The men's 110 metres hurdles was the only hurdling event on the Athletics at the 1896 Summer Olympics programme. The preliminary heats were the first track event of the day on 7 April. Eight competitors ran in two heats of four runners each. Only the fastest two runners in each heat advanced to the final.[1] The event was won by Thomas Curtis of the United States.
Background
This was the first appearance of the event, which is one of 12 athletics events to have been held at every Summer Olympics. It was not a well-known event. Two top hurdlers, Stephen Chase of the United States and Godfrey Shaw of Great Britain, were not present. In Greece, Anastasios Andreou was thought to be unbeatable. Grantley Goulding of Great Britain apparently had the same view of himself. Alajos Szokolyi had won the Hungarian Olympic trials and was considered a strong contender there.[2][3]
Competition format
The competition consisted of two semifinals and a final. With seventeen competitors having entered, there were scheduled to be three or four semifinal heats: ultimately, only eight competitors started, meaning two heats were ultimately held.
The top two runners in each semifinal heat advanced to the four-man final.[2][3][4]
Records
There was no standing Olympic record before the first Games.
Each race set a new Olympic record. Grantley Goulding won the first semifinal in 18.4 seconds. Thomas Curtis won the second semifinal in 18.0 seconds. Curtis then won the final in 17.6 seconds to finish the Games with the Olympic record.
Schedule
The precise times of the events are not recorded. The 110 metres hurdles semifinal round was the first event of the afternoon session on the second day, which began around "half past two". The final was the third event of the fifth day's afternoon.[4]
Date
Round
Gregorian
Julian
Tuesday, 7 April 1896
Tuesday, 26 March 1896
Semifinals
Friday, 10 April 1896
Friday, 29 March 1896
Final
Results
Semifinals
The semifinal heats were held on 7 April. The top two finishers in each of the two heats advanced to the final.
Semifinal 1
Grantley Goulding of Great Britain finished first, in a time of 18.4 seconds. Szokolyi was in the lead but hit the last hurdle and stumbled. It is not entirely clear what happened next. Goulding certainly passed Szokolyi and finished first. Szokolyi got up and crossed the finish line along with Reichel; there was some dispute over which had finished second and which third. Neither man competed in the final, eliminating a reliable way of resolving the dispute. The Official Report placed Szokolyi second. Mallon & Widlund place Reichel second. Ekkehard zur Megede places Szokolyi second. The IOC webpage lists Szokolyi as a finalist, suggesting he was second.[6][2][7][8]
The final of the 110 metre hurdles was run on 10 April.
Hoyt scratched from the final in order to prepare for the pole vault (which he won).
As there are conflicting reports of who qualified in second from the first heat, there are conflicting reports of why that runner scratched: Mallon and Widlund have Reichel as second in the heat, and that he was forced to scratch from the final as he was serving as an assistant to Albin Lermusiaux in the marathon.[3] Sources placing Szokolyi second rather than Reichel do not generally give a reason for Szokolyi's absence, but Szokolyi himself recounted that "[w]hen the final came — after a lot of negotiations we were both canceled as second."[2]
The Official Report placed Szokolyi second in the heat, and says of both Hoyt and Szokolyi that "[n]o other competitor came forward" than Curtis and Goulding.[9]
In any case, only two athletes competed, but they finished within one-tenth of a second: Goulding led at the final hurdle, being a better hurdler, but Curtis passed him in the straight and won a tight race by two inches.
Lampros, S.P.; Polites, N.G.; De Coubertin, Pierre; Philemon, P.J. & Anninos, C. (1897). The Olympic Games: BC 776 – AD 1896. Athens: Charles Beck. (Digitally available at la84foundation.org)