The document provides a detailed overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It begins with an introduction describing how the Games were revived in the late 19th century by Pierre de Coubertin. It then discusses the many symbols and traditions that have developed around the Olympics, including the Olympic rings, torch relay, oath, anthem, motto, and victory ceremony. Finally, it lists the host cities of the Summer Olympic Games from 1896 to the present. In under 3 sentences, the document summarizes the origins and growth of the modern Olympics and their many established rituals and symbols.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the Modern Olympic Games. It discusses how the Games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of Pierre de Coubertin and the first modern Games held there. It then outlines some of the key symbols and traditions of the Olympics like the rings, flame, anthem and creed. The document concludes by noting how the Games have grown significantly over the years in terms of participating nations and number of athletes and events.
The document discusses the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It describes key symbols of the Olympics like the Olympic rings representing the five continents, the torch relay that brings the Olympic flame from Olympia to the host city, and the Olympic oath taken by athletes to compete fairly and without drugs. It then provides a brief overview of each Olympic Games from 1896 to 2000, noting some highlights and the growing number of participating nations and athletes over time.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document aims to concisely summarize the origins and evolution of the modern Olympic movement.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document emphasizes the ideals of international unity and participation that Baron Pierre de Coubertin sought to promote through reviving the Olympic tradition.
The document provides an overview of key symbols and traditions of the Modern Olympic Games, including:
1) The Olympic rings represent the union of the five continents and meeting of the world's athletes.
2) The Olympic Oath is taken by one athlete and judge to represent all competitors and officials and promise fair play and adherence to rules.
3) The Olympic flag features the rings on a white background to symbolize peace and universality.
This document provides information about the Olympic movement including the ancient and modern Olympics, Olympic symbols, ideals, objectives and values. It discusses the International Olympic Committee and its role in organizing the Olympic Games. It also describes the Indian Olympic Association and the objectives of establishing it. Finally, it gives details about the Dronacharya Award and Arjuna Award which are conferred by the Government of India to honor coaches and sportspersons respectively.
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games will take place from July to September 2020, featuring 33 sports at the Olympics and 22 sports at the Paralympics. A total of 43 competition venues will be used throughout Tokyo and Japan, including many legacy venues from the 1964 Tokyo Games. The venue plan consists of the Heritage Zone featuring iconic venues from 1964, and the Tokyo Bay Zone serving as a model for urban development, with the Athletes' Village positioned at the intersection of the two zones.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) was founded in 1894 and is based in Lausanne, Switzerland. It organizes the Summer and Winter Olympic Games every four years. The IOC owns the rights to Olympic properties like logos and promotes the Olympic values of fair play. It has 205 member National Olympic Committees and works to promote sports and physical activity worldwide.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the Modern Olympic Games. It discusses how the Games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of Pierre de Coubertin and the first modern Games held there. It then outlines some of the key symbols and traditions of the Olympics like the rings, flame, anthem and creed. The document concludes by noting how the Games have grown significantly over the years in terms of participating nations and number of athletes and events.
The document discusses the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It describes key symbols of the Olympics like the Olympic rings representing the five continents, the torch relay that brings the Olympic flame from Olympia to the host city, and the Olympic oath taken by athletes to compete fairly and without drugs. It then provides a brief overview of each Olympic Games from 1896 to 2000, noting some highlights and the growing number of participating nations and athletes over time.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document aims to concisely summarize the origins and evolution of the modern Olympic movement.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document emphasizes the ideals of international unity and participation that Baron Pierre de Coubertin sought to promote through reviving the Olympic tradition.
The document provides an overview of key symbols and traditions of the Modern Olympic Games, including:
1) The Olympic rings represent the union of the five continents and meeting of the world's athletes.
2) The Olympic Oath is taken by one athlete and judge to represent all competitors and officials and promise fair play and adherence to rules.
3) The Olympic flag features the rings on a white background to symbolize peace and universality.
This document provides information about the Olympic movement including the ancient and modern Olympics, Olympic symbols, ideals, objectives and values. It discusses the International Olympic Committee and its role in organizing the Olympic Games. It also describes the Indian Olympic Association and the objectives of establishing it. Finally, it gives details about the Dronacharya Award and Arjuna Award which are conferred by the Government of India to honor coaches and sportspersons respectively.
The Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games will take place from July to September 2020, featuring 33 sports at the Olympics and 22 sports at the Paralympics. A total of 43 competition venues will be used throughout Tokyo and Japan, including many legacy venues from the 1964 Tokyo Games. The venue plan consists of the Heritage Zone featuring iconic venues from 1964, and the Tokyo Bay Zone serving as a model for urban development, with the Athletes' Village positioned at the intersection of the two zones.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) was founded in 1894 and is based in Lausanne, Switzerland. It organizes the Summer and Winter Olympic Games every four years. The IOC owns the rights to Olympic properties like logos and promotes the Olympic values of fair play. It has 205 member National Olympic Committees and works to promote sports and physical activity worldwide.
This document provides an introduction and overview of athletics. It discusses that athletics originated from ancient Greek competitions and were part of the original Olympic Games. The first known winner of an athletics event was Korobios, a Greek cook who won the 600-foot stadium race at the first Olympics in 776 BC. Athletics grew popular over centuries but declined after 394 AD when the Roman emperor banned the Olympics. Athletics reemerged and became organized as a modern sport in the 19th century with competitions in England and the US. Key events included the first English Championships in 1866 and the founding of the International Amateur Athletic Federation in 1913 to oversee the sport globally.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is an international non-governmental organization founded in 1894 to oversee the modern Olympic Games and Youth Olympic Games. The IOC is based in Lausanne, Switzerland and has 105 active members and 32 honorary members. It organizes the Summer and Winter Olympics held every four years. The IOC session is the general meeting held annually where members vote on decisions like electing host cities and members of the executive board. In the 1980s, the Olympics faced bankruptcy but drafting a marketing team helped turn it into a multi-billion dollar program financially supporting International Sports Federations.
History and development of paralympics Muhsina P P
The 2018 Winter Paralympics officially known as the XII Paralympic Winter Games, and commonly known as the 2018 PyeongChang Paralympics, will be an international winter multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities that is scheduled to be held in Pyeongchang County ,today that is 9 March 2018, itself started the game. so history and development of paralympic is important to us. I think that it is useful for you.
The Olympics began in ancient Greece as a way to honor the god Zeus. They have since grown into a massive international event held every two years, alternating between Summer and Winter games. The Olympics feature competition across dozens of sports and are viewed by billions worldwide. A key symbol of the Olympics is the interlocking rings on a white background, representing the global reach of the games. Host cities are chosen to hold the events and showcase their facilities to the world.
The Olympic mascot bear came to a school in Armenia in 2012. Students from the school council took the bear on an excursion to the Armenian State Institute of Physical Culture to learn about the history of Armenian sports. Armenia has a long history of participation in the Olympic Games dating back to ancient times. Several prominent Armenian athletes who won gold medals at past Olympics in various sports from the 1950s to the 1990s were introduced to the bear. The bear also learned about Armenian athletes competing in the 2012 London Olympics in shooting, boxing, wrestling and gymnastics.
The document discusses the history and evolution of the Olympic Games and Olympic Movement over the 20th and 21st centuries. It provides biographies of several Armenian Olympic athletes, including weightlifter Yuri Vardanian, gymnast Albert Azaryan, and wrestler Levon Julfalakyan. The Olympic flag was created in 1914 and features five interlaced rings representing the five inhabited continents.
The Ancient Olympic Games began in 776 BC in Olympia, Greece and were held every four years as part of a religious festival honoring Zeus. They featured competitions such as running, boxing, chariot racing, and the pentathlon and were celebrated continuously until being abolished by the Romans in 393 AD. The Modern Olympic Games were founded in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin, who established the International Olympic Committee with a goal of promoting international friendship through sporting competition. The Youth Olympic Games were launched in 2010 as a multi-sport event for young athletes aged 14 to 18 to emphasize sports, culture and education.
The document summarizes the history and objectives of the modern Olympic movement. It describes how the ancient Olympic Games originated in Greece but were later abolished by Roman emperor Theodosius. The modern Olympics were revived in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin, who founded the International Olympic Committee. The first modern Games incorporated elements of the ancient Olympics and aimed to promote international cooperation and excellence in sports. The Olympic symbols like the rings and motto represent the ideals of diversity, friendship, and striving for personal bests.
The document provides a history of the Olympic Games from their origins in ancient Greece to the modern Olympics. It discusses how the first Olympics were held in 776 BC in Olympia, Greece to honor the god Zeus and featured running events. The Games were prohibited in 394 AD when the Christian Roman Emperor banned them. Pierre de Coubertin helped revive the Olympics in the late 19th century, and the first modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896 with 14 nations participating. The Winter Olympics began in 1924 in France, and both Summer and Winter Olympics now occur every four years and are a huge global media event watched around the world.
The document summarizes the history and key aspects of the Olympic Games. It discusses how the ancient Olympic Games originated in Greece in 776 BC and were held every four years to honor Zeus. It also describes how the modern Olympics were revived in 1896 by Pierre de Coubertin and bring thousands of athletes from around the world together to compete in a variety of summer and winter sports. The Olympic Games have become one of the largest international events and showcase for nations every two years.
The modern Olympic Games were founded in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin. They have been held every four years since then except during the two World Wars. The Olympics have grown from a small event in 1896 with 245 male competitors from 14 countries to a massive international event today with thousands of athletes from nearly every country competing in dozens of sports. The Olympic charter established the goal of building international understanding and goodwill through athletic competition.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses how the games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of Pierre De Coubertin and the first modern Olympics held there. It then outlines some of the key symbols and traditions of the Olympics like the rings, flame, anthem and creed. The rest of the document chronicles the cities and years that have hosted the Summer Olympic Games from 1896 to the present. It also notes how the Winter Games were added and discusses the growing scale and participation in the Olympics over time.
