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Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metres

These are the official results of the men's 100 metres event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. There were a total number of 106 participating athletes from 75 nations, with twelve heats in round 1, five quarterfinals, two semifinals and a final.[1] Each nation was limited to 3 athletes per rules in force since the 1930 Olympic Congress. The event was won by Donovan Bailey of Canada, the nation's first title in the event since Percy Williams won it in 1928.

Men's 100 metres
at the Games of the XXVI Olympiad
VenueCentennial Olympic Stadium
DateJuly 26–27
Competitors106 from 75 nations
Winning time9.84 WR
Medalists
← 1992
2000 →
Official Video Highlights @ 1:04:34

Summary edit

Canada's Donovan Bailey won the gold medal, breaking the world record that Leroy Burrell of the United States had set in 1994. Namibia's Frankie Fredericks won the silver medal for a second consecutive Olympics, while Trinidad and Tobago sprinter Ato Boldon won the bronze. It was Trinidad and Tobago's first medal in the event since Hasely Crawford's win in 1976. For Fredericks and Boldon, this was the first of two events where they both medaled behind a world record setting run; Fredericks took silver and Boldon bronze in the 200 metre event where Michael Johnson ran 19.32 to win.

At first Bailey who was going to be the eventual winner did not get a great start. Mitchell and Boldon got terrific starts. Boldon led the race till the 60 metre mark, the point where Canadian Donovan Bailey was gaining on the field. He had an unbelievable surge with a top end speed of over 12 m/s, world record at that time. He won the race with a new 100 metres men's world record time of 9.84 which was 100th of a second faster than the previous record. Fredericks of Namibia edged past Boldon of Trinidad to take silver. Linford Christie, the defending Olympic Champion, was watching the entire event unfold from the point of view of a spectator, having been disqualified after two false starts, the second of which was controversial.[2]

This marked the first time since 1976 (and the boycotted 1980 Games) that no American runner medaled in the 100 metres, with 1992 bronze medalist Dennis Mitchell placing fourth behind Boldon. Counting 1980, it was only the fourth time that the United States missed the podium.

Background edit

This was the twenty-third time the event was held, having appeared at every Olympics since the first in 1896. For the first time, all three medalists from the previous Games (Great Britain's Linford Christie, Namibia's Frankie Fredericks, and the United States's Dennis Mitchell) returned. Indeed, seven of the eight finalists from 1992 were back in 1996—the other returners were Canadian Bruny Surin, Nigerians Olapade Adeniken and Davidson Ezinwa, and Jamaican Raymond Stewart; only Leroy Burrell did not return to the 100 metres in 1996. Donovan Bailey of Canada had won the 1995 world championships, followed by countryman Surin and then Trinidad and Tobago's Ato Boldon. Christie was the reigning Commonwealth and European champion, and had won the 1993 world championship.[1]

Azerbaijan, Comoros, Guinea-Bissau, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, São Tomé and Príncipe, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan appeared in the event for the first time. Russia appeared independently for the first time since 1912 and Latvia did so for the first time since 1924. The United States made its 22nd appearance in the event, most of any country, having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games.

Competition format edit

The event retained the same basic four round format introduced in 1920: heats, quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final. The "fastest loser" system, introduced in 1968, was used again to ensure that the quarterfinals and subsequent rounds had exactly 8 runners per heat; this time, the system was used in both the heats and quarterfinals.

The first round consisted of 12 heats, each with 9 athletes scheduled (2 heats had 8 actually run due to withdrawals). The top three runners in each heat advanced, along with the next four fastest runners overall. This made 40 quarterfinalists, who were divided into 5 heats of 8 runners. The top three runners in each quarterfinal advanced, with one "fastest loser" place. The 16 semifinalists competed in two heats of 8, with the top four in each semifinal advancing to the eight-man final.[1][3]

Records edit

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1996 Summer Olympics.

World Record 9.85   Leroy Burrell Lausanne (SUI) July 6, 1994
Olympic Record 9.92   Carl Lewis Seoul (KOR) September 24, 1988

Donovan Bailey's 9.84 seconds in the final broke both the world and Olympic records.

