Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Women's 4 × 400 metres relay
Athletics at the 1988 Summer Olympics |
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Track events | ||||
100 m | men | women | ||
200 m | men | women | ||
400 m | men | women | ||
800 m | men | women | ||
1500 m | men | women | ||
3000 m | women | |||
5000 m | men | |||
10,000 m | men | women | ||
100 m hurdles | women | |||
110 m hurdles | men | |||
400 m hurdles | men | women | ||
3000 m steeplechase |
men | |||
4×100 m relay | men | women | ||
4×400 m relay | men | women | ||
Road events | ||||
Marathon | men | women | ||
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 | ||||
Heptathlon | women | |||
Decathlon | men | |||
Wheelchair races | ||||
These are the official results of the Women's 4 × 400 m Relay event at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. There were a total number of sixteen nations competing.
On paper this looked like the Soviet Union would dominate. They had the gold and bronze medalists from the 400 metres race and the silver medalist from the 400 hurdles. With the retirement of Marita Koch and Jarmila Kratochvílová, Gold medalist Olga Bryzgina had the fastest time of any active athlete when she finished a close second behind Koch's world record three years earlier. Her 48.64 earlier in the week showed she hadn't lost a step. The Soviet's fourth runner had a bronze medal from the 1983 world championships.
USA was the defending champion from the boycott impaired games at home four years earlier. USA had the fourth through sixth places in the 400 meters race earlier in the week. Instead of running the fourth best runner from the Olympic Trials, USA pulled a risky maneuver in asking Florence Griffith-Joyner to anchor vs Bryzgina. FloJo hadn't run a 400 metres in years and it never was her specialty event. But FloJo was now a different beast. In one year she had risen from a 200 metres silver medal in the previous Olympics and World Championships, to super-human. Over the course of sporadic races in 1988 she had set the world record in the 100 metres and 200 metres, both by Beamonesque margins with the 200 metres world record set only two days earlier. And just earlier in the day she had anchored the US 4x100 metres relay team to the gold medal, her third already in this Olympics.
From the gun, hurdler Tatyana Ledovskaya looked to have a slight lead over former high school star Denean Howard, who at 23 was already on her third Olympic team. Just as she had done in the hurdles, Ledovskaya tied up a bit on the final straight, Howard put the USA in first at the handoff with a 49.8 out of starting blocks. Going through the third turn, it was already clear this was a two team race. Just as she did in her many indoor victories, Diane Dixon got to the break line first and "shut the door" taking over the lead position over bronze medalist Olga Nazarova. This forced Nazarova to pass Dixon on the outside, and she did it on the turn. After making the pass, Nazarova opened up about a 10 meter lead on Dixon going into the handoff. Mariya Pinigina took the handoff and extended the lead another five metres by the 200 mark against the 1984 gold medalist Valerie Brisco-Hooks. But through the turn Brisco-Hooks started to make some headway. On the final straight, Pinigina began to tie up, noticeably hopping a stride trying to maintain form. The lead evaporated as Brisco-Hooks gained with every step. At the handoff, it was barely a meter, with FloJo taking the baton and strategically ducking in behind Bryzgina. Down the backstretch and through the final turn, Griffith-Joyner stayed the same distance behind Bryzgina as if there was a rope between the two. At the end of the turn, Griffith-Joyner looked to gain a little but Bryzgina sensed the attack and accelerated away, widening the gap slightly. In the final 50 metres , Griffith-Joyner made one more attack, but it wasn't with super-human sprint speed. She was able to close down the gap to 2 metres by the finish but it was a clear win for the Soviets.
The American time 3:15.51 was more than four tenths of a second faster than the four-year old world record. The winning Soviet time 3:15.17 improved the world record by three quarters of a second. Since that day, more than a quarter of a century, those two times remain the fastest in history. No team has come within a second and a half of the world record. Only four squads, all American Olympic or world championship teams, have since beaten the East German time from a distant third place in this race.
Contents
Records
These were the standing World and Olympic records (in minutes) prior to the 1988 Summer Olympics.
World Record | 3:15.92 | Gesine Walther Sabine Busch Dagmar Rübsam Marita Koch |
Erfurt (GDR) | June 3, 1984 |
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Olympic Record | 3:18.29 | Lillie Leatherwood Denean Howard Valerie Brisco-Hooks Chandra Cheeseborough |
Los Angeles (USA) | August 11, 1984 |
The following World and Olympic record (in minutes) was set during this competition.
