Men's épée
at the Games of the XV Olympiad
The Mangiarotti family, including gold medalist Edoardo (center) and silver medalist Dario (left)
VenueWestend Tennis Hall, Espoo
Dates27–28 July
Competitors76 from 29 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Edoardo Mangiarotti
 Italy
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Dario Mangiarotti
 Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Oswald Zappelli
 Switzerland

The men's épée was one of seven fencing events on the fencing at the 1952 Summer Olympics programme. It was the eleventh appearance of the event. The competition was held from 27 July 1952 to 28 July 1952. 76 fencers from 29 nations competed.[1] Nations were limited to three fencers each. The event was won by Edoardo Mangiarotti of Italy, the nation's fourth consecutive victory in the men's épée (passing France for most all-time). It was also the fourth consecutive year that Italy had at least two fencers on the podium in the event, as Edoardo's brother Dario Mangiarotti took silver. Bronze went to Oswald Zappelli of Switzerland. Zappelli and Edoardo Mangiarotti had faced each other in a barrage for silver and bronze medals in 1948, which Zappelli had won; the two men were the fifth and sixth to earn multiple medals in the event.

Background

This was the 11th appearance of the event, which was not held at the first Games in 1896 (with only foil and sabre events held) but has been held at every Summer Olympics since 1900.[2]

Four of the 10 finalists from the 1948 Games returned: silver medalist Oswald Zappelli of Switzerland, bronze medalist Edoardo Mangiarotti of Italy, eighth-place finisher Émile Gretsch of Luxembourg, and tenth-place finisher Ronald Parfitt of Great Britain. Also competing was Dario Mangiarotti, Edoardo's elder brother, part of the silver medal 1948 Italian team who had to withdraw from the individual event due to injury (his replacement, Luigi Cantone, won gold in the individual competition). The Mangiarotti brothers had each won a World Championship since the London Games, Dario in 1949 and Edoardo in 1951 (making him the reigning World Champion coming into the 1952 Olympics). The 1950 World Champion, Mogens Lüchow of Denmark, also competed.

Australia, Guatemala, Ireland, Japan, the Soviet Union, Venezuela, and Vietnam each made their debut in the event. Belgium and the United States each appeared for the 10th time, tied for most among nations.

Competition format

The competition format was pool play round-robin, with bouts to three touches. Not all bouts were played in some pools if not necessary to determine advancement. Ties were broken through fence-off bouts ("barrages") in early rounds if necessary for determining advancement. Ties not necessary for advancement were either not broken (if at least one fencer had not finished all bouts in the round-robin) or broken first by touches received and then by touches scored. In the final, ties were broken by barrage if necessary for medal placement but otherwise first by touches received and then by touches scored.[3]

Fencers from the four nations that reached the team event final received byes to the quarterfinals.

  • Round 1: 8 pools of 8 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each pool advanced to the quarterfinals.
  • Quarterfinals: 5 pools between 8 and 9 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each pool advanced to the semifinals.
  • Semifinals: 2 pools of 10 fencers each. The top 5 fencers in each pool advanced to the final.
  • Final: 1 pool of 10 fencers.

Schedule

All times are Eastern European Summer Time (UTC+3)

Date Time Round
Sunday, 27 July 19528:00
15:00
Round 1
Quarterfinals
Monday, 28 July 19528:00
15:00
Semifinals
Final

Results

Round 1

The top 4 finishers in each pool advanced to round 2.[3] Fencers from the four teams that advanced to the final of the men's team épée event received byes through round 1:

Pool 1

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Adam Krajewski Poland518Q
Antonio Haro Mexico519Q
3Erkki Kerttula Finland4210Q
József Sákovics Hungary4212Q
5Alfred Eriksen Norway2414
Gustavo Gutiérrez Venezuela2416
Robert Henrion Belgium2416
8Eduardo López Guatemala0618

Pool 2

Mourão and Meraz defeated Amaral in a three-way barrage for third and fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Raimondo Carnera Denmark528Q
2Mohamed Abdel Rahman Egypt5210Q
3Álvaro Mário Mourão Portugal431613Q
4Emilio Meraz Mexico431513Q
5Darío Amaral Brazil4315
6Vito Simonetti Argentina2516
7That Hải Tơn Vietnam2519
8George Carpenter Ireland1619

Pool 3

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Béla Rerrich Hungary5210Q
2Allan Jay Great Britain439Q
3César Pekelman Brazil4313Q
4Wojciech Rydz Poland4314Q
5Yury Deksbakh Soviet Union3413
6Vasile Chelaru Romania3414
7Giovanni Bertorelli Venezuela161019
Patrick Duffy Ireland161019

Pool 4

Przeździecki defeated Brooke in a barrage for fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Mogens Lüchow Denmark517Q
Jean-Baptiste Maquet Belgium5211Q
3Edward Vebell United States4212Q
4Andrzej Przeździecki Poland3415Q
5Edward Brooke Canada3414
6Santiago Massini Argentina2516
7Zoltan Uray Romania1618
8Charles Stanmore Australia1619

Pool 5

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1René Dybkær Denmark518Q
Ivan Lund Australia5214Q
3Johan von Koss Norway4312Q
4Ghislain Delaunois Belgium4313Q
5Armand Mouyal France3415
6Enrique Rettberg Argentina2413
7Abelardo Menéndez Cuba161320
8Juozas Ūdras Soviet Union161020

