Athletics at the 1968 Summer Olympics – Men's 200 metres

The men's 200 metres event at the 1968 Summer Olympics was held in Mexico City, Mexico. The final was won by 0.23 seconds by Tommie Smith in a time of 19.83, a new world record. However, the race is perhaps best known for what happened during the medal ceremony – the Black Power salute of Smith and bronze medallist John Carlos. The background, consequences, and legacy of the salute carried forward into subsequent Olympics and is perhaps the single most memorable event from these Olympics.

Men's 200 metres
at the Games of the XIX Olympiad
The medal award ceremony for the 200 metres. Tommie Smith (center) and John Carlos (right) showing the Black Power salute while silver medalist Peter Norman (left) wears an OPHR badge to show his support for the two Americans.
VenueEstadio Olímpico Universitario
Dates15–16 October
Competitors50 from 37 nations
Winning time19.83 WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Tommie Smith
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Peter Norman
 Australia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)John Carlos
 United States
← 1964
1972 →

The event started on 15 October and finished on 16 October.[1] There were 50 athletes from 37 nations competing.[2] The maximum number of athletes per nation had been set at 3 since the 1930 Olympic Congress. Smith's win was the second consecutive and 12th overall for the United States. Peter Norman's medal was the second for Australia in the men's 200 metres, after Stan Rowley's bronze 68 years earlier.

Background

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This was the 15th appearance of the event, which was not held at the first Olympics in 1896 but has been on the program ever since. Three of the eight finalists from the 1964 Games returned: bronze medalist Edwin Roberts of Trinidad and Tobago, fourth-place finisher Harry Jerome of Canada, and fifth-place finisher (and 1960 gold medalist) Livio Berruti of Italy.

Tommie Smith was the 1967 and 1968 AAU champion; John Carlos was the 1967 Pan American Games and 1968 U.S. Olympic trials winners (with a time that would have been a world record, but was not ratified because his shoes had too many spikes). The two were heavily favored, though had considered boycotting the Olympics to protest racial inequality in the United States.[2]

Barbados, British Honduras (Belize), the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, West Germany, Honduras, Nicaragua, Sudan, Tanzania, and the Virgin Islands each made their debut in the event. The United States made its 15th appearance, the only nation to have competed at each edition of the 200 metres to date.

Competition format

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The competition used the four round format introduced in 1920: heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. The "fastest loser" system introduced in 1960 was used again in the heats.

There were 7 heats of between 7 and 8 runners each, with the top 4 men in each advancing to the quarterfinals along with the next 4 fastest overall. The quarterfinals consisted of 4 heats of 8 athletes each; the 4 fastest men in each heat advanced to the semifinals. There were 2 semifinals, each with 8 runners. Again, the top 4 athletes advanced. The final had 8 runners. The races were run on a 400-metre track.[2]

Records

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

World record  Tommie Smith (USA)20.0y Sacramento, United States11 June 1966
Olympic record  Henry Carr (USA)20.3 Tokyo, Japan17 October 1964

Tommie Smith's 20.3 / 20.37 in the second heat matched the hand-timed Olympic record. Peter Norman broke that record with a 20.2 / 20.23 in the sixth heat. Smith's time in the third quarterfinal was 20.2 / 20.28, equaling the record. Mike Fray matched the old 20.3 second record in the fourth quarterfinal. In the first semifinal, Norman again ran a 20.2 (/ 20.22) but was behind John Carlos at 20.1 / 20.12 for another new Olympic record. Smith matched Carlos's hand-timing in the second semifinal, with 20.1 / 20.14. Smith then broke the 20-second barrier in the final, recording 19.8 hand-timed and 19.83 auto-timed for a new world record.

Schedule

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All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6)

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 15 October 196810:30
15:40
Heats
Quarterfinals
Wednesday, 16 October 196815:20
17:50
Semifinals
Final

Results

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Heats

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Heat 1

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1John Carlos  United States20.54Q
2Andrés Calonge  Argentina20.81Q
3Mani Jegathesan  Malaysia20.92Q, NR
4Livio Berruti  Italy21.06Q
5Valentin Maslakov  Soviet Union21.07q
6Norman Chihota  Tanzania21.28
7Canagasabai Kunalan  Singapore21.39
8Hadley Hinds  Barbados22.35

Heat 2

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Tommie Smith  United States20.37Q, =OR
2Charles Asati  Kenya20.66Q
3Jochen Eigenherr  West Germany20.69Q
4Edwin Roberts  Trinidad and Tobago20.69Q
5David Ejoke  Nigeria21.09q
6Edwin Johnson  Bahamas21.22q
7Kun Min-mu  Taiwan22.44

