Long jump at the Olympics

The long jump at the Summer Olympics, is grouped among the four track and field jumping events held at the multi-sport event. The men's long jump has been present on the Olympic athletics programme since the first Summer Olympics in 1896. The women's long jump was introduced over fifty years later in 1948, and was the second Olympic jumping event for women after the high jump, which was added in 1928.

Long jump
at the Olympic Games
Dawn Burrell in the 2000 Olympic long jump competition
Overview
SportAthletics
GenderMen and women
Years heldMen: 18962024
Women: 19482024
Olympic record
Men8.90 m Bob Beamon (1968)
Women7.40 m Jackie Joyner-Kersee (1988)
Reigning champion
Men Miltiadis Tentoglou (GRE)
Women Tara Davis-Woodhall (USA)

The Olympic records for the event are 8.90 m (29 ft 2+14 in) for men, set by Bob Beamon in 1968, and 7.40 m (24 ft 3+14 in) for women, set by Jackie Joyner-Kersee in 1988. Beamon's mark is the longest-standing Olympic athletics record by a margin of twelve years, which was the only time a man has set a long jump world record at the competition. The women's world record has been broken on two occasions at the Olympics, with Mary Rand jumping 6.76 m (22 ft 2 in) in 1964 and Viorica Viscopoleanu clearing 6.82 m (22 ft 4+12 in) in 1968. In 1956, Elżbieta Krzesińska jumped 6.35 m (20 ft 10 in) to equal her own world record.[1]

Ellery Clark and Olga Gyarmati were the first men's and women's Olympic long jump champions. Miltiadis Tentoglou and Malaika Mihambo are the reigning Olympic champions from 2020. Carl Lewis is the event's most successful athlete as he was Olympic champion four times consecutively from 1984 to 1996. Heike Drechsler is the only woman to win two Olympic long jump titles. Ralph Boston and Jackie Joyner-Kersee are the only other two athletes to win three Olympic long jump medals in their careers. The United States is the most successful nation in the event.

A standing long jump variant of the event was contested from 1900 to 1912 and standing jumps specialist Ray Ewry won all but one of the gold medals in its brief history.