Schedule edit

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Date Time Round
Friday, 26 July 1996 11:00
18:30
Heats
Quarterfinals
Saturday, 27 July 1996 19:30
21:00
Semifinals
Final

Results edit

Round 1 edit

Heat 1 edit

Wells had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Reaction Time Notes
1 6 Emmanuel Tuffour   Ghana 0.187 10.15 Q
2 5 Bruny Surin   Canada 0.168 10.18 Q
3 2 Andrey Fedoriv   Russia 0.159 10.39 Q
4 1 Renward Wells   Bahamas 0.156 10.48
5 3 Chithaka De Soyza   Sri Lanka 0.173 10.55
6 7 Luís Cunha   Portugal 0.149 10.65
7 9 Patrick Mocci Roumbe   Gabon 0.185 10.87
8 8 Nordine Ould Menira   Mauritania 0.186 10.95
9 4 Bonifacio Edu   Equatorial Guinea 0.198 11.87
Wind: −0.9 m/s

Heat 2 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 1 Davidson Ezinwa   Nigeria 10.03 Q
2 2 Jon Drummond   United States 10.08 Q
3 9 Erik Wymeersch   Belgium 10.24 Q
4 5 Leon Gordon   Jamaica 10.48
5 6 Stefan Burkart   Switzerland 10.49
6 7 Barnabe Jolicoeur   Mauritius 10.57
7 4 Bimal Tarafdar   Bangladesh 10.98
8 3 Abdul Ghafoor   Afghanistan 12.20
8 Andrew Tynes   Bahamas DNS

Heat 3 edit

Markoullides had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 5 Ato Boldon   Trinidad and Tobago 10.06 Q
2 7 Anninos Markoullides   Cyprus 10.26 Q
3 2 Kim Collins   Saint Kitts and Nevis 10.27 Q
4 8 Augustine Nketia   New Zealand 10.34 q
5 4 Raymond Stewart   Jamaica 10.38 q
6 9 Stefano Tilli   Italy 10.38
7 6 Jamal Al-Saffar   Saudi Arabia 10.44
8 3 Amarildo Almeida   Guinea-Bissau 10.85
9 1 Mohamed Bakar   Comoros 11.02

Heat 4 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 7 Michael Green   Jamaica 10.16 Q
2 9 Patrick Stevens   Belgium 10.21 Q
3 8 Serhiy Osovych   Ukraine 10.29 Q
4 1 Ezio Madonia   Italy 10.33 q
5 2 Edson Ribeiro   Brazil 10.39
6 3 Chris Donaldson   New Zealand 10.39
7 5 Patrik Strenius   Sweden 10.48
8 4 Toluta'u Koula   Tonga 10.71
9 6 Vladislav Chernobay   Kyrgyzstan 10.88

Heat 5 edit

Borrega had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 2 Deji Aliu   Nigeria 10.34 Q
2 8 Ousmane Diarra   Mali 10.34 Q
3 3 Wenzhong Chen   China 10.37 Q
4 6 Manuel Borrega   Spain 10.52
5 7 Hiroyasu Tsuchie   Japan 10.58
6 9 Ruben Benitez   El Salvador 10.74
7 1 Vitaly Medvedev   Kazakhstan 10.90
8 4 Mitchell Peters   Virgin Islands 11.12
9 5 Bouriema Kimba   Niger 11.24

Heat 6 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 4 Dennis Mitchell   United States 10.24 Q
2 7 Ian Mackie   Great Britain 10.27 Q
3 3 Marc Blume   Germany 10.33 Q
4 9 Alexandros Terzian   Greece 10.48
5 1 Franck Amegnigan   Togo 10.51
6 6 Rod Mapstone   Australia 10.56
7 8 Sayon Cooper   Liberia 10.58
8 2 Pa Modou Gai   The Gambia 10.72
9 5 Jorge Castellon   Bolivia 10.74

Heat 7 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 1 Obadele Thompson   Barbados 10.33 Q
2 5 Kostyantyn Rurak   Ukraine 10.37 Q
3 9 Pascal Theophile   France 10.41 Q
4 2 Carlos Gats   Argentina 10.57
5 3 Joel Mascoll   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 10.64
6 6 Anvar Kuchmuradov   Uzbekistan 10.71
7 4 Arif Akhundov   Azerbaijan 11.11
8 8 Khaled Othman   Libya 11.65
9 7 Jean-Olivier Zirignon   Ivory Coast 22.69