Pool 6

Kearney defeated Soberón and de Paula in a three-way barrage for fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Álvaro Pinto Portugal619Q
2Claude Nigon France6111Q
3Ronald Parfitt Great Britain4316Q
4Tom Kearney Ireland3417Q
5Rubén Soberón Guatemala3414
6Walter de Paula Brazil3415
7Lev Saychuk Soviet Union2518
8Heikki Raitio Finland1619

Pool 7

Bougnol defeated Camous, Skrobisch, and Kroggel in a four-way barrage for fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Barnabás Berzsenyi Hungary431914Q
2Rolf Wiik Finland431814Q
3Benito Ramos Mexico4317Q
4René Bougnol France3414Q
5Juan Camous Venezuela3415
6Alfred Skrobisch United States3415
7Erwin Kroggel Germany3415
8Shinichi Maki Japan1620

Pool 8

Dias and Fethers defeated Makler in a three-way barrage for third and fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Nicolae Marinescu Romania5213Q
2Egill Knutzen Norway4313Q
3Carlos Dias Portugal3417Q
John Fethers Australia3417Q
5Paul Makler Sr. United States3414
6René Paul Great Britain2518
7Antonio Chocano Guatemala161319
8Roland Asselin Canada161219

Quarterfinals

The top 4 finishers in each pool advanced to the semifinals.[4]

Quarterfinal 1

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Dario Mangiarotti Italy618Q
2Sven Fahlman Sweden6212Q
3Jean-Baptiste Maquet Belgium5211Q
4René Bougnol France5319Q
5Antonio Haro Mexico4418
6César Pekelman Brazil3518
7Nicolae Marinescu Romania3520
8Wojciech Rydz Poland2517
9Álvaro Pinto Portugal0721

Quarterfinal 2

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Edoardo Mangiarotti Italy529Q
2Allan Jay Great Britain5210Q
3Edward Vebell United States4313Q
4Álvaro Mário Mourão Portugal4315Q
5Emilio Meraz Mexico3415
6Claude Nigon France3417
7Béla Rerrich Hungary2518
8Paul Meister Hungary1620

Quarterfinal 3

Dybkær defeated Barth in a barrage for fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Carlo Pavesi Italy514Q
Léon Buck Luxembourg518Q
Mohamed Abdel Rahman Egypt5314Q
4René Dybkær Denmark4419Q
5Paul Barth Switzerland4414
6Johan von Koss Norway2517
7Andrzej Przeździecki Poland2519
8Ivan Lund Australia1619
9Carlos Dias Portugal1620

Quarterfinal 4

Forssell defeated Delaunois and Berzsenyi in a three-way barrage for fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Émile Gretsch Luxembourg5314Q
2Rolf Wiik Finland532016Q
3Mogens Lüchow Denmark532016Q
4Carl Forssell Sweden4416Q
5Ghislain Delaunois Belgium442217
6Barnabás Berzsenyi Hungary442317
7Ronald Parfitt Great Britain3519
8Adam Krajewski Poland3520

Quarterfinal 5

Sákovics and Zappelli defeated Fethers in a three-way barrage for third and fourth place.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Erkki Kerttula Finland617Q
2Per Carleson Sweden5212Q
3József Sákovics Hungary4415Q
4Oswald Zappelli Switzerland4415Q
5John Fethers Australia4417
6Raimondo Carnera Denmark3519
7Egill Knutzen Finland2516
8Jean-Fernand Leischen Luxembourg2517
9Tom Kearney Ireland2620

Semifinals

The top 5 finishers in each pool advanced to the final.[4]

Semifinal 1

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Edoardo Mangiarotti Italy90274Q
2Erkki Kerttula Finland6312Q
3Oswald Zappelli Switzerland6316Q
4Carl Forssell Sweden5416Q
5Carlo Pavesi Italy5420Q
6Sven Fahlman Sweden4520
7René Dybkær Denmark2620
Émile Gretsch Luxembourg2621
9Álvaro Mário Mourão Portugal2722
10Jean-Baptiste Maquet Belgium1825

Semifinal 2

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTRNotes
1Mogens Lüchow Denmark7212Q
2Per Carleson Sweden6312Q
3Dario Mangiarotti Italy6315Q
4József Sákovics Hungary6318Q
5Léon Buck Luxembourg5416Q
6Allan Jay Great Britain4518
7Mohamed Abdel Rahman Egypt4519
8Rolf Wiik Finland4522
9Edward Vebell United States3621
10René Bougnol France0927

Final

There was a three-way barrage for silver, bronze, and fourth place. D. Mangiarotti came out best in that barrage, followed by Zappelli and then Buck.

RankFencerNationWinsLossesTSTR
1st place, gold medalist(s)Edoardo Mangiarotti Italy7212
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Dario Mangiarotti Italy6316
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Oswald Zappelli Switzerland6318
4Léon Buck Luxembourg6319
5József Sákovics Hungary5417
6Carlo Pavesi Italy4521
7Per Carleson Sweden3620
8Carl Forssell Sweden3623
9Erkki Kerttula Finland2723
10Mogens Lüchow Denmark2725

References

  1. "Fencing: 1952 Olympic Results - Men's épée". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  2. "Épée, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  3. 1 2 Official Report, p. 490.
  4. 1 2 Official Report, p. 491.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.