Medalists

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Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Ellery Clark
  United States
6.35 m
Robert Garrett
  United States
6.18 m
James Brendan Connolly
  United States
6.11 m
1900 Paris
details
Alvin Kraenzlein
  United States
7.18 m
Myer Prinstein
  United States
7.17 m
Patrick Leahy
  Great Britain
6.95 m
1904 St. Louis
details
Myer Prinstein
  United States
7.34 m
Daniel Frank
  United States
6.89 m
Robert Stangland
  United States
6.88 m
1908 London
details
Frank Irons
  United States
7.48 m
Daniel Kelly
  United States
7.09 m
Calvin Bricker
  Canada
7.08 m
1912 Stockholm
details
Albert Gutterson
  United States
7.60 m
Calvin Bricker
  Canada
7.21 m
Georg Åberg
  Sweden
7.18 m
1920 Antwerp
details
William Petersson
  Sweden
7.15 m
Carl Johnson
  United States
7.09 m
Erik Abrahamsson
  Sweden
7.08 m
1924 Paris
details
DeHart Hubbard
  United States
7.44 m
Edward Gourdin
  United States
7.27 m
Sverre Hansen
  Norway
7.26 m
1928 Amsterdam
details
Ed Hamm
  United States
7.73 m
Silvio Cator
  Haiti
7.58 m
Al Bates
  United States
7.40 m
1932 Los Angeles
details
Ed Gordon
  United States
7.64 m
Lambert Redd
  United States
7.60 m
Chūhei Nambu
  Japan
7.45 m
1936 Berlin
details
Jesse Owens
  United States
8.06 m
Luz Long
  Germany
7.87 m
Naoto Tajima
  Japan
7.74 m
1948 London
details
Willie Steele
  United States
7.82 m
Bill Bruce
  Australia
7.55 m
Herb Douglas
  United States
7.54 m
1952 Helsinki
details
Jerome Biffle
  United States
7.57 m
Meredith Gourdine
  United States
7.53 m
Ödön Földessy
  Hungary
7.30 m
1956 Melbourne
details
Gregory Bell
  United States
7.83 m
John Bennett
  United States
7.68 m
Jorma Valkama
  Finland
7.48 m
1960 Rome
details
Ralph Boston
  United States
8.12 m
Bo Roberson
  United States
8.11 m
Igor Ter-Ovanesyan
  Soviet Union
8.04 m
1964 Tokyo
details
Lynn Davies
  Great Britain
8.07 m
Ralph Boston
  United States
8.03 m
Igor Ter-Ovanesyan
  Soviet Union
7.99 m
1968 Mexico City
details
Bob Beamon
  United States
8.90 m
Klaus Beer
  East Germany
8.19 m
Ralph Boston
  United States
8.16 m
1972 Munich
details
Randy Williams
  United States
8.24 m
Hans Baumgartner
  West Germany
8.18 m
Arnie Robinson
  United States
8.03 m
1976 Montreal
details
Arnie Robinson
  United States
8.35 m
Randy Williams
  United States
8.11 m
Frank Wartenberg
  East Germany
8.02 m
1980 Moscow
details
Lutz Dombrowski
  East Germany
8.54 m
Frank Paschek
  East Germany
8.21 m
Valeriy Pidluzhnyy
  Soviet Union
8.18 m
1984 Los Angeles
details
Carl Lewis
  United States
8.54 m
Gary Honey
  Australia
8.24 m
Giovanni Evangelisti
  Italy
8.24 m
1988 Seoul
details
Carl Lewis
  United States
8.72 m
Mike Powell
  United States
8.49 m
Larry Myricks
  United States
8.27 m
1992 Barcelona
details
Carl Lewis
  United States
8.67 m
Mike Powell
  United States
8.64 m
Joe Greene
  United States
8.34 m
1996 Atlanta
details
Carl Lewis
  United States
8.50 m
James Beckford
  Jamaica
8.29 m
Joe Greene
  United States
8.24 m
2000 Sydney
details
Iván Pedroso
  Cuba
8.55 m
Jai Taurima
  Australia
8.49 m
Roman Shchurenko
  Ukraine
8.31 m
2004 Athens
details
Dwight Phillips
  United States
8.59 m
John Moffitt
  United States
8.47 m
Joan Lino Martínez
  Spain
8.32 m
2008 Beijing
details
Irving Saladino
  Panama
8.34 m
Godfrey Khotso Mokoena
  South Africa
8.24 m
Ibrahim Camejo
  Cuba
8.20 m
2012 London
details
Greg Rutherford
  Great Britain
8.31 m
Mitchell Watt
  Australia
8.16 m
Will Claye
  United States
8.12 m
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Jeff Henderson
  United States
8.38 m
Luvo Manyonga
  South Africa
8.37 m
Greg Rutherford
  Great Britain
8.29 m
2020 Tokyo
details
Miltiadis Tentoglou
  Greece
8.41 m
Juan Miguel Echevarría
  Cuba
8.41 m
Maykel Massó
  Cuba
8.21 m
2024 Paris
details
Miltiadis Tentoglou
  Greece
8.48 m
Wayne Pinnock
  Jamaica
8.36 m
Mattia Furlani
  Italy
8.34 m

Medal table

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States (USA)22151047
2  Great Britain (GBR)2024
3  Greece (GRE)2002
4  East Germany (GDR)1214
5  Cuba (CUB)1124
6  Sweden (SWE)1023
7  Panama (PAN)1001
8  Australia (AUS)0404
9  Germany (GER)0202
  Jamaica (JAM)0202
  South Africa (RSA)0202
12  Canada (CAN)0112
13  Haiti (HAI)0101
14  Soviet Union (URS)0033
15  Italy (ITA)0022
  Japan (JPN)0022
17  Finland (FIN)0011
  Hungary (HUN)0011
  Norway (NOR)0011
  Spain (ESP)0011
  Ukraine (UKR)0011
Totals (21 entries)30303090