Heat 8 edit

Silva had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 7 Michael Marsh   United States 10.14 Q
2 8 Darren Braithwaite   Great Britain 10.29 Q
3 9 Kirk Cummins   Barbados 10.47 Q
4 5 Torbjörn Eriksson   Sweden 10.49
5 6 Paul Henderson   Australia 10.52
6 3 Alberto Mendez   Dominican Republic 10.60
7 2 Arnaldo da Silva   Brazil 10.62
8 1 Mario Bonello   Malta 10.89
9 4 Odair Baia   São Tomé and Príncipe 11.05

Heat 9 edit

Douhou had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 8 André da Silva   Brazil 10.25 Q
2 5 Linford Christie   Great Britain 10.26 Q
3 6 Yiannis Zisimides   Cyprus 10.32 Q
4 1 Venancio Jose   Spain 10.34 q
5 9 Hamed Douhou   Ivory Coast 10.53
6 7 Robert Dennis   Liberia 10.65
7 2 Donald Onchiri   Kenya 10.66
8 3 Sun-Kuk Jin   South Korea 10.73
9 4 Peter Pulu   Papua New Guinea 10.76

Heat 10 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 5 Eric Nkansah   Ghana 10.26 Q
2 2 Needy Guims   France 10.39 Q
3 1 Olapade Adeniken   Nigeria 10.41 Q
4 7 Jone Delai   Fiji 10.42
5 8 Vitaliy Savin   Kazakhstan 10.52
6 9 Watson Nyambek   Malaysia 10.55
7 6 Neil Ryan   Ireland 10.78
8 3 Javier Verne   Peru 10.91
9 4 Van Lam Hai   Vietnam 11.14

Heat 11 edit

Karlsson had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3 Donovan Bailey   Canada 10.24 Q
2 1 Nobuharu Asahara   Japan 10.28 Q
3 2 Peter Karlsson   Sweden 10.35 Q
4 6 Sanusi Turay   Sierra Leone 10.39
5 9 Sergejs Insakovs   Latvia 10.42
6 8 Haralambos Papadias   Greece 10.46
7 7 Hsin-Ping Huang   Chinese Taipei 10.70
8 4 Eric Agueh   Benin 10.98
5 Alfayaya Embalo   Cape Verde DNS

Heat 12 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 4 Frank Fredericks   Namibia 10.32 Q
2 1 Glenroy Gilbert   Canada 10.34 Q
3 3 Alexandros Yenovelis   Greece 10.39 Q
4 6 Frutos Feo   Spain 10.56
5 8 Benjamin Sirimou   Cameroon 10.58
6 7 Hamed Sadeq   Kuwait 10.81
7 9 Devon Bean   Bermuda 10.89
8 5 Robert Loua   Guinea 11.21
9 2 Mark Sherwin   Cook Islands 11.41

Quarterfinals edit

Quarterfinal 1 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 5 Ato Boldon   Trinidad and Tobago 9.95 Q
2 3 Nobuharu Asahara   Japan 10.19 Q
3 6 Eric Nkansah   Ghana 10.24 Q
4 4 Deji Aliu   Nigeria 10.26
5 7 Glenroy Gilbert   Canada 10.28
6 8 Marc Blume   Germany 10.33
7 1 Andrey Fedoriv   Russia 10.34
8 2 Augustine Nketia   New Zealand 10.35

Quarterfinal 2 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 6 Linford Christie   Great Britain 10.03 Q
2 5 Donovan Bailey   Canada 10.05 Q
3 3 Jon Drummond   United States 10.17 Q
4 4 Emmanuel Tuffour   Ghana 10.18 q
5 2 Erik Wymeersch   Belgium 10.37
6 7 Olapade Adeniken   Nigeria 10.38
7 8 Needy Guims   France 10.43
8 1 Ezio Madonia   Italy 10.43