The RFEF is the governing body of football in Spain. It organizes La Liga and manages the Spanish national football teams. Some important players include Ricardo Zamora, Luis Suárez, Fernando Torres, Andrés Iniesta, and Iker Casillas. Important coaches who helped Spain succeed include Luis Aragonés and Vicente del Bosque. The RFEF was formed in 1913 and has its headquarters in Las Rozas, Madrid.
The RFEF is the Royal Spanish Football Federation, the governing body of football in Spain. It organizes La Liga and manages the Spanish national football teams. Formed in 1913, the RFEF has helped Spain achieve success in international competitions, including a World Cup title in 2010 and Eurocup titles in 1964, 2008, and 2012. It is headquartered in Madrid and works with organizations like FIFA, UEFA, and the Spanish Olympic Committee to promote football in Spain.
The 1960 Summer Olympics, also known as the XVII Olympiad, were held in Rome, Italy from August 25th to September 11th. This was the first Olympics where the Olympic Hymn was played. 83 countries participated with over 5,300 competitors, including 610 women. Notable athletes included Paul Elvstrom of Denmark who won his fourth gold in sailing, and Larissa Latynina of the Soviet Union who won six gold medals. There was controversy in the men's 100m race when the finish was too close to call and the head judge changed the results. Spain won a bronze in field hockey but otherwise did not medal.
The 1960 Olympic Games were held in Rome from August 25th to September 11th. Notable athletes included Paul Elvstrom of Denmark who won his fourth consecutive gold medal in sailing, and Aladar Gerevich of Hungary who won his sixth gold medal in shooting. There was some controversy over the results of the 100m race, where half the judges saw one athlete winning and the other half saw a different athlete winning.
Sport has become a major social phenomenon over the last century and is practiced by many in both organized and casual settings. The document discusses the evolution of sport in society from a spectator activity to one widely participated in. It also outlines the institutionalization of sport through various governing bodies at international, national, regional and local levels that work to promote and regulate sporting competitions and activities. The concepts of sport, its social role, and trends in participation in Spain are also examined.
3 sport and physical activity in the 21st century25071998
This document discusses sport and physical activity in the 21st century. It describes how sport has become institutionalized and organized through governing bodies at international, national and local levels. It also outlines how participation in sport has grown significantly in Spain over the last 30 years, with nearly 16 million people now playing sport regularly. The document contrasts mass spectator sports with widespread popular participation, and examines how both amateur and professional sport now play an important role in modern society.
This document contains a physical evaluation worksheet for a student named Maite González Cortés. It includes results from tests of cooper running distance, VO2 max, ball throwing, vertical jump, curl ups, sit and reach flexibility, speed over 50 meters, and spagat flexibility. It also contains worksheets on athletic events like 1500m, 800m and 400m running with space to record lap times, as well as worksheets on speed for 100m and 200m, throwing events, high jump techniques and evolution, and notable athletes and achievements in Olympic history.
This document provides an introduction and overview of athletics. It discusses that athletics originated from ancient Greek competitions and were part of the original Olympic Games. The first known winner of an athletics event was Korobios, a Greek cook who won the 600-foot stadium race at the first Olympics in 776 BC. Athletics grew popular over centuries but declined after 394 AD when the Roman emperor banned the Olympics. Athletics reemerged and became organized as a modern sport in the 19th century with competitions in England and the US. Key events included the first English Championships in 1866 and the founding of the International Amateur Athletic Federation in 1913 to oversee the sport globally.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is an international non-governmental organization founded in 1894 to oversee the modern Olympic Games and Youth Olympic Games. The IOC is based in Lausanne, Switzerland and has 105 active members and 32 honorary members. It organizes the Summer and Winter Olympics held every four years. The IOC session is the general meeting held annually where members vote on decisions like electing host cities and members of the executive board. In the 1980s, the Olympics faced bankruptcy but drafting a marketing team helped turn it into a multi-billion dollar program financially supporting International Sports Federations.
History and development of paralympics Muhsina P P
The 2018 Winter Paralympics officially known as the XII Paralympic Winter Games, and commonly known as the 2018 PyeongChang Paralympics, will be an international winter multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities that is scheduled to be held in Pyeongchang County ,today that is 9 March 2018, itself started the game. so history and development of paralympic is important to us. I think that it is useful for you.
The Olympics began in ancient Greece as a way to honor the god Zeus. They have since grown into a massive international event held every two years, alternating between Summer and Winter games. The Olympics feature competition across dozens of sports and are viewed by billions worldwide. A key symbol of the Olympics is the interlocking rings on a white background, representing the global reach of the games. Host cities are chosen to hold the events and showcase their facilities to the world.
The Olympic mascot bear came to a school in Armenia in 2012. Students from the school council took the bear on an excursion to the Armenian State Institute of Physical Culture to learn about the history of Armenian sports. Armenia has a long history of participation in the Olympic Games dating back to ancient times. Several prominent Armenian athletes who won gold medals at past Olympics in various sports from the 1950s to the 1990s were introduced to the bear. The bear also learned about Armenian athletes competing in the 2012 London Olympics in shooting, boxing, wrestling and gymnastics.
The document discusses the history and evolution of the Olympic Games and Olympic Movement over the 20th and 21st centuries. It provides biographies of several Armenian Olympic athletes, including weightlifter Yuri Vardanian, gymnast Albert Azaryan, and wrestler Levon Julfalakyan. The Olympic flag was created in 1914 and features five interlaced rings representing the five inhabited continents.
The Ancient Olympic Games began in 776 BC in Olympia, Greece and were held every four years as part of a religious festival honoring Zeus. They featured competitions such as running, boxing, chariot racing, and the pentathlon and were celebrated continuously until being abolished by the Romans in 393 AD. The Modern Olympic Games were founded in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin, who established the International Olympic Committee with a goal of promoting international friendship through sporting competition. The Youth Olympic Games were launched in 2010 as a multi-sport event for young athletes aged 14 to 18 to emphasize sports, culture and education.
The document summarizes the history and objectives of the modern Olympic movement. It describes how the ancient Olympic Games originated in Greece but were later abolished by Roman emperor Theodosius. The modern Olympics were revived in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin, who founded the International Olympic Committee. The first modern Games incorporated elements of the ancient Olympics and aimed to promote international cooperation and excellence in sports. The Olympic symbols like the rings and motto represent the ideals of diversity, friendship, and striving for personal bests.
The document provides a history of the Olympic Games from their origins in ancient Greece to the modern Olympics. It discusses how the first Olympics were held in 776 BC in Olympia, Greece to honor the god Zeus and featured running events. The Games were prohibited in 394 AD when the Christian Roman Emperor banned them. Pierre de Coubertin helped revive the Olympics in the late 19th century, and the first modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896 with 14 nations participating. The Winter Olympics began in 1924 in France, and both Summer and Winter Olympics now occur every four years and are a huge global media event watched around the world.
The document summarizes the history and key aspects of the Olympic Games. It discusses how the ancient Olympic Games originated in Greece in 776 BC and were held every four years to honor Zeus. It also describes how the modern Olympics were revived in 1896 by Pierre de Coubertin and bring thousands of athletes from around the world together to compete in a variety of summer and winter sports. The Olympic Games have become one of the largest international events and showcase for nations every two years.
The modern Olympic Games were founded in 1896 in Athens by Pierre de Coubertin. They have been held every four years since then except during the two World Wars. The Olympics have grown from a small event in 1896 with 245 male competitors from 14 countries to a massive international event today with thousands of athletes from nearly every country competing in dozens of sports. The Olympic charter established the goal of building international understanding and goodwill through athletic competition.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses how the games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of Pierre De Coubertin and the first modern Olympics held there. It then outlines some of the key symbols and traditions of the Olympics like the rings, flame, anthem and creed. The rest of the document chronicles the cities and years that have hosted the Summer Olympic Games from 1896 to the present. It also notes how the Winter Games were added and discusses the growing scale and participation in the Olympics over time.
The RFEF is the governing body of football in Spain. It organizes La Liga and manages the Spanish national football teams. Some important players include Ricardo Zamora, Luis Suárez, Fernando Torres, Andrés Iniesta, and Iker Casillas. Important coaches who helped Spain succeed include Luis Aragonés and Vicente del Bosque. The RFEF was formed in 1913 and has its headquarters in Las Rozas, Madrid.
The RFEF is the Royal Spanish Football Federation, the governing body of football in Spain. It organizes La Liga and manages the Spanish national football teams. Formed in 1913, the RFEF has helped Spain achieve success in international competitions, including a World Cup title in 2010 and Eurocup titles in 1964, 2008, and 2012. It is headquartered in Madrid and works with organizations like FIFA, UEFA, and the Spanish Olympic Committee to promote football in Spain.
The 1960 Summer Olympics, also known as the XVII Olympiad, were held in Rome, Italy from August 25th to September 11th. This was the first Olympics where the Olympic Hymn was played. 83 countries participated with over 5,300 competitors, including 610 women. Notable athletes included Paul Elvstrom of Denmark who won his fourth gold in sailing, and Larissa Latynina of the Soviet Union who won six gold medals. There was controversy in the men's 100m race when the finish was too close to call and the head judge changed the results. Spain won a bronze in field hockey but otherwise did not medal.
The 1960 Olympic Games were held in Rome from August 25th to September 11th. Notable athletes included Paul Elvstrom of Denmark who won his fourth consecutive gold medal in sailing, and Aladar Gerevich of Hungary who won his sixth gold medal in shooting. There was some controversy over the results of the 100m race, where half the judges saw one athlete winning and the other half saw a different athlete winning.
Sport has become a major social phenomenon over the last century and is practiced by many in both organized and casual settings. The document discusses the evolution of sport in society from a spectator activity to one widely participated in. It also outlines the institutionalization of sport through various governing bodies at international, national, regional and local levels that work to promote and regulate sporting competitions and activities. The concepts of sport, its social role, and trends in participation in Spain are also examined.
