Athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Men's 50 kilometres walk

Men's 50 kilometres walk
at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad
View of a chasing group during the men's 50 kilometres walk
VenuePontal
Date19 August 2016
Competitors63 from 35 nations
Winning time3:40:58
Medalists
   Slovakia
   Australia
   Japan
Athletics at the
2016 Summer Olympics
List of athletes
Qualification
Track events
100 m   men   women
200 m men women
400 m men women
800 m men women
1500 m men women
5000 m men women
10,000 m men women
100 m hurdles women
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men women
3000 m
steeplechase
men women
4 × 100 m relay men women
4 × 400 m relay men women
Road events
Marathon men women
20 km walk men women
50 km walk men
Field events
Long jump men women
Triple jump men women
High jump men women
Pole vault men women
Shot put men women
Discus throw men women
Javelin throw men women
Hammer throw men women
Combined events
Heptathlon women
Decathlon men

The men's 50 kilometres race walk at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro was held on 19 August. Matej Tóth, winner of the 2015 World Championships from Slovakia won the gold medal, reigning Olympic champion Jared Tallent from Australia finished second and Japanese walker Hirooki Arai took the bronze. The winning time was 3:40:58.

Canadian Evan Dunfee was awarded the bronze medal after Athletics Canada successfully filed a protest because Arai had made contact with Dunfee in the last 2 km of race, but the Japanese committee appealed the decision, and the medal was reinstated for Arai.[1]

Summary

Off the start line, Vladimir Savanović went for the lead putting an immediate gap on the field and getting four minutes of worldwide television time. Before the first kilometer was over, world record holder Yohann Diniz lost his tolerance for the breakaway and went after Savanović, quickly bridging the gap. Savanovic was already showing signs of fading and disappeared back into the pack. Diniz stayed out front. Over the first 4 kilometers, the race broke up, with a lead pack of about nine separating from the larger pack of the field, with a smaller group of four stuck in between. The lead pack at 5K, already 29 seconds behind Diniz, consisted of Matej Tóth, Jared Tallent Evan Dunfee, Robert Heffernan, Andres Chocho, Horacio Nava, Yu Wei, Takayuki Tanii and Matteo Giupponi. Hirooki Arai bridged the gap and joined the lead pack.

The gap stayed consistent through 10K, but the next 5K, Diniz accelerated his pace, opening up the gap to 55 seconds. Diniz began to pick up lapped walkers already. By 20K, the pack was 1:24 behind Diniz and had over 2 minutes on the next group, with no stragglers in between. Leading up to the half way mark, Toth made a test surge, but Dunfee and the rest of the pack pulled it back except Tanii who fell off the back. Diniz had a 1:41 advantage at half way. Dunfee was the next to attack, picking up the pace by some 20 seconds over the next 5K. The back began to string out behind with Toth trying to cover the move, Tallent leading Heffernan, Arai, Yu and Chocho as the others remaining in contact. Dunfee broke away from the pack and continued to take time out of the gap to Diniz, bringing it down to 1:15.

Suddenly at the 33K mark, Diniz stopped in front of his coach. For an agonizing 1:15 Diniz stood by the railing. When Dunfee arrived, he patted Diniz on the pack and Diniz joined Dunfee in the lead. It was only until the next water stop that Diniz was able to struggle to stay with Dunfee, then the gap began to grow. Within the next half kilometer Chocho was shown the red paddle, asking him off the course. Before the 35K mark, Heffernan began to lose contact, further shrinking the pack. Diniz was caught by the next water stop, where he tried to join the back of the pack. Another 2 minutes and Diniz stopped again, falling backward onto the pavement, lying on the street. Attendants rushed to him with ice and water. Within 30 seconds, Diniz was back on his feet racing, now well behind the pack of four (Toth, Tallent, Arai and Yu) and even the straggler Heffernan. Coming in to the 39K mark, the pack quickly pulled in Dunfee. During the next kilo, Tallent was the next to attack, Arai tried to cover the move for a short distance but fell back to the pack. With the new injection of speed, Yu fell off the back. With Tallent pulling away, Toth and Arai walked together as Dunfee fell off the back. For the next 7K, Tallent extended his lead. Around 44K, Toth started to separate from Arai.

During the last half of the penultimate lap, Toth noticeably began to gain on Tallent, passing him just before the bell and pulling away. Behind them Dunfee began to see Arai come back into range. Within the next 500 meters, Dunfee had passed Arai. After falling back about 10 metres, Arai surged back on Dunfee but as he passed, Arai didn't use the width of the street, instead almost going deliberately at Dunfee's left side. The two made contact twice, Dunfee being knocked off stride as Arai suddenly gained a 10 metre advantage. A tired Dunfee struggled to find his form. Toth had built up enough of a lead he was celebrating before the crowd, accepting a Slovak flag more than 100 metres before the finish. Arai was gaining on Tallent but Tallent managed to hold his form together long enough to cross six seconds ahead of Arai. Dunfee wobbled across the finish line 14 seconds later, collapsing past the finish line. The first four finished within 40 seconds.[2]

While Toth continued to celebrate on his feet, medical attendants had to deal with the other three finishers exhausted on the ground at the finish line. Another five minutes and four more finishers later, Diniz crossed the finish line after struggling and stopping multiple times. 19 seconds after Diniz, Caio Bonfim crossed the line to a big cheer setting the new Brazilian record. Dunfee had also set the Canadian record. After the race, Athletics Canada filed a protest based on the contact with Arai, resulting in Arai's disqualification with Dunfee being awarded third place and the bronze medal. That decision was then appealed by Japan Association of Athletics Federations and was reversed.