Quarterfinal 3 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 5 Frank Fredericks   Namibia 9.93 Q
2 3 Davidson Ezinwa   Nigeria 10.08 Q
3 4 Obadele Thompson   Barbados 10.14 Q
4 8 Raymond Stewart   Jamaica 10.18
5 7 Peter Karlsson   Sweden 10.24
6 6 Darren Braithwaite   Great Britain 10.27
7 2 Wenzhong Chen   China 10.29
8 1 Ousmane Diarra   Mali 10.38

Quarterfinal 4 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 6 Dennis Mitchell   United States 10.09 Q
2 3 Michael Green   Jamaica 10.11 Q
3 4 Anninos Markoullides   Cyprus 10.23 Q
4 5 Patrick Stevens   Belgium 10.31
5 2 Kim Collins   Saint Kitts and Nevis 10.34
6 1 Pascal Theophile   France 10.38
7 7 Serhiy Osovych   Ukraine 10.38
8 8 Kirk Cummins   Barbados 10.45

Quarterfinal 5 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 6 Michael Marsh   United States 10.04 Q
2 4 Bruny Surin   Canada 10.13 Q
3 5 Ian Mackie   Great Britain 10.25 Q
4 3 André da Silva   Brazil 10.26
5 2 Alexandros Yenovelis   Greece 10.31
6 1 Venancio Jose   Spain 10.46
7 7 Kostyantyn Rurak   Ukraine 10.47
8 8 Yiannis Zisimides   Cyprus 10.47

Semifinals edit

Semifinal 1 edit

Bailey had one false start (a second would have resulted in disqualification).

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 5 Frank Fredericks   Namibia 9.94 Q
2 3 Donovan Bailey   Canada 10.00 Q
3 6 Michael Marsh   United States 10.08 Q
4 4 Michael Green   Jamaica 10.11 Q
5 1 Nobuharu Asahara   Japan 10.16
6 8 Obadele Thompson   Barbados 10.16
7 2 Emmanuel Tuffour   Ghana 10.22
8 7 Anninos Markoullides   Cyprus 10.36

Semifinal 2 edit

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
1 3 Ato Boldon   Trinidad and Tobago 9.93 Q
2 5 Dennis Mitchell   United States 10.00 Q
3 6 Linford Christie   Great Britain 10.04 Q
4 4 Davidson Ezinwa   Nigeria 10.04 Q
5 1 Bruny Surin   Canada 10.13
6 2 Jon Drummond   United States 10.16
7 8 Eric Nkansah   Ghana 10.26
7 Ian Mackie   Great Britain DNS

Final edit

The final was held on July 27, 1996. Christie was disqualified after two false starts. Boldon also had one false start.[4]

Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes
  6 Donovan Bailey   Canada 9.84 WR
  5 Frank Fredericks   Namibia 9.89
  3 Ato Boldon   Trinidad and Tobago 9.90
4 4 Dennis Mitchell   United States 9.99
5 1 Michael Marsh   United States 10.00
6 7 Davidson Ezinwa   Nigeria 10.14
7 8 Michael Green   Jamaica 10.16
2 Linford Christie   Great Britain DSQ

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "100 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  2. ^ Thomsen, Ian (29 July 1996). "Chaotic 100 Meters Ends with Record". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Official Report, vol. 3, pp. 68–69.
  4. ^ Official Report, vol. 3, p. 69.
  • Official Report