3 sport and physical activity in the 21st century25071998
This document discusses sport and physical activity in the 21st century. It describes how sport has become institutionalized and organized through governing bodies at international, national and local levels. It also outlines how participation in sport has grown significantly in Spain over the last 30 years, with nearly 16 million people now playing sport regularly. The document contrasts mass spectator sports with widespread popular participation, and examines how both amateur and professional sport now play an important role in modern society.
This document contains a physical evaluation worksheet for a student named Maite González Cortés. It includes results from tests of cooper running distance, VO2 max, ball throwing, vertical jump, curl ups, sit and reach flexibility, speed over 50 meters, and spagat flexibility. It also contains worksheets on athletic events like 1500m, 800m and 400m running with space to record lap times, as well as worksheets on speed for 100m and 200m, throwing events, high jump techniques and evolution, and notable athletes and achievements in Olympic history.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document emphasizes the ideals of international unity and participation that Baron Pierre de Coubertin sought to promote through reviving the Olympic tradition.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the Modern Olympic Games. It discusses how the Games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of Pierre de Coubertin and the first modern Games held there. It then outlines some of the key symbols and traditions of the Olympics like the rings, flame, anthem and creed. The document concludes by noting how the Games have grown significantly over the years in terms of participating nations and number of athletes and events.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document aims to concisely summarize the origins and evolution of the modern Olympic movement.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key aspects like the Olympic symbols (rings, flame, motto), traditions (oath, anthem, victory ceremony), and hosts the first 32 Summer Olympic Games from 1896 to 2016. The 1896 Games were the first modern Olympics held in Athens with 14 participating nations and 43 events only for men. The Olympic Movement aims to use sports to promote unity, peace and understanding among nations.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document emphasizes the ideals of international unity and participation that Baron Pierre de Coubertin sought to promote through reviving the Olympic tradition.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key aspects like the Olympic symbols (rings, flame, motto), traditions (oath, anthem, release of doves), and summaries the first 32 Summer Olympic Games hosted between 1896-2016, noting some highlights. The document emphasizes how Baron Pierre de Coubertin revived the Olympic Games in 1896 with the goal of using sports to promote unity and peace among nations. It has since grown significantly in scale and international participation.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses key symbols like the Olympic rings and their meaning, traditions like the torch relay and opening/closing ceremonies. It then outlines the host cities and notable events of each of the modern Olympic Games from 1896 in Athens to 2016 in Rio de Janeiro. The first modern Olympics had 14 participating countries and 43 events, while more recent games have seen enormous growth with nearly 200 participating countries and hundreds of events. The document emphasizes the ideals of international unity and participation that Baron Pierre de Coubertin sought to promote through reviving the Olympic tradition.
This document provides an overview of the history and traditions of the modern Olympic Games. It discusses the key people and events that led to the revival of the Olympics in 1896 in Athens. It then outlines many of the traditions and symbols of the Olympics, including the Olympic rings, torch relay, oath, anthem, motto, release of doves, and victory ceremony. The document concludes by briefly summarizing each host city of the Summer Olympic Games from 1896 to 2016.
The document provides a detailed history and overview of the modern Olympic Games, including their origins and revival in 1896, key symbols and traditions that developed over time such as the Olympic rings, torch relay, and anthem, and summaries of each Olympic Games from 1896 to the present. It describes Baron Pierre de Coubertin's role in reviving the Games and founding the International Olympic Committee in 1894. The summaries highlight notable events and athletes from the early Games.
The document provides a history of the Olympic Games from their origins in ancient Greece to the modern Olympics. It discusses how the first Olympics were held in 776 BC in Olympia, Greece to honor the god Zeus and featured running events. The Games were prohibited in 394 AD when the Christian Roman Emperor banned them. Pierre de Coubertin helped revive the Olympics in the late 19th century, and the first modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896 with 14 nations participating. The Winter Olympics began in 1924 in France, and both Summer and Winter Olympics now occur every four years and are a huge global media event watched around the world.
The Summer Olympic Games or the Games of the Olympiad are an international multi-sport event, occurring every four years, organized by the International Olympic Committee.
The document summarizes the history of hosting the Summer Olympic Games. It notes that several European and Commonwealth nations have hosted twice, with France and Australia hosting three times each. Tokyo is the only non-European/English speaking city to host twice. The 2016 Rio Games were the first in South America. Several other details are provided on host cities and nations over time.
Pierre de Coubertin was influential in bringing back the Modern Olympics. He was born in Paris in 1863 and helped establish the International Olympic Committee in 1894. The first Modern Olympics were held in Athens, Greece. There have been 28 Summer Olympic Games since 1896. The Olympic flag features five interlocking rings representing the five inhabited continents. Opening, closing, and medal ceremonies are held at each Olympics.
The 1900 Olympic Games were held in Paris, France from May 14 to October 28 as part of the Paris World's Fair. Over 1,200 male athletes and 19 female athletes from 26 countries competed in 17 sports over 5 months, with events rarely referred to as "Olympic". American Alvin Kraenzlein won gold in four individual track and field events. Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain became the first female Olympic champion. Medals were not awarded consistently, with some events giving cups or trophies instead of medals.
The modern Olympic Games were revived in 1896 in Athens through the efforts of French baron Pierre de Coubertin and Greek Dimitrios Vikelas. Since then, the Olympics have grown tremendously and now include more participating nations and events. They are held every four years in different host cities, alternating between Summer and Winter Games, with the exception of a two year gap after the 1992 Winter Games. The Olympics strive to use sport to bring people of different backgrounds together and promote the ideals of fair play.
1) The ancient Olympic Games were founded by Heracles according to legend and were held every four years in Greece until being abolished in 393 CE by Roman emperor Theodosius I.
2) In the late 19th century, Pierre de Coubertin helped revive the Olympic Games, founding the International Olympic Committee in 1894.
3) The first modern Olympic Games were held in Athens in 1896 and have been held every four years in different host cities around the world since, growing into a global event and cultural phenomenon.
The document provides an overview of the history and modern Olympics. It discusses the ancient origins in Greece and the revival of the modern Olympics by Pierre de Coubertin in 1894. It also summarizes the Paralympics, founded in 1948 for soldiers after WWII, and India's role in the Olympics, first competing in 1920 and winning hockey medals until 1980.
The document provides information about the history and modern Olympic Games in 3 paragraphs and 6 sections. It discusses the origins of the ancient Olympic Games in Greece and their revival in the modern era as a major international event. Key details include that the ancient Games lasted over 1000 years and athletes competed for honor, not material prizes. Today over 200 nations participate in Summer and Winter Games held every 4 years across 35 sports. Sections also profile famous Olympic athletes like Carl Lewis, Michael Phelps, Birgit Fischer, Abebe Bikila, Nadia Comaneci, and Usain Bolt.
The document summarizes the history of the Olympic Games. It describes how the ancient Olympic Games originated in Olympia, Greece over 2,700 years ago and were held every four years to honor the Greek gods. It also discusses how the modern Olympics were revived in 1896 by Pierre de Fredi, Baron de Coubertin and are now held every two years, alternating between Summer and Winter games. The Olympics have grown to include numerous sports and events, as well as traditions like the Olympic flag and torch.
This year has been one of the student's best years in physical education class. They have enjoyed learning new sports like kin ball and acrosport, which have taught valuable lessons about teamwork and safety. While running is still their preferred sport, it is important to build endurance, performance, and other athletic skills. The student gives their physical education teacher high marks for making this their best year yet through confidence and demonstrated coaching skills. They advise practicing kin ball more since students may only experience it in this class.
This student found the third term to be shorter than the second term, so they did not have as much time to enjoy activities like Kin Ball. While it was a great term overall for practicing sports, they only got to play some sports once or twice and would have liked more opportunities. They will be doing an escalation activity soon that involves heights, which they did not enjoy much last year due to a fear of falling, even from a short distance. They hope to enjoy and not be afraid this time.
This year has been one of the student's best years in physical education class. They have enjoyed learning new sports like kin ball and acrosport, which have taught valuable lessons about teamwork and safety. While running is still their preferred sport, it is important to build endurance, performance, and other athletic skills. The student gives their physical education teacher high marks for making this their best year yet through confidence and demonstrated coaching skills. They advise practicing kin ball more since students may only experience it in this class.
This student discusses their opinion of the third school term. They felt it was worse than the second term because it was very short and they did not have enough time to enjoy it. However, they felt it was a great term overall where they got to play sports like Kin Ball, though they only got to play some sports once or twice and would have liked more time for sports. They will be doing an escalation activity this term and could not give their opinion yet, but last year they did not enjoy it much due to a fear of falling, even from a low height, though they hope to enjoy it more this time.
This year has been one of the student's best years in physical education class. They have enjoyed learning new sports like kin ball and acrosport, which have taught valuable lessons about teamwork and safety. While running is still their preferred sport, it is important to build endurance, performance, and other athletic skills. The student gives themselves a grade of nine for trying their best in all activities, though some days they were not at 100%. They give their PE teacher a perfect score of ten for being more confident and demonstrating excellent coaching skills, making this their best year together. They recommend practicing kin ball more often since students may only learn it this year.
The document discusses the history of doping in Spanish sports since the 1970s. Several famous Spanish athletes across multiple sports like cycling, football, and swimming have failed doping tests due to using banned substances like amphetamines which helped improve their performance and earn them contracts with wealthy teams and salaries between €40,000 to €73.5 million per year. The conclusion is that many high-performing athletes have used drugs at some point in their careers to boost their marks or get better contracts.
2 worksheet society and sport discussion board25071998
The document analyzes doping in high performance sports in Spain since the 1970s. It discusses how many famous Spanish athletes have tested positive for banned substances like amphetamines, including cyclists, footballers, swimmers, and runners. These substances helped improve their performance, allowing them to be contracted by wealthy teams and earn salaries between €2,040-€189,706 per day. The author concludes that most top athletes have used drugs at some point to boost their marks and get better contracts. In their personal opinion, this situation is unfair as athletes do not achieve success through their own abilities and it endangers their health, though the pressure to improve and earn more money encourages doping.
