nation to have competed in all Olympic shot put competitions to date.

Competition format

The competition used the two-round format introduced in 1936, with the qualifying round completely separate from the divided final. In qualifying, each athlete received three attempts; those recording a mark of at least 17.80 metres advanced to the final. If fewer than 12 athletes achieved that distance, the top 12 would advance. The results of the qualifying round were then ignored. Finalists received three throws each, with the top six competitors receiving an additional three attempts. The best distance among those six throws counted.[2][3]

Records

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

World record  Dallas Long (USA) 20.68 Los Angeles, United States 25 July 1964
Olympic record  Bill Nieder (USA) 19.68 Rome, Italy 31 August 1960

Randy Matson broke the Olympic record with his third throw of the final, at 19.88 metres. He extended his new record to 20.20 metres, in his fourth throw. Dallas Long, however, throwing in the order immediately after Matson, took over the record with his gold medal throw of 20.33 metres.

Schedule

All times are

UTC+9
)

Date Time Round
Saturday, 17 October 1964 10:00
15:00
Qualifying
Final

Results

Qualification

The qualification standard was 17.80 metres. Each thrower had three attempts to reach that standard.

Rank Athlete Nation 1 2 3 Distance Notes
1
Dallas Crutcher Long
 United States 19.51 19.51 Q
2 Randy Matson  United States 18.92 18.92 Q
3 Viktor Lipsnis  Soviet Union 18.90 18.90 Q
4
Vilmos Varju
 Hungary 18.26 18.26 Q
5 Zsigmond Nagy  Hungary 18.14 18.14 Q
6 Władysław Komar  Poland 18.05 18.05 Q
Les Mills  New Zealand 18.05 18.05 Q
Georgios Tsakanikas  Greece 17.72 17.25 18.05 18.05 Q
9 Rudolf Langer  United Team of Germany 17.90 17.90 Q
10 Adolfas Varanauskas  Soviet Union 17.86 17.86 Q
11 Parry O'Brien  United States 17.84 17.84 Q
12
Nikolay Karasyov
 Soviet Union 17.83 17.83 Q
13 Dieter Hoffmann  United Team of Germany 17.45 X 17.82 17.82 Q
14 Heinfried Birlenbach  United Team of Germany 17.10 16.79 17.77 17.77
15 Alfred Sosgórnik  Poland X 17.75 X 17.75
16 Martyn Lucking  Great Britain X X 17.67 17.67
17 Silvano Meconi  Italy 17.29 17.20 X 17.29
18 Lahcen Samsam Akka  Morocco X 17.24 X 17.24
19 Mike Lindsay  Great Britain 16.77 16.70 17.23 17.23
20
Segui Denis Kragbe
 Ivory Coast 16.20 16.59 16.38 16.59
21 Teruo Itokawa  Japan 15.73 15.84 15.56 15.84
22 Im Ho-geun  South Korea 13.47 13.64 13.37 13.64
Edmund Piątkowski  Poland DNS
Gideon Ariel  Israel DNS
Gheorghe Zîmbresteanu  Romania DNS

Final

The scores from the qualification round were ignored for the final. Each thrower received three attempts; the six that had thrown the longest in those three threw another three times each.

Rank Athlete Nation 1 2 3 4 5 6 Distance Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Dallas Long  United States 19.61 19.55 19.34 20.33 OR 19.09 X 20.33 OR
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Randy Matson  United States 18.53 19.19 19.88 OR 20.20 OR X 19.62 20.20
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Vilmos Varju  Hungary 19.23 X 19.39 19.29 18.97 19.25 19.39
4 Parry O'Brien  United States 18.95 18.86 19.20 18.32 18.62 18.84 19.20
5 Zsigmond Nagy  Hungary 18.77 X 18.50 18.43 X 18.88 18.88
6 Nikolay Karasiov  Soviet Union 18.86 18.26 X 18.14 17.98 18.18 18.86
7 Les Mills  New Zealand 18.19 18.50 18.52 Did not advance 18.52
8 Adolf Varanauskas  Soviet Union X 18.30 18.41 Did not advance 18.41
9 Władysław Komar  Poland 18.20 X X Did not advance 18.20
10 Victor Lipsnis  Soviet Union 17.45 17.86 18.11 Did not advance 18.11
11 Rudolf Langer  United Team of Germany 17.29 16.90 X Did not advance 17.29
12 Dieter Hoffmann  United Team of Germany X X 17.11 Did not advance 17.11
13 Georges Tsakinikas  Greece 16.87 X 16.38 Did not advance 16.87

References

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games: Men's Shot Put". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Shot Put, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 13 October 2020.
  3. ^ Official Report, vol. 2, p. 51.