Multiple medalists

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Rank Athlete Nation Olympics Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Carl Lewis   United States (USA) 1984–1996 4 0 0 4
2 Miltiadis Tentoglou   Greece (GRE) 2020–2024 2 0 0 2
3 Ralph Boston   United States (USA) 1960–1968 1 1 1 3
4 Myer Prinstein   United States (USA) 1900–1904 1 1 0 2
Randy Williams   United States (USA) 1972–1976 1 1 0 2
6 Arnie Robinson   United States (USA) 1972–1976 1 0 1 2
Greg Rutherford   Great Britain (GBR) 2012–2016 1 0 1 2
8 Mike Powell   United States (USA) 1988–1992 0 2 0 2
9 Calvin Bricker   Canada (CAN) 1908–1912 0 1 1 2
10 Igor Ter-Ovanesyan   Soviet Union (URS) 1960–1964 0 0 2 2
Joe Greene   United States (USA) 1992–1996 0 0 2 2

Women

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Games Gold Silver Bronze
1948 London
details
Olga Gyarmati
  Hungary
5.69 m
Noemí Simonetto
  Argentina
5.60 m
Ann-Britt Leyman
  Sweden
5.57 m
1952 Helsinki
details
Yvette Williams
  New Zealand
6.24 m
Aleksandra Chudina
  Soviet Union
6.14 m
Shirley Cawley
  Great Britain
5.92 m
1956 Melbourne
details
Elżbieta Krzesińska
  Poland
6.35 m
Willye White
  United States
6.09 m
Nadezhda Khnykina-Dvalishvili
  Soviet Union
6.07 m
1960 Rome
details
Vera Krepkina
  Soviet Union
6.37 m
Elżbieta Krzesińska
  Poland
6.27 m
Hildrun Claus
  United Team of Germany
6.21 m
1964 Tokyo
details
Mary Rand
  Great Britain
6.76 m
Irena Kirszenstein
  Poland
6.60 m
Tatyana Shchelkanova
  Soviet Union
6.42 m
1968 Mexico City
details
Viorica Viscopoleanu
  Romania
6.82 m
Sheila Sherwood
  Great Britain
6.68 m
Tatyana Talysheva
  Soviet Union
6.66 m
1972 Munich
details
Heide Rosendahl
  West Germany
6.78 m
Diana Yorgova
  Bulgaria
6.77 m
Eva Šuranová
  Czechoslovakia
6.67 m
1976 Montreal
details
Angela Voigt
  East Germany
6.72 m
Kathy McMillan
  United States
6.66 m
Lidiya Alfeyeva
  Soviet Union
6.60 m
1980 Moscow
details
Tatyana Kolpakova
  Soviet Union
7.06 m
Brigitte Wujak
  East Germany
7.04 m
Tatyana Skachko
  Soviet Union
7.01 m
1984 Los Angeles
details
Anișoara Cușmir-Stanciu
  Romania
6.96 m
Valy Ionescu
  Romania
6.81 m
Sue Hearnshaw
  Great Britain
6.80 m
1988 Seoul
details
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
  United States
7.40 m
Heike Drechsler
  East Germany
7.22 m
Galina Chistyakova
  Soviet Union
7.11 m
1992 Barcelona
details
Heike Drechsler
  Germany
7.14 m
Inessa Kravets
  Unified Team
7.12 m
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
  United States
7.07 m
1996 Atlanta
details
Chioma Ajunwa
  Nigeria
7.12 m
Fiona May
  Italy
7.02 m
Jackie Joyner-Kersee
  United States
7.00 m
2000 Sydney
details
Heike Drechsler
  Germany
6.99 m
Fiona May
  Italy
6.92 m
Tatyana Kotova
  Russia
6.83 m
2004 Athens
details
Tatyana Lebedeva
  Russia
7.07 m
Irina Simagina
  Russia
7.05 m
Tatyana Kotova
  Russia
7.05 m
2008 Beijing
details
Maurren Maggi
  Brazil
7.04 m
Blessing Okagbare
  Nigeria
6.91 m
Chelsea Hammond
  Jamaica
6.79 m
2012 London
details
Brittney Reese
  United States
7.12 m
Elena Sokolova
  Russia
7.07 m
Janay DeLoach
  United States
6.89 m
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Tianna Bartoletta
  United States
7.17 m
Brittney Reese
  United States
7.15 m
Ivana Španović
  Serbia
7.08 m
2020 Tokyo
details
Malaika Mihambo
  Germany
7.00 m
Brittney Reese
  United States
6.97 m
Ese Brume
  Nigeria
6.97 m
2024 Paris
details
Tara Davis-Woodhall
  United States
7.10 m
Malaika Mihambo
  Germany
6.98 m
Jasmine Moore
  United States
6.96 m