Date | Event | Athlete | Time | OR | WR |
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October 1, 1988 | Final | Tatyana Ledovskaya (URS) Olga Nazarova (URS) Mariya Pinigina (URS) Olga Bryzgina (URS) |
3:15.17 | OR | WR |
Final
- Held on Saturday 1988-10-01
RANK | NATION | ATHLETES | TIME |
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Soviet Union (URS) | • Tatyana Ledovskaya • Olga Nazarova • Mariya Pinigina • Olga Bryzgina |
3:15.17 WR |
|
United States (USA) | • Denean Howard • Diane Dixon • Valerie Brisco-Hooks • Florence Griffith-Joyner |
3:15.51 | |
East Germany (GDR) | • Dagmar Neubauer • Kirsten Emmelmann • Sabine Busch • Petra Müller |
3:18.29 | |
4. | West Germany (FRG) | • Ute Thimm • Helga Arendt • Andrea Thomas • Gudrun Abt |
3:22.49 |
5. | Jamaica (JAM) | • Sandie Richards • Andrea Thomas • Cathy Rattray-Williams • Sharon Powell |
3:23.13 |
6. | Great Britain (GBR) | • Linda Keough • Jennifer Stoute • Angela Piggford • Sally Gunnell |
3:26.89 |
7. | France (FRA) | • Fabienne Ficher • Nathalie Simon • Nadine Debois • Evelyn Elien |
3:29.37 |
— | Canada (CAN) | • Charmaine Crooks • Molly Killingbeck • Marita Payne-Wiggins • Jillian Richardson |
DNF |
Semifinals
- Held on Friday 1988-09-30
RANK | NATION | HEAT 1 | TIME |
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1. | East Germany (GDR) | • Grit Breuer • Dagmar Neubauer • Kirsten Emmelmann • Petra Müller |
3:27.37 |
2. | Canada (CAN) | • Charmaine Crooks • Esmie Lawrence • Marita Payne-Wiggins • Jillian Richardson |
3:27.63 |
3. | West Germany (FRG) | • Helga Arendt • Michaela Schabinger • Gisela Kinzel • Gudrun Abt |
3:27.75 |
4. | Great Britain (GBR) | • Linda Keough • Jennifer Stoute • Janet Smith • Sally Gunnell |
3:28.52 |
5. | France (FRA) | • Fabienne Ficher • Nathalie Simon • Evelyn Elien • Nadine Debois |
3:29.95 |
6. | Nigeria (NGR) | • Falilat Ogunkoya • Kehinde Vaughan • Airat Bakare • Mary Onyali |
3:30.21 |
7. | India (IND) | • Mercy Kuttanmath Alapurackal • Vandana Rao • Vandana Shanbagh • Shin Kurisingal Abraham |
3:30.21 |
— | Australia (AUS) | • Debbie Flintoff-King • Maree Holland • Kerry Johnson • Jennifer Laurendet |
DNF |
RANK | NATION | HEAT 2 | TIME |
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1. | United States (USA) | • Lillie Leatherwood • Sherri Howard • Denean Howard • Diane Dixon |
3:25.86 |
2. | Jamaica (JAM) | • Marcia Tate • Andrea Thomas • Cathy Rattray-Williams • Sharon Powell |
3:26.83 |
3. | Soviet Union (URS) | • Lyudmila Dzhigalova • Olga Nazarova • Mariya Pinigina • Olga Bryzgina |
3:27.14 |
4. | Brazil (BRA) | • Tania Miranda • Suzete Montalvao • Soraya Telles • Maria Figueiredo |
3:36.81 |
5. | South Korea (KOR) | • Yang Kyoung-Hee • Choi Se-Beom • Lim Chun-Ae • Kim Soon-Ja |
3:51.09 |
— | Colombia (COL) | • Olga Escalante • Norfalia Carabali • Amparo Caicedo • Ximena Restrepo |
DSQ |
— | Uganda (UGA) | • Jane Ajilo • Grace Buzu • Farida Kyakutema • Ruth Kyalisiima |
DNS |
— | Spain (ESP) | • Blanca Lacambra • Esther Lahoz • Cristina Pérez • Teresa Zuñiga |
DNS |
See also
- 1986 Women's European Championships 4 × 400 m Relay (Stuttgart)
- 1987 Women's World Championships 4 × 400 m Relay (Rome)
- 1990 Women's European Championships 4 × 400 m Relay (Split)
- 1991 Women's World Championships 4 × 400 m Relay (Tokyo)