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1983 World Championships in Athletics – Men's 10,000 metres

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FieldValue
eventMen's 10,000 metres
competition1983 World Championships
venueHelsinki Olympic Stadium
dates7 August (heats)
9 August (final)
competitors37
nations27
win_value28:01.04
goldAlberto Cova
goldNOCITA
silverWerner Schildhauer
silverNOCGDR
bronzeHansjörg Kunze
bronzeNOCGDR
next1987

9 August (final) These are the official results of the men's 10,000 metres event at the 1983 IAAF World Championships in Helsinki, Finland. There were a total number of 37 participating athletes, with two qualifying heats held on Sunday 7 August and the final held on Tuesday 9 August 1983.

The winning margin was 0.14 seconds which as of 2024 remains the only time the men's 10,000 metres was won by less than a quarter of a second at these championships.

Records

Existing records at the start of the event.

Championship RecordNew event

Summary

With the best in the world filtered down to 18 finalists, there was still a traffic jam on the track. In the first 80 metres several athletes were jostled trying to find running room. Christoph Herle and Antonio Prieto found themselves lying on the track. Out of the chaos, Bekele Debele was far back in the string of competitors, speeding down the outside of the backstretch. This culminated with him taking over the lead for a short period of time before Gidamis Shahanga took over the point. Joined by Mohamed Kedir, the three Africans jockeyed for the lead marked most closely by Carlos Lopes. The African pace was not consistent, instead slowing until the field bunched then speeding up to disrupt the even pace most distance runners would prefer. With 6 laps to go, tall, long striding, home favorite Martti Vainio took charge with a 63 second lap, exciting the crowd and forcing the field the change their pace to catch back up. For three laps, Vainio held the lead but was looking for help that was not going to support him. With three laps to go, the pack was bunched tighter than ever, 13 athletes all within 10 metres. Again Kedir took the lead with Lopes almost attached to his shoulder. 50 metres before the bell, the pack was finally disrupted by Werner Schildhauer sprinting out to a 3 metre lead. His East German teammate Hansjörg Kunze and Vaino rushed to cover the break. Shahanga and Alberto Cova were the last to hang on to the breakaway down the final backstretch. With 200 to go, Schildhauer had 3 metres on Kunze who had another 3 metres on Vainio, with Shahanga and Cova respectively another 2 and 4 metres back. Through the final turn, all those distances began to compress. By the time they hit the final straightaway, they were in the same order but with a metre separating each. Each then pulled progressively wider, Cova all the way out to lane 4, so each could have running room for the sprint to the finish. Cova was clearly the faster sprinter, cruising past the field. Schildhauer and Kunze both leaned for the finish way too early, hoping the finish line would arrive sooner. The first four runners separated by a third of a second after 10,000 metres. The result was not exactly a surprise, it was the same result as the European Championships for Cova, Schildhauer, Vainio and 6th place Lopes, a year earlier, with the addition of Kunze and Shahanga. Minus the boycotting East Germans, Cova pulled the same stunt on Vainio in what turned into a match race at the 1984 Olympics. Days later, Vainio was later disqualified for doping.

Results

Heats

The qualifying heats took place on 7 August, with the 37 athletes involved being split into 2 heats. The first 5 athletes in each heat ( Q ) and the next 8 fastest ( q ) qualified for the final.

RankHeatNameNationalityTimeNotes
11Fernando MamedePOR27:45.54Q,
21Alberto CovaITA27:46.61Q
31Gidamis ShahangaTAN27:46.93Q
41Werner SchildhauerGDR27:47.03Q
51Antonio PrietoESP27:47.34Q
61Steve JonesGBR27:47.57q
71Bekele DebeleETH27:49.30q
81Mark NenowUSA27:52.41q
92Hansjörg KunzeGDR28:04.69Q
102Carlos LopesPOR28:05.62Q
112Nick RoseGBR28:06.05Q
122Christoph HerleFRG28:06.71Q
131Henrik JørgensenDEN28:06.74q
142Mohamed KedirETH28:07.16Q
152Martti VainioFIN28:07.47q
162José GómezMEX28:07.57q
172Bill McChesneyUSA28:08.13q
182Alberto SalazarUSA28:10.10q
192Steve BinnsGBR28:12.79
202Peter ButlerCAN28:13.16
212Zakariah BarieTAN28:22.06
221Rodolfo GómezMEX28:25.38
231John TreacyIRL28:35.58
242Ahmed Musa JoudaSUD28:38.03
251Roy AndersenNOR29:03.45
261Boualem RahouiALG29:10.95
271Domingo TibaduizaCOL29:23.86
282Kunimitsu ItoJPN29:49.04
292Ronald LanzoniCRC30:18.60
301Antoine NivyobiziBDI30:45.10
311Ramón LópezPAR31:27.01
321Said ToumaneCOM34:24.62
1Markus RyffelSUI
2Stanislav RozmanYUG
1Mehmet YurdadonTUR
2Girma BerhanuETH
2Dietmar MillonigAUT

Final

The final took place on August 9.

RankNameNationalityTime
Alberto CovaITA28:01.04
Werner SchildhauerGDR28:01.18
Hansjörg KunzeGDR28:01.26
4Martti VainioFIN28:01.37
5Gidamis ShahangaTAN28:01.93
6Carlos LopesPOR28:06.78
7Nick RoseGBR28:07.53
8Christoph HerleFRG28:09.05
9Mohamed KedirETH28:09.92
10Bekele DebeleETH28:11.13
11Antonio PrietoESP28:11.57
12Steve JonesGBR28:15.03
13Mark NenowUSA28:17.28
14Fernando MamedePOR28:18.39
15Bill McChesneyUSA28:34.46
16José GómezMEX28:42.61
17Alberto SalazarUSA28:48.42
Henrik JørgensenDEN

References

Info: Wikipedia Source

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