Alajos Szokolyi: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
Szokolyi placed fourth in the [[triple jump]], with a best effort of 11.26 metres. |
Szokolyi placed fourth in the [[triple jump]], with a best effort of 11.26 metres. |
||
He also ran the 110 metres [[hurdling|hurdles]]. Sources differ as to whether |
He also ran the 110 metres [[hurdling|hurdles]]. Sources differ as to whether Szokolyi placed second or third in his preliminary heat, with most claiming that he was in second until hitting the final hurdle and stumbling, allowing [[Frantz Reichel]] to pass him and take second place. |
||
==External Links== |
==External Links== |
Revision as of 21:36, 11 January 2008
|- ! colspan="3" style="text-align:center;vertical-align:middle;background-color:#eeeeee;color:inherit;" | Men's Athletics
|- | style="text-align:center;vertical-align:middle;color:inherit;" | || style="text-align:center;vertical-align:middle;" | 1896 Athens || style="text-align:center;vertical-align:middle;" | 100 metres |}
Alajos Szokolyi or Alajos Szokoly (in Slovak: Alojz Sokol) (June 19, 1871 – September 9, 1932) was a Slovak/Hungarian athlete from the Kingdom of Hungary. He competed in the 1896 Summer Olympics.
Szokolyi competed in the 100 metres. He came in second in the heats, with a time of 12.75, and advanced to the final. There, Szokolyi was one of three athletes to come in at 12.6 seconds. The officials ruled that he and Francis Lane of the United States, who had beat Sokol in the heats, had finished in a dead heat for third place; Alexandros Khalkokondilis of Greece was ruled to have been slightly behind them. Szokolyi and Lane are currently considered to split the bronze medal for the event (no medals were awarded at the 1896 Olympics) by the International Olympic Committee.
Szokolyi placed fourth in the triple jump, with a best effort of 11.26 metres.
He also ran the 110 metres hurdles. Sources differ as to whether Szokolyi placed second or third in his preliminary heat, with most claiming that he was in second until hitting the final hurdle and stumbling, allowing Frantz Reichel to pass him and take second place.