athletics, 1996, summer, olympics, metres, these, official, results, metres, event, 1996, summer, olympics, atlanta, there, were, total, number, participating, athletes, from, nations, with, twelve, heats, round, five, quarterfinals, semifinals, final, each, n. These are the official results of the men s 100 metres event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta There were a total number of 106 participating athletes from 75 nations with twelve heats in round 1 five quarterfinals two semifinals and a final 1 Each nation was limited to 3 athletes per rules in force since the 1930 Olympic Congress The event was won by Donovan Bailey of Canada the nation s first title in the event since Percy Williams won it in 1928 Men s 100 metresat the Games of the XXVI OlympiadVenueCentennial Olympic StadiumDateJuly 26 27Competitors106 from 75 nationsWinning time9 84 WRMedalistsDonovan Bailey CanadaFrank Fredericks NamibiaAto Boldon Trinidad and Tobago 19922000 Official Video Highlights 1 04 34 Contents 1 Summary 2 Background 3 Competition format 4 Records 5 Schedule 6 Results 6 1 Round 1 6 1 1 Heat 1 6 1 2 Heat 2 6 1 3 Heat 3 6 1 4 Heat 4 6 1 5 Heat 5 6 1 6 Heat 6 6 1 7 Heat 7 6 1 8 Heat 8 6 1 9 Heat 9 6 1 10 Heat 10 6 1 11 Heat 11 6 1 12 Heat 12 6 2 Quarterfinals 6 2 1 Quarterfinal 1 6 2 2 Quarterfinal 2 6 2 3 Quarterfinal 3 6 2 4 Quarterfinal 4 6 2 5 Quarterfinal 5 6 3 Semifinals 6 3 1 Semifinal 1 6 3 2 Semifinal 2 6 4 Final 7 ReferencesSummary editCanada s Donovan Bailey won the gold medal breaking the world record that Leroy Burrell of the United States had set in 1994 Namibia s Frankie Fredericks won the silver medal for a second consecutive Olympics while Trinidad and Tobago sprinter Ato Boldon won the bronze It was Trinidad and Tobago s first medal in the event since Hasely Crawford s win in 1976 For Fredericks and Boldon this was the first of two events where they both medaled behind a world record setting run Fredericks took silver and Boldon bronze in the 200 metre event where Michael Johnson ran 19 32 to win At first Bailey who was going to be the eventual winner did not get a great start Mitchell and Boldon got terrific starts Boldon led the race till the 60 metre mark the point where Canadian Donovan Bailey was gaining on the field He had an unbelievable surge with a top end speed of over 12 m s world record at that time He won the race with a new 100 metres men s world record time of 9 84 which was 100th of a second faster than the previous record Fredericks of Namibia edged past Boldon of Trinidad to take silver Linford Christie the defending Olympic Champion was watching the entire event unfold from the point of view of a spectator having been disqualified after two false starts the second of which was controversial 2 This marked the first time since 1976 and the boycotted 1980 Games that no American runner medaled in the 100 metres with 1992 bronze medalist Dennis Mitchell placing fourth behind Boldon Counting 1980 it was only the fourth time that the United States missed the podium Background editThis was the twenty third time the event was held having appeared at every Olympics since the first in 1896 For the first time all three medalists from the previous Games Great Britain s Linford Christie Namibia s Frankie Fredericks and the United States s Dennis Mitchell returned Indeed seven of the eight finalists from 1992 were back in 1996 the other returners were Canadian Bruny Surin Nigerians Olapade Adeniken and Davidson Ezinwa and Jamaican Raymond Stewart only Leroy Burrell did not return to the 100 metres in 1996 Donovan Bailey of Canada had won the 1995 world championships followed by