Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Women's 400 metres hurdles

The Women's 400 metres Hurdles at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea had an entry list of 35 competitors, with five qualifying heats and two semifinals (16) before the final (8) took place on Wednesday September 28, 1988.[1]

Women's 400 metres hurdles
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
VenueOlympic Stadium
Dates25 September 1988 (heats)
27 September 1988 (semi-finals)
28 September 1988 (final)
Competitors35 from 25 nations
Winning time53.17 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Debbie Flintoff-King
 Australia
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Tatyana Ledovskaya
 Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Ellen Fiedler
 East Germany
← 1984
1992 →

In 1987, the former world record holder Sabine Busch of the GDR, improved her best to 53.24 seconds, before going on to win the World Championship title in Rome in 53.62 secs, with Debbie Flintoff-King of Australia second, GDR team-mate Cornelia Ullrich third, and Jamaica's Sandra Farmer fourth. Both Ullrich and Farmer, who was now competing for the USA as Sandra Farmer-Patrick, failed to make it to Seoul. Farmer-Patrick was disqualified in her semifinal at the US Olympic trials for a lane infringement, while Ullrich missed out on a spot on the GDR Olympic team to Ellen Fiedler and Susanne Losch.

In Seoul, Fiedler set a new Olympic record in the heats, running 54.58 secs. Flintoff-King then further improved the Olympic record to 54.00 in the first semifinal, finishing just ahead of the little-known Soviet Tatyana Ledovskaya, who ran 54.01. Fiedler won the second semifinal in 54.28, with world champion Busch fourth.

In the final, Ledovskaya (lane 3) made the fastest start and still held a narrow lead at the eighth hurdle, with Fiedler (lane 6) second, Busch (lane 7) third and Flintoff-King (lane 5) back in fifth. By the tenth hurdle, Ledovskaya still led from Fiedler, with Flintoff-King closing and moving into third ahead of Bush. Flintoff-King continued to close on the run-in and passed Ledovskaya in the final stride, winning in the new Olympic record time of 53.17, to move to second on the world all-time list. Ledovskaya took the silver in 53.18, with Fiedler holding off Busch for the bronze, running 53.63 to Busch's 53.69. With six of the top seven running personal bests, the Seoul final rewrote the all-time list, with fifth-placed Sally Gunnell (54.03) and sixth-placed Gudrun Abt (54.04), moving to number 10 and 11 on the all-time list.

Medalists

edit
Gold Debbie Flintoff-King
  Australia
Silver Tatyana Ledovskaya
  Soviet Union
Bronze Ellen Fiedler
  East Germany

Records

edit

These were the standing World and Olympic records (in seconds) prior to the 1988 Summer Olympics.

World Record 52.94   Marina Stepanova Stuttgart (FRG) September 17, 1986
Olympic Record 54.61   Nawal El Moutawakel Los Angeles (USA) August 8, 1984

The following Olympic records were set during this competition.

Date Event Athlete Time OR WR
September 25, 1988 Quarterfinal   Ellen Fiedler (GDR) 54.58 s OR
September 26, 1988 Semifinal   Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) 54.00 s OR
September 28, 1988 Final   Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) 53.17 s OR

Final

edit
RANK FINAL TIME
    Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) 53.17(OR)
    Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) 53.18
    Ellen Fiedler (GDR) 53.63
4.   Sabine Busch (GDR) 53.69
5.   Sally Gunnell (GBR) 54.03
6.   Gudrun Abt (FRG) 54.04
7.   Tatyana Kourochkina (URS) 54.39
8.   LaTanya Sheffield (USA) 55.32

Semi finals

edit
RANK HEAT 1 TIME
1.   Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) 54.00(OR)
2.   Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) 54.01
3.   LaTanya Sheffield (USA) 54.36
4.   Sally Gunnell (GBR) 54.48
5.   Anita Protti (SUI) 54.56
6.   Susanne Losch (GDR) 55.56
7.   Genowefa Błaszak (POL) 56.76
8.   Gretha Tromp (NED) 57.57


RANK HEAT 2 TIME
1.   Ellen Fiedler (GDR) 54.28
2.   Tatyana Kourochkina (URS) 54.46
3.   Gudrun Abt (FRG) 54.53
4.   Sabine Busch (GDR) 54.71
5.   Cristina Pérez (ESP) 55.23
6.   Elaine McLaughlin (GBR) 55.91
7.   Schowonda Williams (USA) 56.71
8.   Chantal Beaugeant (FRA) 56.94

Qualifying heats

edit
RANK HEAT 1 TIME
1.   Susanne Losch (GDR) 55.90
2.   Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) 55.91
3.   Elaine McLaughlin (GBR) 56.11
4.   Rose Tata-Muya (KEN) 56.18
5.   Marie Womplou (CIV) 57.35
6.   Christine Wynn (CAN) 58.00
7.   P.T. Usha (IND) 59.55


RANK HEAT 2 TIME
1.   Sabine Busch (GDR) 55.96
2.   Gretha Tromp (NED) 56.11
3.   Genowefa Błaszak (POL) 56.18
4.   Jennifer Laurendet (AUS) 56.44
5.   Rosey Edeh (CAN) 56.59
6.   Ruth Kyalisiima (UGA) 59.62
7.   Nenita Adan (PHI) 1:01.92


RANK HEAT 3 TIME
1.   Ellen Fiedler (GDR) 54.58(OR)
2.   Anita Protti (SUI) 54.81
3.   Tatyana Kurochkina (URS) 55.04
4.   Latanya Sheffield (USA) 55.61
5.   Maria Usifo (NGR) 55.99
6.   Helga Halldórsdóttir (ISL) 58.99
7.   Kim Soon-Ja (KOR) 59.78


RANK HEAT 4 TIME
1.   Debbie Flintoff-King (AUS) 54.99
2.   Cristina Pérez (ESP) 55.29
3.   Sally Gunnell (GBR) 55.44
4.   Irmgard Trojer (ITA) 55.74
5.   Leslie Maxie (USA) 57.60
6.   Barbara Johnson (IRL) 58.61
7.   Chang Fen-Hwa (TPE) 1:00.16


RANK HEAT 5 TIME
1.   Gudrun Abt (FRG) 55.72
2.   Schowonda Williams (USA) 55.98
3.   Chantal Beaugeant (FRA) 56.03
4.   Sally Hamilton-Fleming (AUS) 56.08
5.   Liliana Chalá (ECU) 57.15
6.   Semra Aksu (TUR) 57.20
7.   Simone Laidlow (GBR) 59.28

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games: Women's 400 metres Hurdles". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
edit