1978 European Athletics Championships – Men's 5000 metres

The men's 5000 metres at the 1978 European Athletics Championships was held in Prague, then Czechoslovakia, at Stadion Evžena Rošického on 31 August and 2 September 1978.[1]

Medalists edit

Gold Venanzio Ortis
  Italy
Silver Markus Ryffel
   Switzerland
Silver Aleksandr Fedotkin
  Soviet Union

Results edit

Final edit

2 September Most of this final was run at a slow and tactical pace. 1,000 metres was passed in 2:44.6, with the Soviet Union's Enn Sellik leading the race. Soon thereafter, West Germany's Christoph Herle took the lead. His teammate Frank Zimmermann passed Herle before 1,600 metres. Zimmermann led the leading group at 2,000 metres in 5:28.1. Finland's Martti Vainio, who had stunned many long-distance running fans on the opening day by winning the 10,000-metre race, shared the lead with West Germany's Frank Zimmermann. Only Portugal's Fernando Mamede, a talented but notably nervous runner, lost contact with the main group already soon after 1,500 metres. Before 3,000 metres, Britain's Nick Rose surged into the lead, dropping West Germany's Christoph Herle, and reaching 3,000 metres in 8:09.5. During the next kilometre, despite the rather slow pace, also West Germany's Karl Fleschen and Frank Zimmermann, East Germany's Jörg Peter, Belgium's Léon Schots, the Soviet Union's Boris Kuznetsov, and his team mate Enn Sellik dropped from the lead group. Vainio was leading at 4,000 metres in 10:53.3. He was followed by Rose, Romania's Ilie Floroiu, Italy's Venanzio Ortis, the Soviet Union's Aleksandr Fyodotkin, Switzerland's Markus Ryffel, and Ireland's John Treacy. Sellik tried to catch the leading group, but could not. At 4,600 metres, reached in about 12:30–12:31, the seven-runner leading group was still tightly together. Around 4,700 metres, Floroiu suddenly rushed past Vainio who could, however, still increase his pace. Rose started to drop from the lead group, and for a few crucial seconds, Treacy lingered behind him. Vainio managed to keep his lead until the second half of the final bend, when Ryffel, Ortis, and Fyodotkin sprinted past him. During the first half of the home straight, also Floroiu and Treacy managed to pass Vainio. While Ortis narrowly but decisively passed Ryffel and Fyodotkin, Treacy kicked past Floroiu, and kept closing in on the three leading runners. Despite his narrow victory, Ortis raised his arms in triumph, while Fyodotkin and Ryffel crossed the finish line so tied that even the finish-line camera could not separate them. This was a very tight finish for a major championship final; the first four runners crossed the line 0.31 seconds apart, the first five runners in 0.8 seconds, and the first six runners in 1.2 seconds.[2]

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
  Venanzio Ortis   Italy 13:28.52
  Markus Ryffel    Switzerland 13:28.60
  Aleksandr Fedotkin   Soviet Union 13:28.60
4 John Treacy   Ireland 13:28.83
5 Ilie Floroiu   Romania 13:29.27
6 Martti Vainio   Finland 13:29.67
7 Nick Rose   Great Britain 13:32.8
8 Enn Sellik   Soviet Union 13:35.8
9 Boris Kuznetsov   Soviet Union 13:36.5
10 Frank Zimmermann   West Germany 13:39.1
11 Léon Schots   Belgium 13:47.4
12 Jörg Peter   East Germany 13:48.6
13 Karl Fleschen   West Germany 13:50.3
14 Christoph Herle   West Germany 13:55.4
15 Fernando Mamede   Portugal 13:58.2

Heats edit

31 August

Heat 1 edit

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1 Frank Zimmermann   West Germany 13:32.42 Q
2 Martti Vainio   Finland 13:33.6 Q
3 Léon Schots   Belgium 13:34.1 Q
4 Jörg Peter   East Germany 13:34.3 Q
5 Boris Kuznetsov   Soviet Union 13:34.8 q
6 Brendan Foster   Great Britain 13:38.3
7 Knut Kvalheim   Norway 13:43.6
8 Radhouane Bouster   France 14:09.3
9 John Charvetto   Gibraltar 14:18.4 NR
Karel Gaba   Czechoslovakia DNF

Heat 2 edit

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1 Karl Fleschen   West Germany 13:34.45 Q
2 Fernando Mamede   Portugal 13:34.8 Q
3 Nick Rose   Great Britain 13:35.7 Q
4 Enn Sellik   Soviet Union 13:36.2 Q
5 Gerard Tebroke   Netherlands 13:37.0
6 Fernando Cerrada   Spain 13:40.4
7 Pierre Levisse   France 13:44.1
8 Stanislav Tábor   Czechoslovakia 13:45.0
9 Dietmar Millonig   Austria 13:50.4
10 Necdet Ayaz   Turkey 13:55.7
Justin Gloden   Luxembourg DNF

Heat 3 edit

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1 Aleksandr Fedotkin   Soviet Union 13:24.10 Q
2 Markus Ryffel    Switzerland 13:24.71 Q
3 Venanzio Ortis   Italy 13:26.67 Q
4 John Treacy   Ireland 13:28.85 Q
5 Christoph Herle   West Germany 13:30.59 q
6 Ilie Floroiu   Romania 13:32.5 q
7 Mike McLeod   Great Britain 13:42.9
8 Jerzy Kowol   Poland 13:49.1
9 Aniceto Simões   Portugal 13:52.1
10 Willy Polleunis   Belgium 14:24.5
Klaas Lok   Netherlands DNF

Participation edit

According to an unofficial count, 32 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.

References edit

  1. ^ European Athletics Championships Zürich 2014 – STATISTICS HANDBOOK (PDF), European Athletics Association, pp. 427–435, retrieved 13 August 2014
  2. ^ See Tapio Pekola et al. (eds.), EM-Praha 1978 (European Championships in Prague 1978), Kaarina, Finland: Juoksija-lehti (Runner Magazine), 1978; Our Sports' Faces (Urheilumme kasvot), Finland, c. 1978; Steven Mills – YouTube – Men's 5000m final-1978 European Championships; John Treacy Archives https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Nh6t6zsUc8