Jump to content

Template:Olympic medalists in the men's marathon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Siwel619 (talk | contribs) at 00:57, 17 February 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Spyridon Louis
 Greece
Charilaos Vasilakos
 Greece
Gyula Kellner
 Hungary
1900 Paris
details
Michel Théato
 Luxembourg[1][2]
Émile Champion
 France
Ernst Fast
 Sweden
1904 St. Louis
details
Thomas Hicks
 United States
Albert Corey
 France[3][4]
Arthur Newton
 United States
1908 London
details
Johnny Hayes
 United States
Charles Hefferon
 South Africa
Joseph Forshaw
 United States
1912 Stockholm
details
Ken McArthur
 South Africa
Christian Gitsham
 South Africa
Gaston Strobino
 United States
1920 Antwerp
details
Hannes Kolehmainen
 Finland
Jüri Lossmann
 Estonia
Valerio Arri
 Italy
1924 Paris
details
Albin Stenroos
 Finland
Romeo Bertini
 Italy
Clarence DeMar
 United States
1928 Amsterdam
details
Boughera El Ouafi
 France
Manuel Plaza
 Chile
Martti Marttelin
 Finland
1932 Los Angeles
details
Juan Carlos Zabala
 Argentina
Sam Ferris
 Great Britain
Armas Toivonen
 Finland
1936 Berlin
details
Sohn Kee-chung
 Japan[5]
Ernest Harper
 Great Britain
Nam Sung-yong
 Japan[5]
1948 London
details
Delfo Cabrera
 Argentina
Tom Richards
 Great Britain
Étienne Gailly
 Belgium
1952 Helsinki
details
Emil Zátopek
 Czechoslovakia
Reinaldo Gorno
 Argentina
Gustaf Jansson
 Sweden
1956 Melbourne
details
Alain Mimoun
 France
Franjo Mihalić
 Yugoslavia
Veikko Karvonen
 Finland
1960 Rome
details
Abebe Bikila
 Ethiopia
Rhadi Ben Abdesselam
 Morocco
Barry Magee
 New Zealand
1964 Tokyo
details
Abebe Bikila
 Ethiopia
Basil Heatley
 Great Britain
Kokichi Tsuburaya
 Japan
1968 Mexico City
details
Mamo Wolde
 Ethiopia
Kenji Kimihara
 Japan
Mike Ryan
 New Zealand
1972 Munich
details
Frank Shorter
 United States
Karel Lismont
 Belgium
Mamo Wolde
 Ethiopia
1976 Montreal
details
Waldemar Cierpinski
 East Germany
Frank Shorter
 United States
Karel Lismont
 Belgium
1980 Moscow
details
Waldemar Cierpinski
 East Germany
Gerard Nijboer
 Netherlands
Satymkul Dzhumanazarov
 Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles
details
Carlos Lopes
 Portugal
John Treacy
 Ireland
Charlie Spedding
 Great Britain
1988 Seoul
details
Gelindo Bordin
 Italy
Douglas Wakiihuri
 Kenya
Ahmed Salah
 Djibouti
1992 Barcelona
details
Hwang Young-cho
 South Korea
Koichi Morishita
 Japan
Stephan Freigang
 Germany
1996 Atlanta
details
Josia Thugwane
 South Africa
Lee Bong-ju
 South Korea
Erick Wainaina
 Kenya
2000 Sydney
details
Gezahegne Abera
 Ethiopia
Erick Wainaina
 Kenya
Tesfaye Tola
 Ethiopia
2004 Athens
details
Stefano Baldini
 Italy
Mebrahtom Keflezighi
 United States
Vanderlei de Lima
 Brazil
2008 Beijing
details
Samuel Wanjiru
 Kenya
Jaouad Gharib
 Morocco
Tsegay Kebede
 Ethiopia
2012 London
details
Stephen Kiprotich
 Uganda
Abel Kirui
 Kenya
Wilson Kipsang Kiprotich
 Kenya
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Eliud Kipchoge
 Kenya
Feyisa Lelisa
 Ethiopia
Galen Rupp
 United States
2020 Tokyo
details
Eliud Kipchoge
 Kenya
Abdi Nageeye
 Netherlands
Bashir Abdi
 Belgium

References

  1. ^ In the past, the IOC had attributed Théato's medal to France, despite later sources finding that his nationality was Luxembourgish. The IOC website now recognizes Luxembourg.
  2. ^ "Paris 1900 - Medal Table". Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee. Select "Paris 1900", select "Go to medal table" to arrive at "Paris 1900 Medal Table"
  3. ^ Arriving without correct documents, a French immigrant to the United States Albert Corey is inconsistently listed as performing in a mixed team in the four mile team race (with four undisputed Americans) and performing for the US in the marathon. Currently IOC attributes his medal in the marathon to the France and the medal in the team race to a mixed team, not to the United States.
  4. ^ "St. Louis 1904 Athletics Marathon Men Results". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2022-01-31.
  5. ^ a b Both Sohn Kee-chung and Nam Sung-yong were from Korea. The IOC attributes both medals to Japan due to Korea being a Japanese colony at the time. All Korean Olympians during the Japanese colonial rule could only participate in the games as a representative of Japan and had to compete with Japanese names instead of their original Korean names. However, some sources still refer to Son Kee-chung as the first Korean to win an Olympic marathon today.