Schedule

All times are Brazil time (UTC-3)

Date Time Round
19 August 2016 09:00Final

Records

Prior to this event, the world and Olympic records stood as follows:

World record  Yohann Diniz (FRA) 3:32:33 Zürich, Switzerland 15 August 2014
Olympic record  Jared Tallent (AUS) 3:36:53 London, Great Britain 11 August 2012
2016 world leading  Yohann Diniz (FRA) 3:37:48 Saint-Sébastien-sur-Loire, France 13 March 2016

Results

Key: NRNational record PBPersonal best SBSeasonal best ~Loss of contact >Failure to straighten knee
Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1st, gold medalist(s) Matej Tóth Slovakia 3:40:58
2nd, silver medalist(s) Jared Tallent Australia 3:41:16 SB
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Hirooki Arai Japan 3:41:24 SB
4 Evan Dunfee Canada 3:41:38 NR
5 Yu Wei China 3:43:00
6 Robert Heffernan Ireland 3:43:55
7 Håvard Haukenes Norway 3:46:33 PB
8 Yohann Diniz France 3:46:43
9 Caio Bonfim Brazil 3:47:02 NR
10 Chris Erickson Australia 3:48:40 PB
11 Wang Zhendong China 3:48:50
12 Quentin Rew New Zealand 3:49:32
13 Horacio Nava Mexico 3:50:53 ~
14 Takayuki Tanii Japan 3:51:00 ~
15 Adrian Blocki Poland 3:51:31
16 Omar Zepeda Mexico 3:51:35 ~
17 Jorge Armando Ruiz Colombia 3:51:42 > PB
18 Serhiy Budza Ukraine 3:53:22 SB
19 Brendan Boyce Ireland 3:53:59
20 Jesús Ángel García Spain 3:54:29
21 Marco de Luca Italy 3:54:40
22 Rafał Augustyn Poland 3:55:01 >
23 Jarkko Kinnunen Finland 3:55:43
24 Rafał Fedaczyński Poland 3:55:51
25 José Leyver Ojeda Mexico 3:56:07
26 Dušan Majdán Slovakia 3:58:25 >> SB
27 Koichiro Morioka Japan 3:58:59
28 Alexandros Papamichail Greece 3:59:21
29 Jonathan Rieckmann Brazil 4:01:52 ~
30 Ronald Quispe Bolivia 4:02:00 NR
31 Narcis Stefan Mihaila Romania 4:02:46 PB
32 Pedro Isidro Portugal 4:03:42 ~
33 Tadas Suskevicius Lithuania 4:04:10
34 Rolando Saquipay Ecuador 4:07:29
35 Sandeep Kumar India 4:07:55 ~
36 Miguel Carvalho Portugal 4:08:16
37 Arnis Rumbenieks Latvia 4:08:28
38 Marc Mundell South Africa 4:11:03
39 Ivan Banzeruk Ukraine 4:11:51
40 Brendon Reading Australia 4:13:02
41 Mario Alfonso Bran Guatemala 4:15:14 >
42 Vladimir Savanović Serbia 4:15:53
43 John Nunn United States 4:16:12
44 Bence Venyercsan Hungary 4:19:15
45 Claudio Villanueva Ecuador 4:19:33
46 Nenad Filipovic Serbia 4:25:41
47 Han Yucheng China 4:32:35 >>
48 Pavel Chihuan Peru 4:32:37 >
49 Predrag Filipović Serbia 4:39:48 >
Kim Hyun-sub South Korea DNF
Ivan Trotski Belarus DNF >
Ihor Hlavan Ukraine DNF
Miguel Ángel López Spain DNF
Carl Dohmann Germany DNF
Hagen Pohle Germany DNF >
Matteo Giupponi Italy DNF
Mathieu Bilodeau Canada DNF
Artur Mastianica Lithuania DNF
José Leonardo Montaña Colombia DNF >~
Alex Wright Ireland DNF
Jose Ignacio Diaz Spain DNF >>
Marius Cocioran Romania DNF
Sándor Rácz Hungary DNF
Luis Henry Campos Peru DNF >>
Mário dos Santos Brazil DNF
Veli-Matti Partanen Finland DNF
Yerenman Salazar Venezuela DNF
Joao Vieira Portugal DNF
Edward Araya Chile DQ >>~ R 230.7a
Teodorico Caporaso Italy DQ ~ ~ ~ R 230.7a
Andres Chocho Ecuador DQ ~ ~ ~ R 230.7a
Lukas Gdula Czech Republic DQ >>> R 230.7a
Dominic King Great Britain DQ >>> R 230.7a
Luis Lopez El Salvador DQ >~~ R 230.7a
Aleksi Ojala Finland DQ >>> R 230.7a
Park Chil-sung South Korea DQ ~ ~ ~ R 230.7a
Jaime Quiyuch Guatemala DQ >~> R 230.7a
James Rendon Colombia DQ ~ ~ ~ R 230.7a
Miklos Srp Hungary DQ >~> R 230.7a
Martin Tistan Slovakia DQ >>> R 230.7a

References

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