countryman Surin and then Trinidad and Tobago s Ato Boldon Christie was the reigning Commonwealth and European champion and had won the 1993 world championship 1 Azerbaijan Comoros Guinea Bissau Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Libya Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sao Tome and Principe Ukraine and Uzbekistan appeared in the event for the first time Russia appeared independently for the first time since 1912 and Latvia did so for the first time since 1924 The United States made its 22nd appearance in the event most of any country having missed only the boycotted 1980 Games Competition format editThe event retained the same basic four round format introduced in 1920 heats quarterfinals semifinals and a final The fastest loser system introduced in 1968 was used again to ensure that the quarterfinals and subsequent rounds had exactly 8 runners per heat this time the system was used in both the heats and quarterfinals The first round consisted of 12 heats each with 9 athletes scheduled 2 heats had 8 actually run due to withdrawals The top three runners in each heat advanced along with the next four fastest runners overall This made 40 quarterfinalists who were divided into 5 heats of 8 runners The top three runners in each quarterfinal advanced with one fastest loser place The 16 semifinalists competed in two heats of 8 with the top four in each semifinal advancing to the eight man final 1 3 Records editThese were the standing world and Olympic records in seconds prior to the 1996 Summer Olympics World Record 9 85 nbsp Leroy Burrell Lausanne SUI July 6 1994Olympic Record 9 92 nbsp Carl Lewis Seoul KOR September 24 1988Donovan Bailey s 9 84 seconds in the final broke both the world and Olympic records Schedule editAll times are Eastern Daylight Time UTC 4 Date Time RoundFriday 26 July 1996 11 0018 30 HeatsQuarterfinalsSaturday 27 July 1996 19 3021 00 SemifinalsFinalResults editRound 1 edit Heat 1 edit Wells had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Reaction Time Notes1 6 Emmanuel Tuffour nbsp Ghana 0 187 10 15 Q2 5 Bruny Surin nbsp Canada 0 168 10 18 Q3 2 Andrey Fedoriv nbsp Russia 0 159 10 39 Q4 1 Renward Wells nbsp Bahamas 0 156 10 485 3 Chithaka De Soyza nbsp Sri Lanka 0 173 10 556 7 Luis Cunha nbsp Portugal 0 149 10 657 9 Patrick Mocci Roumbe nbsp Gabon 0 185 10 878 8 Nordine Ould Menira nbsp Mauritania 0 186 10 959 4 Bonifacio Edu nbsp Equatorial Guinea 0 198 11 87Wind 0 9 m sHeat 2 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 1 Davidson Ezinwa nbsp Nigeria 10 03 Q2 2 Jon Drummond nbsp United States 10 08 Q3 9 Erik Wymeersch nbsp Belgium 10 24 Q4 5 Leon Gordon nbsp Jamaica 10 485 6 Stefan Burkart nbsp Switzerland 10 496 7 Barnabe Jolicoeur nbsp Mauritius 10 577 4 Bimal Tarafdar nbsp Bangladesh 10 988 3 Abdul Ghafoor nbsp Afghanistan 12 20 8 Andrew Tynes nbsp Bahamas DNSHeat 3 edit Markoullides had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 5 Ato Boldon nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 10 06 Q2 7 Anninos Markoullides nbsp Cyprus 10 26 Q3 2 Kim Collins nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 10 27 Q4 8 Augustine Nketia nbsp New Zealand 10 34 q5 4 Raymond Stewart nbsp Jamaica 10 38 q6 9 Stefano Tilli nbsp Italy 10 387 6 Jamal Al Saffar nbsp Saudi Arabia 10 448 3 Amarildo Almeida nbsp Guinea Bissau 10 859 1 Mohamed Bakar nbsp Comoros 11 02Heat 4 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 7 Michael Green nbsp Jamaica 10 16 Q2 9 Patrick Stevens nbsp Belgium 10 21 Q3 8 Serhiy Osovych nbsp Ukraine 10 29 Q4 1 Ezio Madonia nbsp Italy 10 33 q5 2 Edson Ribeiro nbsp Brazil 10 396 3 Chris Donaldson