2 worksheet society and sport discussion board25071998
This document analyzes doping in high performance sports in Spain since 1970. It discusses how many famous Spanish athletes have tested positive for banned substances like amphetamines. These substances allowed athletes to achieve great performances, which led to contracts with wealthy teams and salaries between €510,000 to €47 million per year. However, the document concludes that doping is unfair and dangerous to health, and athletes who dope are ultimately cheating themselves.
The document discusses the history of doping in Spanish sports since the 1970s. Several famous Spanish athletes across multiple sports like cycling, football, and swimming have failed doping tests due to using banned substances like amphetamines which helped improve their performance and earn them contracts with wealthy teams and salaries between €40,000 to €73.5 million per year. The conclusion is that many high-performing athletes have used drugs at some point in their careers to boost their marks or get better contracts.
Temporalización 3º evaluación 4º de la eso (1)25071998
Este documento presenta el plan de estudios y la temporalización de la asignatura de Educación Física para el tercer trimestre del curso académico 2013-2014 para los estudiantes de 4o de la ESO. Incluye las fechas y actividades programadas para cada una de las 24 sesiones, las cuales se centrarán principalmente en deportes de raqueta, kinball y escalada durante los meses de abril, mayo y junio.
This student found the second term to be better than the previous one because it was less difficult, more engaging and enjoyable. They preferred learning new sports like acrosport which involves choreography and teamwork. Additionally, the teacher seemed to enjoy the term by demonstrating skills like standing on his head during exercises.
This student found the second term better than the first because the activities were more fun and less difficult, such as handball which taught teamwork and acrosport which required order and care. The student also thought the teacher enjoyed this term more as he was able to show off his skills like standing on his head.
3 sport and physical activity in the 21st century25071998
This document discusses the rise of sport and physical activity in the 21st century. It covers the concept of sport, how society views sport, the growth of sports participation in Spain, the role of schools in promoting physical activity and health, and the institutionalization of sport through organizations like the IOC and national federations that regulate competitions and promote physical activity. The key ideas are that sport has become a major social phenomenon over the last century due to increased participation, media coverage, and institutional support through schools and sports organizations.
This document discusses the concept of sport and physical activity in the 21st century. It covers how sport has evolved as a social phenomenon over the last 100 years. Sport is now a major part of society, with millions participating either through organized leagues and clubs or informal physical activity. While competition and commercialization are prominent aspects of sport today, physical activity provides mental, physical and social benefits to both individuals and communities. The document also examines how sport is practiced, organized and promoted across different levels and institutions within societies.
El documento presenta la planificación de las sesiones de educación física para la segunda evaluación del curso académico 2013-2014 para los alumnos de 4o de ESO. Se desarrollarán 24 sesiones entre enero y marzo, donde se trabajarán deportes como el floorball, balonmano, acrosport, frisbee y fútbol, con énfasis en la técnica básica y la iniciación al juego. También se incluyen sesiones teóricas sobre la organización del deporte y un viaje a Andorra
The Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) is the governing body of football in Spain. It organizes La Liga and manages the Spanish national football teams. Some of Spain's most important football players include Ricardo Zamora, Luis Suárez, Fernando Torres, Andrés Iniesta, and Iker Casillas. Key coaches for the Spanish national team were Luis Aragonés, who led Spain to victory at Euro 2008, and Vicente del Bosque, who guided Spain to World Cup and Euro triumphs in 2010 and 2012 respectively.
Este documento presenta la temporalización de la segunda evaluación de Educación Física para los estudiantes de 4o de ESO. Se detallan las 24 sesiones que tendrán lugar entre enero y marzo, dividiéndolas por semanas e indicando las actividades que se realizarán como floorball, balonmano, acrosport, frisbee y fútbol, así como las fechas de exposiciones y entrega de notas.
The 1960 Olympic Games were held in Rome from August 25th to September 11th. Notable athletes included Danish sailor Paul Elvstrom, who won his fourth consecutive gold medal in Finn class, and Hungarian shooter Aladar Gerevich, who won his sixth gold medal. The Games saw 83 countries participate with over 5,000 competitors, including the first Paralympics held after the Olympics.
The 1960 Summer Olympics, known as the XVII Olympiad, were held in Rome, Italy from August 25th to September 11th. Notable events included it being the first Olympics with an Olympic hymn and televised coverage. Over 5,300 competitors from 83 countries participated, including the first Paralympics held afterwards. Paul Elvstrom of Denmark and Aladar Gerevich of Hungary each won their sixth career gold medals. There was controversy in the 100m sprint final over which athlete won.
This document discusses a student's opinion on the hardest and easiest parts of their current term. The student found the tests requiring resistance and speed the hardest as they had to display various skills. While speech seemed easiest, the student discovered public speaking was actually very difficult due to lack of experience which caused shame and worries over pronunciation. The student promises to improve on tests and speeches next term by giving more effort.
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2. 2
The Modern Olympic Games
Index:
1.
INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................................................... 3
2.
MODERN OLYMPIC SYMBOLS AND TRADITIONS .............................................................................. 4
2.1.
The Olympic Movement ........................................................................................................................ 4
2.2.
What do the Olympic rings mean? ........................................................................................................ 4
2.3.
Flame and Torch .................................................................................................................................... 5
2.4.
The Olympic Oath .................................................................................................................................. 5
2.5.
Rings and Flag ........................................................................................................................................ 6
2.6.
Anthem ................................................................................................................................................... 6
2.7.
Motto ...................................................................................................................................................... 7
2.8.
Release of Doves .................................................................................................................................... 7
2.9.
What is the Olympic creed? ................................................................................................................... 7
2.10.
Closing statement .............................................................................................................................. 8
2.11.
The Victory Ceremony ....................................................................................................................... 8
I.
1896 Athens ................................................................................................................................................ 8
II.
1900 Paris ................................................................................................................................................... 9
III.
1904 St. Louis ....................................................................................................................................... 10
IV.
1908 London ........................................................................................................................................ 10
V.
1912 Stockholm .......................................................................................................................................... 11
VI.
1916 Berlin scheduled cancelled due to WW1 ..................................................................................... 12
VII.
1920 Antwerp ....................................................................................................................................... 12
VIII.
1924 Paris ............................................................................................................................................. 12
IX.
1928 Amsterdam .................................................................................................................................. 13
X.
XI.
1932 Los Angeles ...................................................................................................................................... 14
1936 Berlin ........................................................................................................................................... 15
1940 Tokyo (XII) scheduled, cancelled due to WW2 ....................................................................................... 16
1944 London (XIII) scheduled, cancelled due to WW2 ................................................................................... 16
XIV. 1948 London .............................................................................................................................................. 16
XV. 1952 Helsinki .............................................................................................................................................. 16
XVI. 1956 Melbourne......................................................................................................................................... 17
XVII. 1960 Rome ............................................................................................................................................... 18
XVIII. 1964 Tokyo.............................................................................................................................................. 18
XIX. 1968 Mexico .............................................................................................................................................. 19
XX. 1972 Munich ............................................................................................................................................... 19
XXI. 1976 Montreal ...........................................................................................................................................20
XXII. 1980 Moscow ........................................................................................................................................... 21
XXIII. 1984 Los Angeles .................................................................................................................................... 21
XXIV. 1988 Seoul............................................................................................................................................... 22
XXV. 1992 Barcelona ......................................................................................................................................... 22
XXVI. 1996 Atlanta ............................................................................................................................................ 23
XXVII. 2000 Sydney.......................................................................................................................................... 23
XXVIII. 2004 Athens......................................................................................................................................... 24
XXIX. 2008 Beijing ........................................................................................................................................... 25
The Bird's Nest Olympic Stadium ............................................................................................................ 25
XXX. 2012 London ............................................................................................................................................ 26
Physical Department
3. 3
The Modern Olympic Games
XXXI. 2016 Rio Janeiro .................................................................................................................................... 26
THE MODERN OLYMPIC GAMES
1. INTRODUCTION
It wasn't until after efforts by French Baron Pierre De Coubertin and the Greek
Dimitrios Vikelas that the games were
brought back to life after nearly 1500 years
in the wilderness. P. Coubertin believed
that sport was a very strong power that
could inspire a feeling of unity and peace
among the many nations of the world. He
believed that this desire could be brought
about with the revival of the Olympic
Games.
After an unsuccessful attempt at reviving
the games, he finally achieved his
ambition. In 1894 at an international
congress, which was actually devised for the study of amateur sports, he voiced
his view on the revival of the Olympic Games, and was delighted when the other
countries participating in the congress agreed with him. The International
Olympic Committee (IOC) was founded that year.
Held in Athens in 1896 at the Panatheniac Stadium, the games heralded a
welcomed return to the original beliefs and virtues of the ancient games. With
competitors from 14 nations, the games commenced on April 6th and came to a
climax on 15th April. There were 43 events, which were competed in by 245
athletes, all of whom were male.
Probably the biggest cheer of the 1896 Olympics was when a Greek Sheppard,
Spiridon Louis, was victorious in the most popular of all events, the marathon.
The athletes from the United States were also big winners in these games,
winning 9 events.
What is even more remarkable regarding this is that their Olympic squad barely
made it to Athens in time to compete.
The Olympics have taken place every four years, since the first games in 1896.
However, even the ideals of the Olympic Truce could not prevent the games
being cancelled during the first and second world wars. The games cancelled
were the 1916 Olympics, due to be held in Berlin, the 1940 games to be held in
Tokyo and the 1944 games to be held in Helsinki.
The Winter Olympic Games were introduced in 1924, and also took place every
four years. However, it wasn't until 1992 that it was decided that the Olympic
and Winter Olympic games would not take place in the same calendar year. The
Winter Games were moved forward two years to 1994, and would continue to
take place at four-year intervals.
Since the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896, the games have
continued to grow throughout the years and more and more nations have been
taking part, as well as more events being included. During the 1896 games, 14
nations took part. At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, 199 nations took part. In 1896
Physical Department
4. 4
The Modern Olympic Games
there were 245 athletes (all male), in 2000 there were 10,651 (4069 women and
6582 men). And in 1896 there were 43 events, compared to the 300 events at
the 2000 Olympics.
