The Men's 5000 metres at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany took place on 7 and 10 September 1972.[1]
Men's 5000 metres at the Games of the XX Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Olympic Stadium | |||||||||
Dates | September 10 | |||||||||
Competitors | 61 from 35 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 13:26.4 OR | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Having won the 10,000 metres a week earlier, Lasse Virén controlled the pace through the first 2000 metres in 5:32.61. David Bedford, tired of the slow pace, passing Viren and leading a crowd to go around to a faster pace. As the pace accelerated, Javier Álvarez came from the rear around the field to take the point for the next kilometre. At 3200 metres, Nikolay Sviridov challenged for the lead.
Steve Prefontaine[2] took the lead at 3400 metres. Over the next lap, Viren came from sixth place in line to mark Prefontaine. Viren was in turn marked by Emiel Puttemans. A five-man breakaway formed. With 850 metres to go, Viren passed Prefontaine. Down the back stretch, Prefontaine strained back into the lead. 50 metres before the bell, Viren took the lead again, with Mohammed Gammoudi breaking off the remaining group to mark the leaders.
Down the final backstretch, Gammoudi eased around Viren while Prefontaine hit almost a full sprint to get on Gammoudi's shoulder. With 200 to go, Prefontaine relaxed and Viren moved ahead of him. Prefontaine surged again to keep pace. In the middle of the final turn, Virén changed gears into his full sprint, taking the lead. Gammoudi couldn't keep pace and began to watch Prefontaine while trying to hold on to the silver medal. Mid-straightaway all three checked the position of their rivals as Prefontaine took one more surge after Gammoudi. As it was quickly clear he couldn't make enough progress, Prefontaine strained. Ian Stewart came from the chasing group in full sprint gaining rapidly. As Stewart caught him from behind, Prefontaine fell apart, struggling the final steps.[3][4] He was killed in a car crash in 1975.
Virén successfully defended both titles in 1976.
Results
editHeats
editQualification rule: First 2 in each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) advance to the Final.
Final
editRank | Name | Nationality | Time |
---|---|---|---|
Lasse Virén | Finland | 13:26.4 | |
Mohamed Gammoudi | Tunisia | 13:27.4 | |
Ian Stewart | Great Britain | 13:27.6 | |
4 | Steve Prefontaine | United States | 13:28.4 |
5 | Emiel Puttemans | Belgium | 13:30.8 |
6 | Harald Norpoth | West Germany | 13:32.6 |
7 | Per Halle | Norway | 13:34.4 |
8 | Nikolay Sviridov | Soviet Union | 13:39.4 |
9 | Frank Eisenberg | East Germany | 13:40.8 |
10 | Javier Álvarez | Spain | 13:41.8 |
11 | Ian McCafferty | Great Britain | 13:43.2 |
12 | David Bedford | Great Britain | 13:43.2 |
13 | Juha Väätäinen | Finland | 13:53.8 |
Mariano Haro | Spain | DNS |
Sources
edit- "Official Olympic Reports". la84foundation.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2007.
References
edit- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Athletics at the 1972 Munich Games: Men's 5000 metres". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
- ^ Newnham, Blaine (September 10, 1972). "It's Pre versus the Europeans". Eugene Register-Guard. p. 1C.
- ^ Newnham, Blaine (September 11, 1972). "Pre's warning for 1976: 'He'd better watch out'". Eugene Register-Guard. p. 1B.
- ^ Newnham, Blaine (June 1, 1975). "Only first". Eugene Register-Guard. p. 1B.
- ^ "Official Olympic Reports: 1972 Munich Volume 3" (PDF). la84foundation.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007.
External links
edit- Results at todor66.com at the Wayback Machine (archived 2007-09-30)