nbsp New Zealand 10 397 5 Patrik Strenius nbsp Sweden 10 488 4 Toluta u Koula nbsp Tonga 10 719 6 Vladislav Chernobay nbsp Kyrgyzstan 10 88Heat 5 edit Borrega had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 2 Deji Aliu nbsp Nigeria 10 34 Q2 8 Ousmane Diarra nbsp Mali 10 34 Q3 3 Wenzhong Chen nbsp China 10 37 Q4 6 Manuel Borrega nbsp Spain 10 525 7 Hiroyasu Tsuchie nbsp Japan 10 586 9 Ruben Benitez nbsp El Salvador 10 747 1 Vitaly Medvedev nbsp Kazakhstan 10 908 4 Mitchell Peters nbsp Virgin Islands 11 129 5 Bouriema Kimba nbsp Niger 11 24Heat 6 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 4 Dennis Mitchell nbsp United States 10 24 Q2 7 Ian Mackie nbsp Great Britain 10 27 Q3 3 Marc Blume nbsp Germany 10 33 Q4 9 Alexandros Terzian nbsp Greece 10 485 1 Franck Amegnigan nbsp Togo 10 516 6 Rod Mapstone nbsp Australia 10 567 8 Sayon Cooper nbsp Liberia 10 588 2 Pa Modou Gai nbsp The Gambia 10 729 5 Jorge Castellon nbsp Bolivia 10 74Heat 7 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 1 Obadele Thompson nbsp Barbados 10 33 Q2 5 Kostyantyn Rurak nbsp Ukraine 10 37 Q3 9 Pascal Theophile nbsp France 10 41 Q4 2 Carlos Gats nbsp Argentina 10 575 3 Joel Mascoll nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 10 646 6 Anvar Kuchmuradov nbsp Uzbekistan 10 717 4 Arif Akhundov nbsp Azerbaijan 11 118 8 Khaled Othman nbsp Libya 11 659 7 Jean Olivier Zirignon nbsp Ivory Coast 22 69Heat 8 edit Silva had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 7 Michael Marsh nbsp United States 10 14 Q2 8 Darren Braithwaite nbsp Great Britain 10 29 Q3 9 Kirk Cummins nbsp Barbados 10 47 Q4 5 Torbjorn Eriksson nbsp Sweden 10 495 6 Paul Henderson nbsp Australia 10 526 3 Alberto Mendez nbsp Dominican Republic 10 607 2 Arnaldo da Silva nbsp Brazil 10 628 1 Mario Bonello nbsp Malta 10 899 4 Odair Baia nbsp Sao Tome and Principe 11 05Heat 9 edit Douhou had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 8 Andre da Silva nbsp Brazil 10 25 Q2 5 Linford Christie nbsp Great Britain 10 26 Q3 6 Yiannis Zisimides nbsp Cyprus 10 32 Q4 1 Venancio Jose nbsp Spain 10 34 q5 9 Hamed Douhou nbsp Ivory Coast 10 536 7 Robert Dennis nbsp Liberia 10 657 2 Donald Onchiri nbsp Kenya 10 668 3 Sun Kuk Jin nbsp South Korea 10 739 4 Peter Pulu nbsp Papua New Guinea 10 76Heat 10 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 5 Eric Nkansah nbsp Ghana 10 26 Q2 2 Needy Guims nbsp France 10 39 Q3 1 Olapade Adeniken nbsp Nigeria 10 41 Q4 7 Jone Delai nbsp Fiji 10 425 8 Vitaliy Savin nbsp Kazakhstan 10 526 9 Watson Nyambek nbsp Malaysia 10 557 6 Neil Ryan nbsp Ireland 10 788 3 Javier Verne nbsp Peru 10 919 4 Van Lam Hai nbsp Vietnam 11 14Heat 11 edit Karlsson had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 3 Donovan Bailey nbsp Canada 10 24 Q2 1 Nobuharu Asahara nbsp Japan 10 28 Q3 2 Peter Karlsson nbsp Sweden 10 35 Q4 6 Sanusi Turay nbsp Sierra Leone 10 395 9 Sergejs Insakovs nbsp Latvia 10 426 8 Haralambos Papadias nbsp Greece 10 467 7 Hsin Ping Huang nbsp Chinese Taipei 10 708 4 Eric Agueh nbsp Benin 10 98 5 Alfayaya Embalo nbsp Cape Verde DNSHeat 12 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 4 Frank Fredericks nbsp Namibia 10 32 Q2 1 Glenroy Gilbert nbsp Canada 10 34 Q3 3 Alexandros Yenovelis nbsp Greece 10 39 Q4 6 Frutos Feo nbsp Spain 10 565 8 Benjamin Sirimou nbsp Cameroon 10 586 7 Hamed Sadeq nbsp Kuwait 10 817 9 Devon Bean nbsp Bermuda 10 898 5 Robert Loua nbsp Guinea 11 219 2 Mark Sherwin nbsp Cook Islands 11 41Quarterfinals edit Quarterfinal 1 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 5 Ato Boldon nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 9 95 Q2 3 Nobuharu Asahara