Heat 3

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Larry Questad  United States20.75Q
2Julius Sang  Kenya20.90Q
3Edward Romanowski  Poland20.95Q
4Miguel Angel González  Mexico21.31Q
5Jean-Louis Ravelomanantsoa  Madagascar21.53
6Norris Stubbs  Bahamas21.64
7Morgan Gesmalla  Sudan22.70

Heat 4

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Mike Fray  Jamaica20.62Q
2Winston Short  Trinidad and Tobago21.00Q
3Hansruedi Wiedmer  Switzerland21.06Q
4Bernard Nottage  Bahamas21.31Q
5Philippe Housiaux  Belgium21.41
6Porfirio Veras  Dominican Republic21.53
7Juan Argüello  Nicaragua22.80

Heat 5

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Iván Moreno  Chile20.93Q
2Jacques Carette  France20.97Q
3James Addy  Ghana21.00Q
4Fernando Acevedo  Peru21.02Q
5Harry Jerome  Canada21.22q
6William Dralu  Uganda21.38
7Colin Thurton  British Honduras22.14

Heat 6

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Peter Norman  Australia20.17Q, OR[3]
2Roger Bambuck  France20.61Q
3Dick Steane  Great Britain20.66Q
4Rajalingam Gunaratnam  Malaysia21.58Q
5Alberto Torres  Dominican Republic21.99
6José Astacio  El Salvador23.13
Juan Franceschi  Puerto RicoDNF

Heat 7

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Greg Lewis  Australia20.71Q
2Ralph Banthorpe  Great Britain20.73Q
3Nikolay Ivanov  Soviet Union20.78Q
4Pedro Grajales  Colombia21.07Q
5Gert Metz  West Germany21.24
6Carl Plaskett  Virgin Islands21.29
7Cristóbal Corrales  Honduras23.93

Quarterfinals

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Quarterfinal 1

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1John Carlos  United States20.69Q
2Greg Lewis  Australia20.81Q
3Dick Steane  Great Britain20.81Q
4Mani Jegathesan  Malaysia21.01Q
5Julius Sang  Kenya21.04
6Jacques Carette  France21.15
7Edwin Johnson  Bahamas21.41
8Harry Jerome  Canada21.43

Quarterfinal 2

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Peter Norman  Australia20.44Q
2Jochen Eigenherr  West Germany20.53Q
3Fernando Acevedo  Peru20.78Q
4Iván Moreno  Chile20.83Q
5Charles Asati  Kenya20.84
6Livio Berruti  Italy21.01
7Winston Short  Trinidad and Tobago21.51
8Rajalingam Gunaratnam  Malaysia21.52

Quarterfinal 3

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Tommie Smith  United States20.28Q, =OR
2Edwin Roberts  Trinidad and Tobago20.50Q
3Edward Romanowski  Poland20.85Q
4Nikolay Ivanov  Soviet Union20.90Q
5David Ejoke  Nigeria20.99
6Andrés Calonge  Argentina21.03
7Hansruedi Wiedmer  Switzerland21.42
8Miguel Angel González  Mexico21.57

Quarterfinal 4

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Mike Fray  Jamaica20.39Q
2Larry Questad  United States20.54Q
3Roger Bambuck  France20.63Q
4Ralph Banthorpe  Great Britain20.83Q
5James Addy  Ghana20.90
6Valentin Maslakov  Soviet Union20.96
7Pedro Grajales  Colombia21.05
8Bernard Nottage  Bahamas21.53

Semifinals

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Semifinal 1

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1John Carlos  United States20.12Q, OR
2Peter Norman  Australia20.22Q
3Mike Fray  Jamaica20.46Q
4Roger Bambuck  France20.47Q
5Iván Moreno  Chile20.84
6Dick Steane  Great Britain20.85
7Nikolay Ivanov  Soviet Union20.89
8Fernando Acevedo  Peru20.91

Semifinal 2

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
1Tommie Smith  United States20.14Q, =OR
2Edwin Roberts  Trinidad and Tobago20.44Q
3Larry Questad  United States20.48Q
4Jochen Eigenherr  West Germany20.49Q
5Greg Lewis  Australia20.53
6Edward Romanowski  Poland20.80
7Ralph Banthorpe  Great Britain20.88
8Mani Jegathesan  Malaysia21.05

Final

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RankAthleteNationTimeNotes
Tommie Smith  United States19.83WR
Peter Norman  Australia20.06NR
John Carlos  United States20.10
4Edwin Roberts  Trinidad and Tobago20.34
5Roger Bambuck  France20.51
6Larry Questad  United States20.62
7Mike Fray  Jamaica20.63
8Jochen Eigenherr  West Germany20.66

References

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  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1968 Mexico City Summer Games: Men's 200 metres". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "200 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  3. ^ Frost, Caroline (17 October 2008). "The other man on the podium". BBC News. Retrieved 24 May 2014.