2. MODERN OLYMPIC SYMBOLS AND TRADITIONS
2.1. The Olympic Movement
The Olympic Movement is a philosophy created and promoted by the
International Olympic Committee. This philosophy advocates using sport not
just as a physical activity but also as a
means of educating people.
According to this philosophy, the good
sportsmanship, sense of fair play, and
respect for fellow athletes that is
developed through participation in
sports teaches men and women of
different
races,
religions,
and
nationalities to work peacefully
together in competition toward
common
goals.
The
Olympic
Movement works to expand such
lessons beyond the sports arena in the hope of promoting peace and a sense of
brotherhood throughout the world.
The most prominent way the IOC promotes the Olympic Movement is through
the Olympic Games. But the Movement's ideals are practiced in other ways,
including the promotion of environmental issues, fighting drug use among
athletes, and providing financial and educational aid.
2.2. What do the Olympic rings mean?
The colours of the interlinked Olympic rings were chosen by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) , to
represent the union of the 5 continents
, Australia , Africa , America , Asia and
Europe and further signify the meeting
of the worlds athletes at the Olympic
Games.
The plain white background of the
Olympic flag is symbolic of peace throughout the games .
The five colours of the rings from left to right are blue, black and red across the
top with yellow and green along the bottom , these colours may be found on
most flags of the world and officially hold no other particular significance ,
although some believe each colour represents a particular continent
Blue
Yellow
Black
Green
Red
Physical Department
5. 5
The Modern Olympic Games
=Europe
=Asia
=Africa
=Australia
=America
2.3. Flame and Torch
The ancient Greeks believed that fire was given to mankind by Prometheus, and
considered fire to have sacred qualities. Eternal flames burned in front of Greek
temples, flames lit using the rays of the sun.
Greek rituals also included torch relays,
although this was not actually part of the ancient
Olympic Games.
The Olympic flame is lit in front of the ruins of
the Temple of Hera in Olympia, emphasizing the
connection between the ancient Games and the
modern Games. An actress playing a high
priestess uses a parabolic mirror to focus the
rays of the sun, igniting a flame. (In case of cloudy weather, a backup flame is lit
in advance.) A long relay of runners carrying torches brings it to the site of the
Games. There, the final torch is used to light a cauldron that remains lit until it
is extinguished in the Closing
Ceremony.
The first such relay took place
for the 1936 Berlin Games.
3,331 runners brought the flame
through
Greece,
Bulgaria,
Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria,
Czechoslovakia, and Germany.
Similar relays have taken place
for every Summer Games since.
The 2004 relay is the first to
start and end in Greece; it is
also the first to visit every continent, crossing 34 cities in 27 countries before
returning to Greece. The flame travels by plane between cities, and is relayed by
foot within cities. Being a torch-bearer is considered an honor, one often given
to local residents with a record of community service, in addition to athletes and
celebrities. The torches generally burn a gas fuel, and are specially designed to
resist the effects of wind and rain.
Since 1964, the Winter Games have also had a torch relay starting in Olympia.
Of the three immediately preceding Winter Games, two (1952 and 1960) had
torch relays starting in the fireplace of skiing pioneer Sondre Norheim, and one
(1956) had a relay starting in Rome. The 1984 Winter Games were preceded by
two torch relays, one from Norheim's fireplace, and the other from Olympia.
The plan had been to mingle the two flames, lighting the cauldron with the
combination, but this was disallowed; instead, only the Greek flame was used.
2.4. The Olympic Oath
The Olympic Oath is taken by one athlete and one judge from the home nation
during the Opening Ceremony of every Olympics, acting on behalf of all the
competitors and judges. Since 1984, this has been taken while holding a corner
of the Olympic flag. Until then, the national flag of the home nation was used.
Physical Department
6. 6
The Modern Olympic Games
The oath was first taken by an athlete in 1920. Originally, this was primarily a
declaration that all the athletes were
amateurs. The wording has been revised
considerably over the years, however;
amateurism is no longer a general
requirement, and a specific reference to
doping was added in 2000. The current
form is:
In the name of all the competitors I promise that we shall take part in these Olympic
Games, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them, committing ourselves to a
sport without doping and without drugs, in the true spirit of sportsmanship, for the glory
of sport and the honor of our teams."
The oath was first taken by a referee in 1972. The current form of that oath is:
"In the name of all the judges and officials, I promise that we shall officiate in these
Olympic Games with complete impartiality, respecting and abiding by the rules which
govern them, in the true spirit of sportsmanship."
2.5. Rings and Flag
Each of the five Olympic rings is a different color. Together, they represent the
five inhabited continents, although no particular ring is meant to represent any
specific continent. (The Americas are
treated as one continent.) The rings
are interlaced to represent the idea
that the Olympics are universal,
bringing athletes from the entire world
together.
The Olympic flag places the Olympic
rings on a white background. As every
national flag in the world contains at
least one of the flag's six colors (black, blue, green, red, yellow, white), this
further symbolizes the universality of the Olympics.
The Olympic rings and flag were designed by de Coubertin after the 1912 Games
in Stockholm. Those Games were the first to include athletes from all five
continents. The rings were going to be used in the 1916 Games, but those games
were cancelled because of World War I, so the rings made their debut in the
1920 Games in Antwerp, Belgium.
2.6. Anthem
The Olympic Anthem was written for the first modern Games in 1896,
composed by Spyros Samaras to lyrics written by Kostis Palamas. Each
subsequent Olympics through 1956 had its own musical composition, played as
the Olympic flag was raised during the Opening Ceremony. From the 1960
Games onward, the Samaras/Palamas work has been the official anthem played
at every Olympics.
The English translation of the anthem is as follows:
Physical Department
7. 7
The Modern Olympic Games
Immortal spirit of antiquity
Father of the true, beautiful and good,
Descend, appear, shed over us thy
light
Upon this ground and under this sky
Which has first witnessed thy
unperishable fame
Give life and animation to those noble
games!
Throw wreaths of fadeless flowers to
the victors
In the race and in the strife!
Create in our breasts, hearts of steel!
In thy light, plains, mountains and
seas
Shine in a roseate hue and form a vast
temple
To which all nations throng to adore
thee,
Oh immortal spirit of antiquity!
2.7. Motto
The Olympic motto is Citius—Altius—Fortius,
which is Latin for "faster, higher, stronger." The
intended meaning is that one's focus should be on
bettering one's achievements, rather than on
coming in first.
The motto has been with the Games from the
foundation of the International Olympic
Committee in 1894. It was proposed by the father of the modern Olympic
Games, Pierre de Coubertin, who got it from a speech given by a friend of his,
Henri Didon, a Dominican priest and principal of an academy that used sports
as part of its educational program.
2.8. Release of Doves
After the cauldron is lit, doves are released, as a symbol
of peace. This was first done in the 1896 Olympics, and
then in the 1920 Olympics. Since 1920, this has been an
official part of the Opening Ceremony of the Summer
Games. They are generally not released during the Winter Games, because it's
too cold for the birds, but symbolic substitutions are sometimes used. In the
1994 Winter Games, for example, white balloons were released.
The order—first lighting the cauldron, then releasing the doves—is important. In
the 1988 Seoul Games, they tried it the other way around. Unfortunately, many
of the doves were in the area of the cauldron just before it burst into flames,
leading to their unexpected demise.
2.9. What is the Olympic creed?
The Olympic creed was first stated in 1896 by the founder of the modern
Olympic games , Baron Pierre de Coubertin , the words of the creed are as
follows;
Physical Department
8. 8
The Modern Olympic Games
"The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to
take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph
but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to
have fought well."
2.10. Closing statement
The president of the IOC pronounces the Games closed with the following
statement:
"I declare the Games of the________(current) Olympiad closed, and in
accordance with tradition, I call upon the youth of the world to assemble four
years from now at ____________(the site of the next Olympics), to celebrate
with us there the Games of the_______ (next) Olympiad."
2.11. The Victory Ceremony
At the Ancient Games, winners were presented with a
simple olive tree branch which was cut with a goldhandled knife from a wild olive tree. The Greeks
believed that the vitality of the sacred tree was
transmitted to the
recipient through
the branch.
At the Modern
Games, Olympic medals are presented to the
winning athletes who stand on a dais at the
completion of their event. A GOLD medal is
presented for first place, SILVER for second
and BRONZE for third. The host city is
responsible for designing the medals within
the guidelines set by the IOC.
The national anthem of the winner is played as each medalist’s national flag is
raised.
3.
MODERN OLYMPIC GAMES
I. 1896 Athens
Physical Department
9. 9
The Modern Olympic Games
It is universally accepted that Baron de Coubertin masterminded the Modern
Olympic Games. It was fitting that first 'Modern'
celebration was fittingly held in Athens, the scene
of those ancient games.
What struck me about the history of the Olympic
Games is that the early celebrations, with their
amateur status, produced more fascinating
sporting incidents than the slick professional
games of the last 20 years.
On 6 April 1896, the American James Connolly
won the triple jump to become the first Olympic
champion in more than 1,500 years. For these first Olympics, winners were
awarded a crown of olive branches and a silver medal.
The people of Athens greeted the Games with great enthusiasm. Their support
was rewarded when a Greek, Spiridon Louis, won their most popular event, the
marathon. Naturally, the race stated in the city of Marathon and Louis must
have been able to enjoy his fantastic reception since he was 6 minutes clear at
the end.
Alfred Hajos won both the 100m and the 1,200m swimming events. For the
longer race, the competitors were shipped out into the lake and then swam back
to shore. According to Hajos, 'I must say that I shivered at the thought of what
would happen if I got a cramp from the cold water. My will to live completely
overcame my desire to win.'
An Olympic Anthem composed by Spyros Samaras was played at the Athens.
For the next 60 year a variety of musical compositions provided the
backgrounds to the Opening Ceremonies, then in 1960, the Samaras
composition became the official Olympic Anthem.
