Athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's long jump

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Men's long jump
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
DateJuly 21
Competitors27 from 19 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Jerome Biffle  United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Meredith Gourdine  United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ödön Földessy  Hungary
← 1948
1956 →
Video on YouTube amateur film

The Men's long jump at the 1952 Olympic Games took place on July 21 at the Helsinki Olympic Stadium. American athlete Jerome Biffle won the gold medal.[1]

Summary

George Brown came into the Olympics having been the best long jumper in the world for the previous 3 years and the third man to jump 8 meters ever. But Brown's 41 competition win streak ended at the US Olympic Trials, where he barely qualified for Helsinki. In wet conditions, everyone was having trouble with their run up.

In the first round Meredith "Flash" Gourdine took the early lead with a 7.38m. Jerome Biffle, a former NCAA Champion at the University of Denver, was in second place with 7.21m and Ary de Sá was in third with 7.15m. In the second round Ödön Földessy jumped into second place with a 7.23m. In the third round the medals were decided, Gourdine getting a 7.53m to extend his lead, then Biffle carefully came down the runway to leap 7.57 m (24 ft 10 in) to take the lead. That 7.57 would be well within Brown's range but he and Henk Visser failed to get a legal jump in. Biffle also was unable to get another jump in, while Gourdine made three solid attempts but was unable to improve his mark, giving Biffle the gold. Földessy got off a 7.30m in the fifth round to assure himself the bronze medal while de Sá tied Földessy's 7.23 and would have had the tie breaking edge without the 7.30.

Records

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

World record United States Jesse Owens (United States) 8.13 m Ann Arbor, United States 25 May 1935
Olympic record  Jesse Owens (USA) 8.06 m Berlin, Germany 4 August 1936

No new world or Olympic records were set for this event.

Results

Qualifying round

Qualifying Performance 7.20 (Q) or at least 13 best performers (q) advance to the Final.

Rank Group Name Nationality Mark Remarks
1 A Meredith Gourdine  United States 7.41 Q
2 A Jerome Biffle  United States 7.40 Q
3 B Neville Price  South Africa 7.36 Q
4 A George Brown  United States 7.32 Q
5 A Ödön Földessy  Hungary 7.25 Q
6 A Ary de Sá  Brazil 7.24 Q
7 B Henk Visser  Netherlands 7.21 Q
8 B Masaji Tajima  Japan 7.13 q
9 B Karl-Erik Israelsson  Sweden 7.10 q
10 A Paul Faucher  France 7.10 q
11 B Pentti Snellman  Finland 7.09 q
=12 A Leonid Grigoryev  Soviet Union 7.09 q
=12 B Jorma Valtonen  Finland 7.09 q
14 B Carlos Vera  Chile 7.07
15 B Felix Würth  Austria 6.99
16 B Sylvanus Williams  Nigeria 6.98
17 B Jorma Valkama  Finland 6.97
18 B Karim Olowu  Nigeria 6.96
19 A Toni Breder  Saar 6.88
20 A Brígido Iriarte  Venezuela 6.82
21 A Henryk Grabowski  Poland 6.77
22 A Nikolay Andryushchenko  Soviet Union 6.74
23 B Geraldo de Oliveira  Brazil 6.71
24 B Pat Leane  Australia 6.40
25 B Kamtorn Sanidwong  Thailand 5.31
A Avni Akgün  Turkey NM
B Khandadash Madatov  Soviet Union NM

Final

Rank Athlete Nationality 1 2 3 4 5 6 Result Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Jerome Biffle  United States 7.21 x 7.57 x x x 7.57
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Meredith Gourdine  United States 7.38 6.58 7.53 7.49 7.36 7.51 7.53
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ödön Földessy  Hungary 7.04 7.23 x 7.17 7.30 7.12 7.30
4 Ary de Sá  Brazil 7.15 6.77 7.06 7.22 7.20 7.23 7.23
5 Jorma Valtonen  Finland x 7.06 7.16 x x 6.97 7.16
6 Leonid Grigoryev  Soviet Union x 7.14 6.92 5.55 x 6.67 7.14
7 Karl-Erik Israelsson  Sweden x x 7.10 7.10
8 Paul Faucher  France x 6.96 7.02 7.02
9 Pentti Snellman  Finland x 6.88 7.02 7.02
10 Masaji Tajima  Japan x 7.00 x 7.00
11 Neville Price  South Africa 6.40 x x 6.40
George Brown  United States x x x NM
Henk Visser  Netherlands x x x NM

NM — No Mark

References

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1952 Helsinki Summer Games: Men's Long Jump". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2017.

External links