Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Women's 1500 metres

The women's 1500 metres at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea had an entry list of 28 competitors, with two qualifying heats (28) before the final (12) took place on Saturday October 1, 1988.[1]

Women's 1500 metres
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
VenueOlympic Stadium
Dates28 September 1988 (heats)
1 October 1988 (final)
Competitors28 from 19 nations
Winning time3:53.96 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Paula Ivan
 Romania
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Laimutė Baikauskaitė
 Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Tetyana Samolenko
 Soviet Union
← 1984
1992 →

From the gun in the final, Paula Ivan wanted the lead. Mary Slaney and Ivan's teammate Doina Melinte did not want to let her get away. The field behind her looked bunched but the 1:02.52 first lap showed she was serious. This was world record pace, rare for a championship race that usually breaks down into a strategic battle. After the first lap, a small gap began to open. Melinte was the last to maintain contact, perhaps having seen this strategy previously in domestic competition. The second lap was completed in 1:03.26, a ten-metre gap had opened, with Tetyana Samolenko edging past Melinte in chase. 2:52.66 at the bell and a fifteen-metre gap, Ivan began a last lap kick, trying to run the 60 second last lap to get the world record. Because of the acceleration, the third lap was the fastest of them all at 1:02.46. The battle was for the medals behind Ivan, Andrea Hahmann passing Samolenko, who had Christina Cahill on her shoulder with Lynn Williams in chase. Melinte faded back to Slaney but behind all of them, Laimutė Baikauskaitė was charging. Onto the home stretch the chase pack was tightening, some 30 metres behind Ivan. Baikauskaitė moved into lane 3 to find some running room. Ivan was unable to find a 60-second lap, but 61.5 was enough to set the Olympic record out of sight with a dominant gold medal performance. Hahmann faded and Samolenko was leading down the stretch with Cahill in close pursuit. Making up ten metres on the final straight, Baikauskaitė passed Cahill and Hahmann in the final 15 metres and leaned past Samolenko at the line to take the silver.

Medalists edit

Gold Paula Ivan
  Romania
Silver Laimutė Baikauskaitė
  Soviet Union
Bronze Tetyana Samolenko
  Soviet Union

Records edit

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

World Record 3:52.47   Tatyana Kazankina Zürich (SUI) August 13, 1980
Olympic Record 3:56.56   Tatyana Kazankina Moscow (URS) August 1, 1980

The following Olympic record (in minutes) was set during this competition.

Date Athlete Time OR WR
September 26, 1988 Paula Ivan   Romania 3:53.96 OR

Final edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
  Paula Ivan   Romania 3:53.96 OR
  Laimutė Baikauskaitė   Soviet Union 4:00.24
  Tetyana Samolenko   Soviet Union 4:00.30
4 Christina Cahill   Great Britain 4:00.64
5 Lynn Williams   Canada 4:00.86
6 Andrea Hahmann   East Germany 4:00.96
7 Shireen Bailey   Great Britain 4:02.32
8 Mary Slaney   United States 4:02.49
9 Doina Melinte   Romania 4:02.89
10. Fatima Aouam   Morocco 4:08.00
11. Kim Gallagher   United States 4:16.25
12. Debbie Bowker   Canada 4:17.95

Non-Qualifiers edit

Rank Athlete Nation Time Notes
13. Elly van Hulst   Netherlands 4:07.40
14. Hassiba Boulmerka   Algeria 4:08.33
15. Kirsty Wade   Great Britain 4:08.37
16. Lyubov Gurina   Soviet Union 4:08.59
17. Angela Chalmers   Canada 4:08.64
18. Vera Michallek   West Germany 4:10.05
19. Susan Sirma   Kenya 4:10.13
20. Cornelia Bürki   Switzerland 4:10.89
21. Regina Jacobs   United States 4:18.09
22. Letitia Vriesde   Suriname 4:19.58
23. Khin Khin Htwe   Burma 4:20.92
24. No Hye-sun   South Korea 4:26.05
25. Daphrose Nyiramutuzo   Rwanda 4:32.31
26. Laverne Bryan   Antigua and Barbuda 4:39.73
27. Poloni Avek   Papua New Guinea 4:46.49
28. Rachel Thompson   Sierra Leone 5:31.42

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Athletics at the 1988 Seoul Games: Women's 1500 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 November 2017.

External links edit