II.1900 Paris
A feature for the next 4 or 5 games was how interminably long they were. The
Athens Olympics was over in a reasonable 8 days,
but the Paris games went on, and on, for 5 months.
The number of nations represented had doubled to
28, and there were now 75 events to contest. Unlike
1896, women made their appearance in these
games. Tennis was the new popular sport and
Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain won the ladies
singles.
I found it surprising that athletes entered as individuals; indeed, there was no
concept of national trials until the 1908 games. It is rumoured that in some
team sports, competitors did not realise they were competing in the Olympic
Games. This may explain why teams comprising members of different
nationalities were acceptable. What price a rowing team in 2008 with an
Englishman, Irishman, German and American!
Records were haphazard, and to this day the names, and especially the
nationality of some medallists are not known. For instance, medals won by
Canada were not discovered for some years as the athlete in question, George
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Orton, had been entered by his American university and had been registered as
an American. One side effect is that the all time records for how many medals
countries have won can never be truly settled. This uncertainty can only be
beneficial as it throws the focus back on individual champions. Indeed, while
the 1900 winners were champions all, none received a gold medal.
III. 1904 St. Louis
The 1904 St. Louis Olympics organizers repeated the mistakes of 1900. The
Olympic were spread out over four months, and in truth, were upstaged by
World Fair.
The atmosphere was one of American inter-collegiate championships. To
illustrate the point, of the 94 events 52 were functionally closed events,
contested by athletes only from the USA.
The 1904 Olympics produced innovations, they were the first to award gold,
silver and bronze medals.
For the only time in the Olympics, the 220 yds (200M) was run on a straight
course, no bends. Another unusual feature was the winner, Archie Hahn, got a
handy 1 yd start on each of his three opponents. This was not because they were
professionals but because they false-started and in 1904 the penalty for jumping
the gun was a 1 yd penalty. Could this idea make a come-back?
Boxing and freestyle wrestling made their debuts. Marathon runners Len Tau
and Jan Mashiani, Tswana tribesmen who were in St. Louis as part of the Boer
War exhibit at the World's Fair, became the first Africans to compete in the
Olympics.
One of the most remarkable athletes was the American gymnast George Eyser,
who won six medals even though his left leg was made of wood. Chicago runner
James Lightbody won the steeplechase and the 800m and then set a world
record in the 1,500m.
IV.
1908 London
Whilst this London games was a better organized and more cosmopolitan
celebration than St. Louis, it still went on and on for more than 4 months.
London was the first official Olympics where athletes marched into the stadium
behind their respective national flags.
With over 100 events and more than 2,000 competitors the level of competition
was high but controversy and national rivalry still left a bitter taste on the
Games.
A total of 21 different sports featured, including ice skating, while bicycle-polo
featured as a demonstration sport.
The shape and size of the running track had yet to be standardized, and the
68,000-seater stadium in Shepherds Bush held a 660 yd track making 3 laps to
the mile.
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Politics reared its head almost immediately. The USA team spotted that there
was no American flag among the national flags decorating the stadium for the
opening ceremonies. As a result USA flag-bearer Martin Sheridan responded by
refusing to dip the Stars and Stripes as he passed King Edward VII's box in the
parade of athletes. 'This flag dips to no earthly king,' Sheridan said.
As a prelude to a sub-plot in the 'Chariots of Fire' story in 1924, Forrest
Smithson protested at having to run on a Sunday. Legend has it he ran, and
won, holding a bible.
The classic marathon distance of 26 miles and 365 yards was fixed once and for
all in the London Marathon. The peculiar distance came about when the course
from Windsor Great Park to Shepherds Bush was extended by a mile and 365
yards so that it finished at the Royal Box.
The London marathon staged the most controversial happening in all Olympic
Marathons. The race had been uneventful until Dorando Pietri of Italy staggered
into the stadium, and then collapsed. Perhaps you have seen the grainy film of
him being half-carried across the finish line. Some say Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
was of those who helped the stricken runner.
V. 1912 Stockholm
Hooray! The Stockholm celebration of the
Olympic Games was reduced to 10 weeks.
1924 was the first Olympic Games where
the athletes were accommodated in an
Olympic Village, a group of wood cabins.
By tradition, each host country is allowed
to stage an event of their choice, after all
they are laying on the games. In 1912 the
Swedes introduced the modern Pentathlon
and it was no surprise that they
dominated the event. However, who
should be in 5th place, future American
General, George S. Patton.
The Americans sailed to Europe in the liner 'Finland' . This was an omen for the
middle distances which were dominated by Kolehmainen. In the 5,000 M
Kolehmainen was pushed so hard by Bouin of France that he knocked over 20
seconds of the world record.
In this era produced some colourful swimming champions, in the 1912 Olympics
Duke Paoa Kahanamoku won the blue-riband event - 100m freestyle. Duke
seemed an unlikely 'moniker' for a Hawaiian, but research show that his royal
parents named him after the Duke of Edinburgh (Queen Victoria's second son).
For many, Jim Thorpe was the greatest athlete of the era. He did not just win
the 1912 Olympic Pentathlon and Decathlon but he annihilated the opposition.
The name Jim Thorpe is also famous as he was controversially disqualified for
alleged professionalism. Some say there as anti-Indian prejudice, others say it
was personal animosity between Thorpe and Avery Brundage (Later IOC
president) who was 5th in the pentathlon.
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VI.
1916 Berlin scheduled cancelled due to WW1
VII. 1920 Antwerp
Antwerp saw the birth of the famous Olympic flag made by interlocking five
circles. The idea was to represent the unity and friendship of the human race.
This was the first games where one of the athletes took the Olympic oathuttered, the honour in Antwerp fell to the Belgium fencer Victor Bion.
1920 also saw a repeat of the first Olympiad, when doves were released to
symbolise peace between the nations.
Finland usurped the American dominance on the track thanks to Koiehmainen
and the legendary Paavo Nurmi who won three medals, two gold and one silver,
at the start of his illustrious Olympic career.
South America claimed their first gold medal in 1920 when Guilherme Paraense
of Brazil won the rapid-fire pistol event, whilst Willie Lee and Lloyd Spooner of
America celebrated four and five golds respectively.
Elsewhere, American diver Aileen Riggin became the youngest gold medal
winner at just 14 years and 119 days.
Great Britain's Philip Noel-Baker won silver in the 1500m, and later went on to
become an MP. In 1959, he became the only Olympian to ever be awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
Suzanne Lenglen (FRA-tennis), one of the greatest women tennis players of all
time, won the Olympic title by losing only four games. She teamed up with Max
Decugis (FRA) to win another gold medal in mixed doubles and with Elisabeth
d' Ayen (FRA) to win a bronze in women's doubles.
VIII. 1924 Paris
The 1924 Games saw American William DeHart Hubbard became the first black
athlete to win an individual gold medal; he triumphed in the long jump.
His compatriot Robert LeGendre broke the long jump world record with a leap
of 7.76m, but this was in the pentathlon, and he had to settle for bronze.
Paavo Nurmi (FIN-athletics) had a crazy programme. He participated in the
1,500 and 5,000m, the finals of which were less than an hour apart, in the
3,000m, both individual and team events, as well as the cross-country! Nurmi
obtained an incredible five titles. Nurmi was honoured for his achievements
when a his statue was erected outside Helsinki stadium.
Great Britain scored two major victories when Harold Abrahams became the
first European to win an Olympic sprint medal, while Eric Liddell took the gold
in the 400m in a time of 47.6 seconds. Lidell's time was a world record, but was
not officially recognised because the runners only had to run around one bend
until 1936.
The gold medals won by British runners Harold Abrahams in the 100 meters
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winning film 'Chariots of Fire.' The movie, however, was not based on fact.
Liddell, a devout Christian, knew months in advance that the preliminary for
the 100 (his best event) was on a Sunday, so he had plenty of time to change
plans and train for the 400.
Speaking of the movies, Johnny Weissmuller of USA won three swimming gold
medals in the 100 and 400-meter freestyles and the 4x200 freestyle relay. He
would later become Hollywood's most famous Tarzan
At the 1924 Paris Games, the Olympic motto, 'Citius, Altius, Fortius', (Swifter,
Higher, Stronger) was introduced, as was the Closing Ceremony ritual of raising
three flags: the flag of the International Olympic Committee, the flag of the host
nation and the flag of the next host nation. The number of participating nations
jumped from 29 to 44, signalling widespread acceptance of the Olympics as a
major event, as did the presence of 1,000 journalists. Women's fencing made its
debut as Ellen Osiier of Denmark earned the gold medal without losing a single
bout.
American swimmer Gertrude Ederle won a bronze medal in the 100m freestyle.
Two years later she caused a sensation by becoming the first woman to swim
across the English Channel (La Manche) - and in a time almost two hours faster
than any man had ever achieved. Finnish runner Paavo Nurmi, won five gold
medals to add to the three he had won in 1920. His most spectacular
performance occurred on 10 July. First he easily won the 1,500m. Then, a mere
55 minutes later, he returned to the track and won the 5,000m. Nurmi's teammate, Ville Ritola, did not do badly either in 1924: he won four gold medals and
two silver.
Tennis made its last appearance before being brought back more than 60 years
later at Seoul. The IOC, which was fiercely anti-professional, had doubts
whether the game's top players were truly amateurs.
IX. 1928 Amsterdam
The 1928 Amsterdam celebration was opened by Prince Hendik, consort of
Queen Wilhelmina. Amsterdam also saw the introduction of the now
synonymous Olympic flame, which was kept alight throughout the duration of
the Games.
Lord Burghley won the 400m Hurdles and Crown Prince (later King Olav) won
a gold medal in yachting.
In the sprints, Canada's Percy Williams became the first non-American to win
both the 100 and 200. Finland claimed four running titles, including Paavo
Nurmi's victory in the 10,000 meters-his ninth overall gold medal in three
Olympic Games. Teammate and arch-rival Ville Ritola placed second in the
10,000 and outran Nurmi in the 5,000.
