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Athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics – Men's pole vault

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Men's pole vault
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
Don Laz and Bob Richards (1951)
VenueHelsinki Olympic Stadium
DatesJuly 21 (qualifying)
July 22 (final)
Competitors28 from 18 nations
Winning height4.55 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Bob Richards
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Don Laz
 United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ragnar Lundberg
 Sweden
← 1948
1956 →
Video on YouTube amateur film

The men's pole vault was an event at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland. Twenty-eight athletes from 18 nations competed.[1] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The final was held on Tuesday July 22, 1952.[2] The event was won by Bob Richards of the United States, the nation's 12th consecutive victory in the men's pole vault. Another American, Don Laz, took silver. Ragnar Lundberg's bronze was Sweden's first medal in the event since 1912.

Summary

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Bob Richards was the returning bronze medalist. His closest domestic competitor was Don Laz, who shared the US championship earlier in the year after 4 years of Richards dominance. In the final both remained clean to 4.40m, just ahead of Ragnar Lundberg and Petro Denysenko, who each had one miss earlier. Lundberg had passed at 4.10m, which became significant because neither could go any higher. While modern rules would make that a tie, in that era, the third tiebreaker was the number of attempts, which gave Lundberg the bronze medal. Both Richards and Laz cleared the next height, 4.50m on their second attempts, still tied. They remained tied to their final attempt at 4.60 m (15 ft 1 in) when Laz missed and Richards cleared it to take his first gold medal.

Richards was only the second man to win multiple medals in the pole vault. He would go on to defend the championship four years later, jumping 1 cm higher and went on to Wheaties box fame. No other man has defended the pole vault title, though Yelena Isinbayeva defended the women's title in 2008. Richards is also the only man to win three medals in the event (Isinbayeva is the only woman to do so).

Background

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This was the 12th appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Half of the finalists from the 1948 Games returned: silver medalist Erkki Kataja of Finland, bronze medalist Bob Richards of the United States, fourth-place finisher Erling Kaas of Norway, fifth-place finisher Ragnar Lundberg of Sweden, seventh-place finisher Valto Olenius of Finland, and ninth-place finisher José Vicente of Puerto Rico. Richards was the favorite in Helsinki after four wins at the AAU championships from 1949 to 1952 (the last tied with Don Laz). The most significant challenger to the Americans was European champion Ragnar Lundberg of Sweden.[1]

Egypt, Romania, the Soviet Union, and Switzerland each made their first appearance in the event. The United States made its 12th appearance, the only nation to have competed at every Olympic men's pole vault to that point.

Competition format

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The competition used the two-round format introduced in 1912, with results cleared between rounds. Vaulters received three attempts at each height. Ties were broken by the countback rule; at the time, total attempts was used after total misses.

In the qualifying round, the bar was set at 3.60 metres, 3.80 metres, 3.90 metres, and 4.00 metres. All vaulters clearing 4.00 metres advanced to the final.

In the final, the bar was set at 3.60 metres, 3.80 metres, 3.95 metres, 4.10 metres, 4.20 metres, 4.30 metres, 4.40 metres, 4.50 metres, 4.55 metres, and 4.60 metres.[1][3]

Records

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

World record  Cornelius Warmerdam (USA) 4.77 Modesto, United States 23 May 1942
Olympic record  Earle Meadows (USA) 4.35 Berlin, Germany 5 August 1936

Bob Richards, Don Laz, Ragnar Lundberg, and Petro Denysenko all cleared 4.40 metres to break the Olympic record. Richards and Laz extended the record to 4.50 metres. Only Richards was able to clear 4.55 metres, the new Olympic record at the end of the Games.

Schedule

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All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

The final took nearly 6 hours.