Medal table

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States (USA)44412
2  Germany (GER)4105
3  Soviet Union (URS)2169
4  Romania (ROU)2103
5  Russia (RUS)1225
6  East Germany (GDR)1214
7  Poland (POL)1203
8  Great Britain (GBR)1124
9  Nigeria (NGR)1113
10  Brazil (BRA)1001
  Hungary (HUN)1001
  New Zealand (NZL)1001
13  Italy (ITA)0202
14  Argentina (ARG)0101
  Bulgaria (BUL)0101
  Ukraine (UKR)0101
17  Czechoslovakia (TCH)0011
  Jamaica (JAM)0011
  Serbia (SRB)0011
  Sweden (SWE)0011
Totals (20 entries)20202060

Multiple medalists

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Rank Athlete Nation Olympics Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Heike Drechsler   Germany (GER)
  East Germany (GDR)
1988–2000 2 1 0 3
2 Brittney Reese   United States (USA) 2012–2020 1 2 0 3
3 Elżbieta Krzesińska   Poland (POL) 1956–1960 1 1 0 2
4 Jackie Joyner-Kersee   United States (USA) 1988–1996 1 0 2 3
5 Fiona May   Italy (ITA) 1996–2000 0 2 0 2
6 Tatyana Kotova   Russia (RUS) 2000–2004 0 0 2 2

Standing long jump

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Standing long jump
at the Olympic Games
 
Kostas Tsiklitiras in the 1912 standing long jump competition
Overview
SportAthletics
GenderMen
Years heldMen: 19001912
Olympic record
Men3.47 m Ray Ewry (1904)

From 1900 to 1912 a variation of the event was contested at the Olympics where athletes had to long jump from a standing position. This was one of three standing jumps to have featured on the Olympic programme, alongside the standing high jump (present for the same period) and the standing triple jump (1900 and 1904 only).[2]

The standing jump competitions were dominated by Ray Ewry, who won the Olympic standing long jump titles in 1900, 1904 and 1908. His clearance of 3.47 m (11 ft 4+12 in) at the 1904 Olympics remained as the Olympic record for the event until its discontinuation in 1912. Ewry took Olympic three gold medals in standing jumps in both 1900 and 1904, then won the standing high and long jumps at the 1908 Olympics, as well as the 1906 Intercalated Games.[3] After Ewry's retirement, Kostas Tsiklitiras became the winner of the final Olympic standing long jump competition in 1912.[4]

The standing long jump—and standing jump events in general—had been a relatively common type of athletics event at the end of the 19th century, but became increasingly rare at top level national and international competitions as the 20th century progressed.[3] The Olympic event remains the only major international competition to have featured the event, except for the first three editions of the Women's World Games in the 1920s, as well as the 1919 and 1920 editions of the South American Championships in Athletics.[5][6] The standing long jump retained some popularity as a championship event in Scandinavia in the second half of the century.[7][8]

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1900 Paris
details
Ray Ewry
  United States
Irving Baxter
  United States
Emile Torcheboeuf
  France
1904 St. Louis
details
Ray Ewry
  United States
Charles King
  United States
John Biller
  United States
1908 London
details
Ray Ewry
  United States
Konstantinos Tsiklitiras
  Greece
Martin Sheridan
  United States
1912 Stockholm
details
Konstantinos Tsiklitiras
  Greece
Platt Adams
  United States
Benjamin Adams
  United States

