Athletics at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon
Men's marathon at the Games of the V Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Stockholms Olympiastadion, Stockholm | |||||||||
Dates | July 14 | |||||||||
Competitors | 68 from 19 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 2:36:54.8 OR | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Athletics at the 1912 Summer Olympics | |
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Track events | |
100 m | men |
200 m | men |
400 m | men |
800 m | men |
1500 m | men |
5000 m | men |
10,000 m | men |
110 m hurdles | men |
4 × 100 m relay | men |
4 × 400 m relay | men |
3000 m team race | men |
10 km walk | men |
Road events | |
Marathon | men |
Field events | |
Long jump | men |
Triple jump | men |
High jump | men |
Pole vault | men |
Standing long jump | men |
Standing high jump | men |
Shot put | men |
Discus throw | men |
Hammer throw | men |
Javelin throw | men |
2-hand shot put | men |
2-hand discus | men |
2-hand javelin | men |
Combined events | |
Pentathlon | men |
Decathlon | men |
Cross-country events | |
Individual | men |
Team | men |
The men's marathon was a track and field athletics event held as part of the athletics at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme. The distance used was 40.2 kilometres, nearly 2 full kilometres shorter than that used in 1908 and since 1924. The competition was held on Sunday, July 14, 1912. 95 runners entered, but only 68 runners (from 19 nations) competed. NOCs could enter up to 12 athletes.[1] With conditions described as "very hot", only 36 of the 68 competitors finished.[2] The event was won by Ken McArthur of South Africa, the nation's first Olympic marathon victory.
This event also saw the first Olympic fatality, as Francisco Lázaro collapsed during the race, and died in hospital the next morning, while another runner, Shizo Kanakuri, went missing: Kanakuri had dropped out of the race due to exhaustion and dehydration and returned home to Japan without notifying race officials. He was taken care of by a local family, and eventually returned to finish the Marathon on scene in 1967, at age 77. The descendants of the Swedish family were invited by a Japanese TV team to the stadium in 2012 to commemorate the incident, cited in Sweden as the "missing Japanese" and "the longest Marathon ever".[3][4][5]
Background
[edit]This was the fifth appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. The field was strong. Sweden and the United States each entered full 12-man teams; the American team included 1911 Boston Marathon winner Clarence DeMar, 1912 Boston winner Michael J. Ryan, and 1908 Olympic bronze medalist Joseph Forshaw. Great Britain had 1909 Polytechnic winner Henry Barrett and 6 of the 8 finishers in the 1912 Polytechnic. Canada sent the winner of that 1912 Polytechnic, James Corkery. South Africa had the runner-up, Christian Gitsham, as well as Ken McArthur, who had won three marathons in South Africa.[6]
Japan, Norway, Portugal, and Serbia each made their first appearance in Olympic marathons. The United States made its fifth appearance, the only nation to have competed in each Olympic marathon to that point.
Competition format
[edit]As all marathons, the competition was a single race. The course for the race was 40.2 kilometres long, which was more akin to the 1896 (40 km), 1900 (40.26 km), and 1904 (40 km) courses than the previous 1908 course (42.195 km) which would become standard.
It was "the first time the Olympic marathon was conducted as an out-and-back race." The course started at the stadium, went to the town of Sollentuna, and came back.[6]
Records
[edit]These were the standing world and Olympic records (in hours) prior to the 1912 Summer Olympics.
World record | Thure Johansson (SWE) | 2:51:23.6 | Stockholm, Sweden | 31 August 1909 |
Olympic record | Johnny Hayes (USA) | 2:55:18.4 | London, United Kingdom | 24 July 1908 |
The distance was nearly two kilometres shorter;[7] nevertheless, Ken McArthur's winning time is registered as an Olympic record.
Schedule
[edit]Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Sunday, 14 July 1912 | 13:48 | Final |
Results
[edit]References
[edit]- Specific
- ^ Official report, p. 61.
- ^ USA Track & Field (2004). "2004 USA Olympic Team Trials: Men's Marathon Media Guide Supplement" (PDF). Santa Barbara, California: USA Track & Field. p. 11. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
- ^ https://www.tokyoweekender.com/art_and_culture/japanese-culture/shizo-kanakuris-54-year-marathon-on-this-day/
- ^ https://sok.se/arkiv-for-artiklar/2015-08-17-japanen-som-kom-bort.html
- ^ https://www.tokyoweekender.com/art_and_culture/japanese-culture/shizo-kanakuris-54-year-marathon-on-this-day
- ^ a b "Marathon, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
- ^ "Athletics at the 1912 Stockholm Summer Games: Men's Marathon". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved October 5, 2012.
- ^ Rick Maese (August 6, 2021). "Lost and found: How Japan's 'father of the marathon' vanished mid-race". Washington Post.
- General
- Bergvall, Erik, ed. (1913). The Official Report of the Olympic Games of Stockholm 1912. Translated by Adams-Ray, Edward. Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand.
- Wudarski, Pawel (1999). "Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich" (in Polish). Retrieved January 3, 2007.