Date Time Round
Monday, 21 July 1952 15:00 Qualifying
Tuesday, 22 July 1952 15:00 Final

Results

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Key

  • o = Height cleared
  • x = Height failed
  • = Height passed
  • r  = Retired
  • SB = Season's best
  • PB = Personal best
  • NR = National record
  • AR = Area record
  • OR = Olympic record
  • WR = World record
  • WL = World lead
  • NM = No mark
  • DNS = Did not start
  • DQ = Disqualified

Qualifying round

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Qualification Criteria: Qualifying Performance 4.00 m advance to the Final.

Rank Group Athlete Nation 3.60 3.80 3.90 4.00 Height Notes
1 A Petro Denysenko  Soviet Union o o 4.00 Q
A Tamás Homonnay  Hungary o o 4.00 Q
B Erkki Kataja  Finland o o 4.00 Q
B Ragnar Lundberg  Sweden o o 4.00 Q
B Jukka Piironen  Finland o o 4.00 Q
6 A Zeno Dragomir  Romania o o o 4.00 Q
B Don Laz  United States o o o 4.00 Q
B Lennart Lind  Sweden o o o 4.00 Q
B George Mattos  United States o o o 4.00 Q
B Bob Richards  United States o o o 4.00 Q
11 A Rigas Efstathiadis  Greece ? ? ? o 4.00 Q, one miss before 4.00
11 B Erling Kaas  Norway ? ? ? o 4.00 Q, one miss before 4.00
13 B Valto Olenius  Finland xo 4.00 Q
14 B Viktor Knyazev  Soviet Union o xo 4.00 Q
15 A Volodymyr Brazhnyk  Soviet Union o o xo 4.00 Q
16 A Theodosios Balafas  Greece o o o xo 4.00 Q
A Torfy Bryngeirsson  Iceland o o o xo 4.00 Q
18 B Bunkichi Sawada  Japan ? ? xo 4.00 Q, one miss before 4.00
19 B Milan Milakov  Yugoslavia o o xxo 4.00 Q
20 A Walter Hofstetter  Switzerland ? ? o xxx 3.90 One miss before 3.90
21 B Ron Miller  Canada o xo xxx 3.90
22 A Tim Anderson  Great Britain o o xxx 3.80
A Geoff Elliott  Great Britain o o xxx 3.80
B Zenon Ważny  Poland o o xxx 3.80
25 A Hélcio da Silva  Brazil o xxx 3.60
26 A Gamal El-Din El-Sherbini  Egypt xxo xxx 3.60
B Georgios Roubanis  Greece xxx No mark
B José Vicente  Puerto Rico xxx No mark

Final

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The final was held on July 22.

Rank Athlete Nation 3.60 3.80 3.95 4.10 4.20 4.30 4.40 4.50 4.55 4.60 Height Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Bob Richards  United States o o o o o xo xxo xxx 4.55 OR
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Don Laz  United States o o o o o xo xxx 4.50
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ragnar Lundberg  Sweden o o xo o xxx 4.40
4 Petro Denysenko  Soviet Union o o xo o o xxx 4.40
5 Valto Olenius  Finland o xo xo xxx 4.30
6 Bunkichi Sawada  Japan o xxo o o xxx 4.20
7 Volodymyr Brazhnyk  Soviet Union o o o xo xxx 4.20
8 Viktor Knyazev  Soviet Union o o xo xo xxx 4.20
9 George Mattos  United States o xo xxo xxx 4.20
10 Erkki Kataja  Finland o o xxx 4.10
11 Tamás Homonnay  Hungary o o o xxx 4.10
Lennart Lind  Sweden o O o xxx 4.10
13 Milan Milakov  Yugoslavia o xo xo xxx 4.10
14 Rigas Efstathiadis  Greece o o xxx 3.95
Torfy Bryngeirsson  Iceland o o xxx 3.95
16 Erling Kaas  Norway o xxx 3.80
17 Theodosios Balafas  Greece o o xxx 3.80
18 Jukka Piironen  Finland xo xxx 3.80
Zeno Dragomir  Romania xo xxx 3.80

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Pole Vault, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Athletics at the 1952 Helsinki Summer Games: Men's Pole Vault". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  3. ^ Official Report, p. 311.
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