Athletics at the 1900 Summer Olympics – Men's marathon

athletics at the Olympics

The men's marathon was a track & field athletics event in the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris. The marathon was on July 19, 1900. There were 13 athletes. These athletes were from 5 nations. The marathon was 40.26 kilometres long.

Men's marathon
at the Games of the II Olympiad
Marathon 1900.jpg
The early stages of the race
VenueParis
DateJuly 19
Competitors14 from 5 nations
Winning time2:59:45
Medalists
Gold medal 
Silver medal 
Bronze medal 
«18961904»

The winner was Michel Théato. He was from Luxembourg and lived in Paris. At this time, competitors were not chosen by an Olympic Committee. This meant that Théato was on the French team. Later, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg made a complaintto the International Olympic Committee. They made a petition to change Théato's nationality to Luxembourg. The complaint was rejected in 2004.[1]

In 2021, IOC changed some of the nationalities of the athletes from the 1900 Games. Michel Théato was changed to be from Luxembourg.[2] This change in the IOC was later reversed.[3]

Background

change

This was the 2nd marathon in the Olympics. This is one of 12 athletic events that has been at every Summer Olympics. None of the runners in the 1896 marathon ran in this marathon. The marathon was a new event in 1896. It was not new anymore. The Boston Marathon had happened since 1897. The 1898 winner of the Boston Marathon (Ronald MacDonald) also ran in this event.

This was the first time that Canada, Great Britain, and Sweden ran in this event. France and the United States were the only countries that competed in the 1896 marathon and the 1900 marathon.

Competition

change

The marathon was a single race. At the time, there was not a standard distance for the marathon. In 1896, the course was 40 kilometres. The 1900 course was 40.26 kilometres. Now, the marathon distance is 42.195 kilometres. The course was 4 laps around the stadium track. Then, the athletes would run through Paris.[4]

Records

change

This was the World record and Olympic record before 1900. The times are in hours. The marathon distance was not standard. The world records would not be official in until 1924.

World record   Jack Caffery (CAN) 2:39:44 (40.23km)[5] Boston 19 April 1900[6][7]
Olympic record   Spyridon Louis (GRE) 2'58:50(*) Athens, Greece 10 April 1896 (NS)

(*) Distance was 40 kilometres

Schedule

change
Date Time Round
Thursday, 19 July 1900 14:30 Final

Summary

change

The marathon race began at 2:30 p.m.. The temperatures were 39 °C (102 °F [8]).

There were 20 runners that were supposed to run. Only 13 started the race. One runner dropped out after the first 4 laps around the track. Touquet-Daunis was in front of the race for some time. Eventually, he was too tired from the heat. He quit the race.

After that, Fast went in front. However, he was too tired from trying to run with Touquet-Daunis. At the end of the race, he was passed by Théato and Champion.

Results

change
Rank Athlete Nation Time
  Michel Théato   France 2:59:45
  Émile Champion   France 3:04:17
  Ernst Fast   Sweden 3:37:14
4 Eugène Besse   France 4:00:43
5 Arthur Newton   United States 4:04:12
6 Dick Grant   United States Unknown
7 Ronald J. MacDonald   Canada Unknown
Auguste Marchais   France DNF
Johan Nyström   Sweden DNF
E. Ion Pool   Great Britain DNF
Frederick Randall   Great Britain DNF
William Saward   Great Britain DNF
W. Taylor   Great Britain DNF[4]
Georges Touquet-Daunis   France DNF
Emilio Banfi   Italy DNS
John Cregan   United States DNS
Alexander Grant   Canada DNS
John Maguire   Great Britain DNS
Martens   France DNS
Jakub Wolf   Hungary DNS
Ettore Zilia   Italy DNS

Sources

change
Specific
  1. "Michel THEATO (1878-1919)". pierrelagrue-jo.com. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  2. "Paris 1900 Medal Table". Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee. Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  3. "Michel Théato IOC webpage". Olympics.com. International Olympic Committee.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Marathon, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  5. "Boston Marathon history - Boston Globe". archive.boston.com. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  6. "History | Boston Athletic Association". www.baa.org.
  7. "Champions | Boston Athletic Association". www.baa.org. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  8. USA Track & Field (2004). "2004 USA Olympic Team Trials: Men's Marathon Media Guide Supplement" (PDF). Santa Barbara, California: USA Track & Field. p. 11. Retrieved February 21, 2011.
General