These Games marked Germany's return to the Olympic fold after serving a 10year probation for its ' aggressiveness' in World War I. It was also the first
Olympics that women were allowed to participate in track and field (despite
objections from Pope Pius IX). And in swimming, the USA. got double gold
performances from Martha Norelius, Albina Osipowich and Johnny
Weissmuller, as well as diver Pete Desjardins.
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Perhaps the Games were best exemplified by the experience of Australian rower
Henry Pearce. Midway through his quarterfinal race, he stopped rowing to allow
a family of ducks to pass single file in front of his boat. Pearce won the race
anyway and, later, the gold medal as well.
At the Opening Ceremony, the team from Greece led the Parade of Nations and
the host Dutch team marched in last. Greece first, hosts last would become a
permanent part of the Olympic protocol.
Athletes from 28 different nations won gold medals in Amsterdam, a record that
would last for 40 years. The number of female athletes more than doubled as
women were finally allowed to compete in gymnastics and athletics. For the first
time, Asian athletes won gold medals. Mikio Oda of Japan won the triple jump,
while his team-mate, Yoshiyuki Tsuruta, won the 200m breaststroke.
Between 1928 and 1960, Indian teams won six straight gold medals in men's
Hockey. Another winning streak began in 1928. Hungary earned the first of
seven consecutive gold medals in team sabre fencing.
Luigina Giavotti became the youngest ever medallist when she gained silver in
gymnastics at 11 years and 302 days, an Olympic record which still stands today.
X. 1932 Los Angeles
Firsts for the 1932 Olympics:
Village to house men
Victory Stand
Photo Finish Camera
First to shorten 16 days previously 80 days.
Mildred (Babe) Didrikson
In the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics, Mildred (Babe) Didrikson won gold medals
and broke her own world records in both the javelin and the 80-meter hurdles.
In the high-jump she was awarded the silver in the high jump despite clearing a
world-record height. The judge's strange reasoning was because they disliked
her technique of clearing the bar headfirst.
For sheer athletic ability, Babe Didrikson may have been more versatile than
Jim Thorpe. She led the Dallas Cyclones to three AAU national basketball
championships and scored 106 points in one game.
After the Olympic Games Babe Didrikson pitched for the House of David men's
baseball team and once struck out Joe DiMaggio. Pro basketball, billiards,
handball, swimming, diving, lacrosse, football, boxing -- she did them all and, as
she was quick to point out, she did them better than the next person. She was
good at everything -- typing (86 words a minute), gin rummy, cooking, dancing,
harmonica playing and crossword puzzles.
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XI. 1936 Berlin
1936 saw the introduction of the torch relay, in which a lighted torch is carried
from Olympia to the site of the current Games. The 1936 Olympics were also the
first to be broadcast on a form of television. Twenty-five large screens were set
up throughout Berlin, allowing the local people to see the Games for free.
Basketball, canoeing and team handball made their first appearances, while
polo was included in the Olympic programme for the last time.
At the Big Ten Track and Field Championships of 1935, Ohio State's Jesse
Owens equalled or set world records in four events: the 100 and 220-yard
dashes, 200-yard low hurdles and the long jump. He was also credited with
world marks in the 200-meter run and 200-meter hurdles. That's six world
records in one afternoon, and he did it all in 45 minutes!
The following year, he swept the 100 and 200 meters and long jump at the
Olympic Trials and headed for Germany favoured to win all three.
In Berlin, dictator Adolf Hitler and his Nazi followers felt sure that the Olympics
would be the ideal venue to demonstrate Germany's oft-stated racial superiority.
He directed that $25 million be spent on the finest facilities, the cleanest streets
and the temporary withdrawal of all outward signs of the state-run anti-Jewish
campaign. By the time over 4,000 athletes from 49 countries arrived for the
Games, the stage was set.
Then Owens, a black sharecropper's son from Alabama, stole the show-winning
his three individual events and adding a fourth gold medal in the 4x100-meter
relay. The fact that four other American blacks also won did little to please Herr
Hitler, but the applause from the German crowds, especially for Owens, was
thunderous.
The top female performers in Berlin were 17-year-old Dutch swimmer Rie
Mastenbroek, who won three gold medals, and 18-year-old American runner
Helen Stephens, who captured the 100 meters and anchored the winning 4x100meter relay team.
Thirteen-year-old Marjorie Gestring of the United States won the gold medal in
springboard diving. She remains the youngest female gold medallist in the
history of the Summer Olympics. Inge Sorensen of Denmark earned a bronze
medal in the 200-medal breaststroke at the age of 12, making her the youngest
medalist ever in an individual event.
Hungarian water polo player Olivier Halassy won his third medal despite the
fact that one of his legs had been amputated below the knee following a streetcar
accident. Rower Jack Beresford of Great Britain won a gold medal in the double
sculls event, marking the fifth Olympics at which he earned a medal. Kristjan
Palusalu of Estonia won the heavyweight division in both freestyle and GrecoRoman wrestling.
Germany won only five gold medals in men's and women's track and field, but
saved face for the 'master race' in the overall medal count with an 89-56 margin
over the United States.
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1940 Tokyo (XII) scheduled, cancelled due to WW2
1944 London (XIII) scheduled, cancelled due to WW2
XIV. 1948 London
Coming so soon after the end of World War II the 1948 Olympics showed little
of the pageantry or bombast of the Berlin Games.
Yet out of these unassuming Games came one of the most remarkable
achievements: the four-gold performance of Fanny Blankers-Koen, a 32-yearold mother of two from the Netherlands. On the fifth day of competition, when
an American sweep of the men's high hurdles led coverage in the Times,
Blankers-Koen was deemed ' remarkable' for her victory in the 80-meter
hurdles, having previously won the 100-meter dash.
At 30, she was the oldest woman in track and field at those Olympics, and also
the most successful. She ran 11 races in seven days and won them all. They
produced four gold medalsin the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes, the 80meter hurdles and the 4x100-meter relay. She almost quit after two gold medals
because she missed her son and daughter and wanted to go home, but her
husband talked her into staying.
In 1936, Fanny Blankers-Koen emerged from the Berlin Olympics with fifth
place in the high jump, fifth in the 4x100-meter relay, and Jesse Owens's
autograph. She kept training during World War II, even when the Germans sent
many of her friends to concentration camps.
XV. 1952 Helsinki
The 1952 Helsinki Games began dramatically as Paavo Nurmi, now 55 years old,
carried the torch into the stadium and handed it to Hannes Kolehmainen, now
62, who lit the cauldron.
One of the first women allowed to compete against men in the equestrian
dressage was Lis Hartel of Denmark. Despite being paralyzed below the knees
after an attack of polio, Hartel, who had to be helped on and off her horse, won a
silver medal. Lars Hall, a carpenter from Sweden, became the first non-military
winner of the modern pentathlon.
Back in 1924, Bill Havens had been chosen to represent the United States in
coxed eights rowing, but declined in order to stay home with his wife, who was
expecting their first child. Twenty-eight years later, that child, Frank Havens,
won a gold medal in the Canadian singles 10,000m canoeing event.
Bob Mathias (USA-athletics) was the first person to win two successive Olympic
decathlon titles. After a first gold medal in 1948 when, as a 17-year-old, he
became the youngest-ever winner of an Olympic track and field event, he set the
world record defending his title.
The Soviet Union returned to the Olympic fold in 1952 after a 40-year absence, a
period of time that included a revolution and two world wars. Ironically, the
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Soviets chose to make their comeback in Finland, a country they had invaded
twice during World War II.
This time it was the United States that was surprised by the Soviets, and the
USA had to scramble on the last day of competition to hold off the USSR's
assault on first place in the overall standings. It was the beginning of an allconsuming 36-year Cold War rivalry.
Despite the Soviets' impressive debut, it was a Communist from another Iron
Curtain country who turned in the most memorable individual performance of
the Games. Emil Zatopek of Czechoslovakia, the 10,000-meter champion in
London, not only repeated at 10,000 meters, but also won at 5,000 and in the
marathon-an event he had never run before. He also set Olympic records in
each race and topped it off by watching his wife Dana Zatopek the women's
javelin.
Also, Harrison Dillard of the U.S. won the 110-meter hurdles. In 1948, Dillard,
the world's best hurdler, failed to qualify for the hurdles and won the 100-meter
dash instead.
XVI. 1956 Melbourne
Melbourne were the first southern hemisphere city to hold the summer games.
However, strict quarantine regulations on horses meant that the equestrian
events had to be held in Stockholm.
Once again political unrest in Europe and the Middle East unsettled the games.
Britain became involved with Suez, while the USSR invaded Hungary.
As ever there were memorable races on the running track where Vladamir Kuts
broke the world record at both 5,000 and 10,000 meters. Zatopek was now
passed his best and his long time rival Alain Mimoun finally bested him in the
marathon.
While Holland, Switzerland and Spain boycotted the games because of the
Soviet invasion of Hungary; the Hungarians themselves still took part, and
cheered Laslo Papp to win a boxing gold medal. The water polo match between
Hungary and USSR turned ugly, and the game had to be abandoned. However,
as Hungary were leading 4-0 it was they progressed and went on to win the gold
medal.
Chris Brasher (Great Britain) 3000 metre steeplechase winner
Chris Brasher was an unexpected winner of the steeplechase, sprinting to a 15
metre victory. A short time after the race it was announced that he had been
disqualified for interfering with Ernst Larsen, the Norwegian runner who had
finished third. Larsen agreed that he had been bumped by Brasher but indicated
that he did not support the disqualification. Sandor Rozsynyoi of Hungary who
finished second also supported Brasher. After an agonising wait of three hours,
Brasher's disqualification was overturned and he was reinstated as the winner.
In later life Chris Brasher co-founded the London Marathon. In earlier life Chris
Brasher paced Roger Bannister to the first ever sub-minute four minute mile.
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Dawn Frazer was the star of the swimming pool winning the 100 M freestyle.
She became the first swimmer to win the same event at three consecutive games
when she won at Rome then Tokyo.
