Athletics at the 1972 Summer Olympics – Women's 800 metres

Women's 800 metres
at the Games of the XX Olympiad
VenueOlympic Stadium, Munich, West Germany
Date31 August 1972 & 3 September 1972
Medalists
   West Germany
   Soviet Union
   East Germany
Athletics at the
1972 Summer Olympics
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
10,000 m men
100 m hurdles women
110 m hurdles men
400 m hurdles men
3000 m
steeplechase
men
4×100 m relay men women
4×400 m relay men women
Road events
Marathon men
20 km walk men
50 km walk men
Field events
Long jump men women
Triple jump men
High jump men women
Pole vault men
Shot put men women
Discus throw men women
Javelin throw men women
Hammer throw men
Combined events
Pentathlon women
Decathlon men

These are the official results of the Women's 800 metres event at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich. The competition was held on 31 of August & 3 of September. The favorite coming into the Olympics was West German champion and world record holder Hildegard Falck. In the 1971 West German Championships she became the first woman to officially better two minutes. She was the pre Olympic favorite to win the gold on home soil, the rest of the field was wide open to claim the other podium spots.[1]

In the final, like the men's race, the favorite was the slowest starter, though Falck quickly moved into sixth place. By the end of the first lap the field was tightly packed, Ileana Silai, Vera Nikolić and Svetla Zlateva and three abreast for the lead at 58.31. At 500 metres, Falck decided to move and slightly accelerated away from Nijolė Sabaitė and Gunhild Hoffmeister but found herself blocked behind the wall. The wall began to break up during the final turn, Silai the first to start fading allowing Falck some running room, coming off the turn she accelerated into the lead. Pulling away from the field Falck relaxed to cruise across the finish line. Sabaitė made a late run at her from a huge deficit, as she came into view, Falck had to accelerate a little to hold her off for a narrow win. Hoffmeister followed Sabaitė in passing the pack for bronze, but was too far behind to be competitive for higher medals.

While the 2 minute barrier had been broken barely a year before this race, five women finished under 2 minutes here, with the remainder of the field bunched within .17 of a second of 2 minutes. While the world record was 1:58.5 (hand timed at the time), this electronically timed 1:58.55 was intrinsically faster, but that conversion was not included in record keeping. Zlateva would improve the world record the following year.

Heats

The top three runners in each heat (blue) and the next fastest (pink), advanced to the semifinal round.

Heat one

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Hildegard Falck West Germany 6 2:01.52
2 Madeline Manning United States 7 2:02.63
3 Cheryl Peasley Australia 8 2:03.11
4 Mary Tracey Ireland 3 2:04.18
5 Martine Duvivier France 2 2:04.87
6 Donata Govoni Italy 1 2:05.24
7 Elisabeth Neuenschwander Switzerland 4 2:06.89
- Arda Kalpakian Lebanon 5 DNS

Heat two

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time Notes
1 Svetla Zlateva Bulgaria 7 1:58.93 OR
2 Vera Nikolić Yugoslavia 6 1:59.62
3 Sylvia Schenk West Germany 1 2:02.22
4 Elżbieta Skowrońska Poland 2 2:03.26
5 Jenny Orr Australia 8 2:04.46
6 Cheryl Toussaint United States 4 2:08.90
7 Claire Walsh Ireland 3 2:08.98
8 Heather Gooding Barbados 5 2:19.69

Heat three

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Nijolė Sabaitė Soviet Union 4 2:01.50
2 Abby Hoffman Canada 5 2:01.57
3 Maria Sykora Austria 7 2:01.82
4 Gisela Ellenberger West Germany 1 2:01.92
5 Maritta Politz East Germany 3 2:02.40
6 Margaret Coomber Great Britain 2 2:02.99
7 Emesia Chizunga Malawi 6 2:19.22
- Malak El-Nasser Syria 8 DNF

Heat four

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Ileana Silai Romania 5 2:01.42
2 Annelise Damm Olesen Denmark 3 2:01.77
3 Magdolna Kulcsár Hungary 4 2:02.35
4 Patricia Cropper Great Britain 8 2:03.55
5 Vasilena Amzina Bulgaria 2 2:05.92
6 Marleen Verheuen Belgium 7 2:09.13
7 Raissa Ruus Soviet Union 1 2:11.18
8 Lee Chiu-Hsia Republic of China 6 2:11.81

Heat five

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Nina Morhunova Soviet Union 6 2:02.64
2 Gunhild Hoffmeister East Germany 7 2:03.15
3 Rosemary Stirling Great Britain 1 2:03.64
4 Sue Haden New Zealand 4 2:04.86
5 Chereno Maiyo Kenya 5 2:04.86
6 Wendy Koenig United States 3 2:08.71
7 Malika Hadky Morocco 2 2:12.46

Semifinals

Top four in each heat advanced to the final round.

Heat one

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Nijolė Sabaitė Soviet Union 3 2:00.90
2 Gunhild Hoffmeister East Germany 7 2:01.21
3 Abby Hoffman Canada 4 2:01.37
4 Vera Nikolić Yugoslavia 1 2:01.49
5 Sylvia Schenk West Germany 2 2:01.50
6 Annelisa Damm Olesen Denmark 5 2:04.19
7 Cheryl Peasley Australia 8 2:04.56
- Magdolna Kulcsár Hungary 6 DNS

Heat two

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time
1 Hildegard Falck West Germany 5 2:01.41
2 Svetla Zlateva Bulgaria 3 2:01.66
3 Ileana Silai Romania 8 2:01.85
4 Rosemary Stirling Great Britain 6 2:02.36
5 Madeline Manning United States 2 2:02.39
6 Maria Sykora Austria 4 2:02.44
7 Gisela Ellenberger West Germany 7 2:02.97
8 Nina Morhunova Soviet Union 1 2:04.93

Final

Rank Name Nationality Lane Time Notes
1st, gold medalist(s) Hildegard Falck West Germany 1 1:58.55 OR
2nd, silver medalist(s) Nijolė Sabaitė Soviet Union 5 1:58.65
3rd, bronze medalist(s) Gunhild Hoffmeister East Germany 6 1:59.16
4 Svetla Zlateva Bulgaria 2 1:59.72
5 Vera Nikolić Yugoslavia 8 1:59.98
6 Ileana Silai Romania 3 2:00.04
7 Rosemary Stirling Great Britain 4 2:00.15
8 Abby Hoffman Canada 7 2:00.17

Key: OR = Olympic record; DNS = did not start; DNF = did not finish

References

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