Athletics: Men's long jump:
Gregor Cankar of Slovenia had the shortest best jump in the qualifyings at 7.32 metres; the winner's final jump was 8.59 metres. One athlete received no mark.
Men's 400-metre hurdles:
Ibrahim Tondi of Niger had the slowest heat time of 52.62 seconds; the winner's final time was 47.63 seconds. One athlete was disqualified for running outside his lane.
Men's 200 metre:
Russel Roman of Palau narrowly edged out a Japanese runner for the slowest heat time -- 24.59 seconds. The winner's final time was 19.79 seconds.
Diving: In the women's 3-metre springboard,
Diamantina Georgatou -- who we last saw finishing last in a synchronized diving event (
results) -- finished 33rd with a score of 157.56. The leader in the prelims -- who eventually finished 3rd -- had a score of 347.04.
Football: In women's football ("soccer"),
Greece was ranked last at the end of the tournament.
Hockey -- or "field hockey" as we say in Canada (never say "ice hockey"):
Spain was 0-4 in the prelims and lost the 9-10 classification, finishing 10th. Reader
George Brink makes the call: "Spain have just come last in the Women's Olympic Hockey competition losing 4-3 to South Africa by a Golden Goal. This must be the cruelest way to come last having scored the first goal then having fought back from a 3-1 deficit to draw 3-3 at full time only to have the 9th position snatched away from them when South Africa scored the first goal in Extra Time."
Modern Pentathlon: In men's
upper-class twit of the year modern pentathlon,
Marcin Horbacz of Poland finished 32nd with 4,388 points. He was 4:33 behind the winner, who had 5,480 points. Marcin started relatively strongly, placing 7th and 6th in the shooting and fencing portions, respectively (he's a better shot than the eventual medallists, for example), but a
DNF in the riding component put him out of the running. (The results seem to indicate a horse substitution?)
Sailing: Some of you have been wondering, "Where's India?" Wonder no more. After 16 races, Indian sailors
Malav Shroff and
Sumeet Patel finished 19th in the 49er class, with a score of 292 total points, 253 net points. The winners had 91 and 67, respectively. (Lower is obviously better.)
Triathlon: In the men's triathlon,
Marc Jenkins of Great Britain finished 45th with a time of 2:05:33.60, nearly 14½ minutes behind the winner and about a minute and a half behind finisher number 44. There were four
DNFs.
Water Polo: Kazakhstan lost to Canada 4-10 in the women's 7th/8th classification game to finish 8th in women's water polo; they were 0-3 in the preliminary round. (Remember that there were only eight spots in this tournament.)
Standings to date: After achieving its rightful place on the throne after my goof of the standings, Greece solidifies its lead with a seventh and eighth last-place finish, denying Poland a chance at the top.
Labels: athens 2004, athletics, diving, field hockey, football, greece, india, kazakhstan, modern pentathlon, niger, palau, poland, sailing, slovenia, spain, triathlon, uk, water polo