Intercalated Games

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The 1906 Intercalated Games were held in Athens and at the time were officially recognised as part of the Olympic Games series, with the intention being to hold a games in Greece in two-year intervals between the internationally held Olympics. However, this plan never came to fruition and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) later decided not to recognise these games as part of the official Olympic series. Some sports historians continue to treat the results of these games as part of the Olympic canon.[9]

Continuing its presence since the first Olympics, a men's long jump event was contested at the 1906 Games. The two protagonists were Myer Prinstein (the 1904 champion) and Peter O'Connor (the world record holder). Prinstein won with his opening jump of 7.20 m (23 ft 7+14 in). O'Connor was runner-up in 7.02 m (23 ft 14 in) but protested the measuring of Prinstein's mark and the judgement of no-jump rulings against him. Hugo Friend was a comfortable third in 6.96 m (22 ft 10 in).[10]

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1906 Athens
details
  Myer Prinstein (USA)   Peter O'Connor (GBR)   Hugo Friend (USA)

The standing long jump variant was also contested at the Intercalated Games. Ray Ewry, who entered as the undefeated Olympic champion in the event, won a further gold medal with his mark of 3.30 m (10 ft 9+34 in). It was an American podium sweep with Martin Sheridan and Lawson Robertson taking second and third place.[11]

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1906 Athens
details
  Ray Ewry (USA)   Martin Sheridan (USA)   Lawson Robertson (USA)

Non-canonical Olympic events

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In addition to the main 1900 Olympic men's long jump, a handicap competition was held four days later. Pál Koppán of Hungary won with a mark of 7.895 m (1.60 m handicap) and John McLean of the United States came second with 7.72 m (85 cm handicap). Sources differ as to whether the third-place finisher William Percy Remington (who was fourth in the main Olympic event) or Thaddeus McClain (seventh in the Olympic long jump).[12][13]

Two professionals-only contests were held in 1900. Mike Sweeney of the United States won with 5.995 m. Another American, Otto Bruno Schoenfeld, was second in 5.60 m, while Frenchman Jules Bouchoux came third in 5.55 m. A handicap professional contest was also held but the results have not been located.[12][14]

The handicap event returned at the 1904 Summer Olympics and the three Olympic finalists who failed to win medals comprised the top three – all of them American. Fred Englehardt won with 6.82 m, Gilbert Van Cleve was runner-up with a mark of 6.53 m, and John Hagerman took third, recording 6.53 m. The corresponding handicaps are not known.[12]

These events are no longer considered part of the official Olympic history of the long jump or the athletics programme in general. Consequently, medals from these competitions have not been assigned to nations on the all-time medal tables.[12]

References

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Participation and athlete data
Olympic record progressions
Specific
  1. ^ 12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook Berlin 2009 (pgs. 546, 556, 646). IAAF (2009). Retrieved on 2014-05-03.
  2. ^ Athletics Men's Standing Long Jump Medalists. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  3. ^ a b Ray Ewry. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  4. ^ Athletics at the 1912 Stockholm Summer Games: Men's Standing Long Jump. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  5. ^ South American Championships (Men). GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  6. ^ FSFI Women's World Games. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  7. ^ Norwegian Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  8. ^ Swedish Indoor Championships. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  9. ^ 1906 Athina Summer Games. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-01-26.
  10. ^ Athletics at the 1906 Athina Summer Games: Men's Long Jump. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-03.
  11. ^ Athletics at the 1906 Athina Summer Games: Men's Standing Long Jump. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-07.
  12. ^ a b c d Handicap Olympic Athletics Events[1]. GBR Athletics. Retrieved on 2014-04-18.
  13. ^ Athletics at the 1900 Paris Summer Games: Men's Long Jump, Handicap. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-05.
  14. ^ Athletics at the 1900 Paris Summer Games: Men's Long Jump, Professionals. Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2014-05-05.
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