nbsp Japan 10 19 Q3 6 Eric Nkansah nbsp Ghana 10 24 Q4 4 Deji Aliu nbsp Nigeria 10 265 7 Glenroy Gilbert nbsp Canada 10 286 8 Marc Blume nbsp Germany 10 337 1 Andrey Fedoriv nbsp Russia 10 348 2 Augustine Nketia nbsp New Zealand 10 35Quarterfinal 2 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 6 Linford Christie nbsp Great Britain 10 03 Q2 5 Donovan Bailey nbsp Canada 10 05 Q3 3 Jon Drummond nbsp United States 10 17 Q4 4 Emmanuel Tuffour nbsp Ghana 10 18 q5 2 Erik Wymeersch nbsp Belgium 10 376 7 Olapade Adeniken nbsp Nigeria 10 387 8 Needy Guims nbsp France 10 438 1 Ezio Madonia nbsp Italy 10 43Quarterfinal 3 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 5 Frank Fredericks nbsp Namibia 9 93 Q2 3 Davidson Ezinwa nbsp Nigeria 10 08 Q3 4 Obadele Thompson nbsp Barbados 10 14 Q4 8 Raymond Stewart nbsp Jamaica 10 185 7 Peter Karlsson nbsp Sweden 10 246 6 Darren Braithwaite nbsp Great Britain 10 277 2 Wenzhong Chen nbsp China 10 298 1 Ousmane Diarra nbsp Mali 10 38Quarterfinal 4 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 6 Dennis Mitchell nbsp United States 10 09 Q2 3 Michael Green nbsp Jamaica 10 11 Q3 4 Anninos Markoullides nbsp Cyprus 10 23 Q4 5 Patrick Stevens nbsp Belgium 10 315 2 Kim Collins nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 10 346 1 Pascal Theophile nbsp France 10 387 7 Serhiy Osovych nbsp Ukraine 10 388 8 Kirk Cummins nbsp Barbados 10 45Quarterfinal 5 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 6 Michael Marsh nbsp United States 10 04 Q2 4 Bruny Surin nbsp Canada 10 13 Q3 5 Ian Mackie nbsp Great Britain 10 25 Q4 3 Andre da Silva nbsp Brazil 10 265 2 Alexandros Yenovelis nbsp Greece 10 316 1 Venancio Jose nbsp Spain 10 467 7 Kostyantyn Rurak nbsp Ukraine 10 478 8 Yiannis Zisimides nbsp Cyprus 10 47Semifinals edit Semifinal 1 edit Bailey had one false start a second would have resulted in disqualification Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 5 Frank Fredericks nbsp Namibia 9 94 Q2 3 Donovan Bailey nbsp Canada 10 00 Q3 6 Michael Marsh nbsp United States 10 08 Q4 4 Michael Green nbsp Jamaica 10 11 Q5 1 Nobuharu Asahara nbsp Japan 10 166 8 Obadele Thompson nbsp Barbados 10 167 2 Emmanuel Tuffour nbsp Ghana 10 228 7 Anninos Markoullides nbsp Cyprus 10 36Semifinal 2 edit Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes1 3 Ato Boldon nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 9 93 Q2 5 Dennis Mitchell nbsp United States 10 00 Q3 6 Linford Christie nbsp Great Britain 10 04 Q4 4 Davidson Ezinwa nbsp Nigeria 10 04 Q5 1 Bruny Surin nbsp Canada 10 136 2 Jon Drummond nbsp United States 10 167 8 Eric Nkansah nbsp Ghana 10 26 7 Ian Mackie nbsp Great Britain DNSFinal edit The final was held on July 27 1996 Christie was disqualified after two false starts Boldon also had one false start 4 Rank Lane Athlete Nation Time Notes nbsp 6 Donovan Bailey nbsp Canada 9 84 WR nbsp 5 Frank Fredericks nbsp Namibia 9 89 nbsp 3 Ato Boldon nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 9 904 4 Dennis Mitchell nbsp United States 9 995 1 Michael Marsh nbsp United States 10 006 7 Davidson Ezinwa nbsp Nigeria 10 147 8 Michael Green nbsp Jamaica 10 16 2 Linford Christie nbsp Great Britain DSQReferences edit a b c 100 metres Men Olympedia Retrieved 24 July 2020 Thomsen Ian 29 July 1996 Chaotic 100 Meters Ends with Record The New York Times Official Report vol 3 pp 68 69 Official Report vol 3 p 69 Official Report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Athletics at the 1996 Summer Olympics Men 27s 100 metres amp oldid 1201693351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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