XVII. 1960 Rome
Rome narrowly missed hosting the 1908. This ancient city had all the natural
attractions to give the Olympic Games due ambience and gravitas.
The marathon started on Capitol hill and finished not in the stadium, but on the
Appian way. The event was won by the first of many great Ethiopian runners
Abebe Bikila. He was born on the 7th August 1932, the day of the Los Angeles
Olympic marathon. Back in 1960 no-one had realized the potential of this small
country to produce great distance runners and it was a hug surprise that the
unknown barefoot Abebe Bikila won the marathon. However he proved it no
fluke by winning the again at the Tokyo Olympics.
Yachting always holds a strange fascination for me. Firstly I cannot see how one
man or women can consistently beat the rest when the all have identical boats.
But the main reason I am fascinated is that older, not athletic types often win
the races. In 1960, crown prince, later King Constantine of Greece, won a gold
medal in the Dragon class. As a royal prince, there was only one person who
dared to give him the traditional winners ducking - his mother Queen Frederika.
(I cannot visualise Queen Elizabeth ever giving any of her children a royal
ducking in public.)
Other highlights
Also on the track Peter Snell and Herb Elliot defied the heat to win the 800M
and 1500M respectively. Wilma Rudolph caught the eye in the women's 100 and
200M sprints. In fact Wilma had an inspirational tale to tell, she recovered from
childhood polio.
XVIII. 1964 Tokyohttp://www.guysports.com/olympics/olympics_1964_tokyo.htm
My memory of the Tokyo Olympics is getting up early to watch the Television no VCR back in those days. What still haunts me is theme tune - Tokyo melody.
American swimmer Don Schollander won four gold medals. Abebe Bikila of
Ethiopia became the first repeat winner of the marathon - less than six weeks
after having his appendix removed. Russian rower Vyacheslav Ivanov won the
single sculls for the third time, and Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser won the
100m freestyle for the third time.
Al Oerter of the United States is one of my top 10 Olympic heroes. He won his
third discus gold medal in the Tokyo games, and would go on to win a fourth in
Mexico city. In 1964 he won despite a cervical disc injury that forced him to
wear a neck harness. Hungarian water polo player Dezso Gyarmati won his fifth
medal in a row.
Another Hungarian, Greco-Roman wrestler Imre Polyak, finally won a gold
medal after finishing second in the same division at the previous three
Olympics. By winning two medals of each kind, Larysa Latynina of the Ukraine
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brought her career medal total to an incredible 18. She is also one of only four
athletes in any sport to win nine gold medals.
XIX. 1968 Mexico
Bob Beamon is one of a hand full of athletes that is synonymous with an
Olympic Games and an event. His spectacular long jump of 8.90m lasted as a
world record for 22 years.
At the Mexico Olympics, we had the first Summer
Games to include sex testing for women. It was
fitting that the Mexican hurdler Enriqueta Basilio
became the first woman to light the cauldron at the
Opening Ceremony. While Eulalia Rolinska of
Poland and Gladys de Seminario of Peru were the
first women to compete in shooting.
Wyomia Tyus of the United States became the first
repeat winner of the 100m. There was a more
sinister, and a longer lasting image in the medal
ceremony of the men's 200m; Tommie Smith and
John Carlos made their symbolic black-gloved
salute. You can just about see that Smith has a glove
on his right hand, whereas Carlos has the other
glove on his left hand.
The 1968 Games also saw the first drug
disqualification, as a Swedish entrant in the modern pentathlon, Hans-Gunnar
Liljenwall, tested positive ...... for excessive alcohol.
American high jumper Dick Fosbury won gold with his 'flop' style that was to
revolutionise the event and replace the conventional straddle technique.
One of those to find out just how disadvantaged most of the competitors would
be was the great Australian distance runner Ron Clarke. Clarke held the world
record for the 10,000m. But he was beaten as much by the altitude as the
African runners lead by Temu.
The biggest cheer in the student union, where I watched most of the events, was
when David Hemery blasted out of the blocks, obliterated the competition, and
shattered the world record for the 400m hurdles.
XX. 1972 Munich
These games have been for ever tainted by the massacre of Israeli athletes by
Arab terrorists. I pray
that such an atrocity will
never mar the games
again. At the time, and
since, I marvel at the
dignified behaviour of
the
Israelis.
No-one
really knew whether the
games should continue.
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Perhaps the deciding logic was that those who died would have wished the
Olympics to carry on rather than be aborted.
On a brighter note Olga Korbut entranced us by her gymnastic interpretations.
Perhaps there have been better pure gymnastics, but she was a breath of fresh
air and captured our hearts. There is often a saying that such and such cricket or
baseball star could clear a bar, and make everyone go out and watch the action,
well Olga Korbut had that star quality, you wanted to see her even if you were
not a regular fan of gymnastics.
Another star to immerge from the water was Mark Spitz. Perhaps the greatest
testament to his ability is that every new great swimmer is touted as the new
Mark Spitz. His record of 7 gold medals at one Olympic games stood until
Michael Phelps won 8 in Beijing.
Apart from Mark Spitz, the American invincibility was shattered. It reminded
my of a gambler's loosing streak when you cannot find a winner no matter what
you do, flat horses fall in the straight, stewards disqualify your winners, your
horse turns out to have been doped; American athletes found these and even
more bizarre ways of losing.
Firstly, two American's mistake the time of the 2nd round heat so they miss the
race and are out of the competition. The pole vaulters suffer because of a rule
change in the specification of their poles. Jim Ryan the great hope for the
1500M fell. But the biggest fiasco was the American Basketball that somehow
lost to the USSR by a miracle basket in the last second. While the legality of that
last basket is challenged to this day, if you look in the results sheet, the USSR
still have the gold medals.
XXI. 1976 Montreal
In 1976, Princess Anne was a member of the English equestrian team in the
Montreal Olympics. In the only exception to qualifying standards in Olympic
history, she was exempted from the mandatory physical examination.
'The horse is about the only person who does not know you are Royal' Princess
Anne IOC committee member
Despite persistent rumours and urban myths, Princess Anne did not win a
medal of any colour at these or any
other Olympic Games.
When the Games finally got started, our
hearts were quickly stolen by 14-yearold
Romanian
gymnast
Nadia
Comaneci, who scored seven perfect
10s on her way to three gold medals.
East Germany's Kornelia Ender did
Comaneci one better, winning four
times as the GDR captured 11 of 13
events in women's swimming. John
Naber (4 gold) and the U.S. men did
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the East German women one better when they won 12 of 13 gold medals in
swimming.
In track and field, Cuba's Alberto Juantorena won the 400 and 800-meter runs,
and Finland's Lasse Viren took the 5,000 and 10,000. Viren missed a third gold
when he placed fifth in the marathon.
Four Americans who became household names during the Games were
decathlon winner Bruce Jenner and three future world boxing champions-Ray
Leonard and the Spinks brothers, Michael and Leon.
While Greg Joy put some shine on Canada's record when he won a silver medal
in the high jump, however, Canada became the first host country not to win a
gold medal.
XXII. 1980 Moscow
The 1980 Olympics in Moscow were strange because there was no America
team. As a consequence the Soviet Union (hosts) and East Germany dominated
the medal table. As a result no other country collected more than 8 gold medals.
This was the era when one country or another sought to make a political point
by boycotting the Olympic Games. Will and Guy muse that it's a shame more
politicians aren't sportsmen and sportswomen, then they may see the good that
the game do.
British highlights include Allan Wells winning the 100m and Coe and Ovett
winning the 1500m and 800m respectively. In the swimming pool Duncan
Goodhew - he of the bald head - won the 100m breaststroke. He later went on to
be an outstanding sports ambassador
Teofilo Stevenson of Cuba won the heavyweight gold medal for the third time.
While it is a shame he never turned professional, his record of three successive
gold medals at this weight will never be beaten.
It may never be known how little or how much drug taking took place at these
Moscow Olympic Games. The fact that there were no reported positive tests is
suspicious in itself - in the sense that the drug cheats had superior chemistry
than the testers. Two world records that stand to this day are under particular
suspicion of being drug fuelled. Both were set by East German women, the
4x100m relay time of 41.6 and the 800m in 1:53:43.
Daley Thomson
Daley Thompson won gold in the Decathlon. He would win again in 1984. His
arch rival, Jurgen Hingsen, was so much bigger it seemed unfair. Hingsen's best
for the individual events was better than Thompson's yet in ten head-to-head
competitions Daley Thompson won every time. This leads Will and Guy to think
that even among Olympians, we doubt if any were more dedicated, single
minded or just plain determined to win than Daley Thompson.
XXIII. 1984 Los Angeles
There was only one contender who bid for the 1984 games - Los Angeles. Other
countries were put off after the terrorist atrocities at Munich in 1972.
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When it comes to organizing the big event, you have to hand it to America in
general, and Los Angeles in particular. Without the state aid of other
celebrations, they showed the rest of the world how to lay on an Olympic Games
and make a profit. Poor Montreal looked on enviously, as they are still paying
for their hosting to this day. In retrospect, those countries like Russia who
boycotted these games wish that they had been there.
Much as Will and Guy love football (soccer) we think that team games like this
have no part in the Olympic Games, especially as they have their own World
Cup.
On the track, this was Carl Lewis's game, he equalled the record of the great
Jesse Owens by winning gold medals in the same 4 events, 100m, 200m, Long
Jump and the sprint relay. The great Ed Moses won the 400m hurdles.
America did not have things all their own way, the crowd's darling Mary Decker
was accidentally tripped by Zola Budd in the 3000m. Also Britain had success
with Sebastian Coe in the 1500M
No two Olympic Games have the same events, in 1984 tennis made a reappearance (another event Will and Guy would ban), ditto synchronized
swimming.
XXIV. 1988 Seoulhttp://www.guysports.com/olympics/olympics_1988_seoul.htm
Kristin Otto of East Germany won six gold medals in the swimming pool, while
Matt Biondi won five and Janet Evans three.
One tradition if for the host country to introduce a game of their choice. In
Korea, table tennis made its first appearance in the Olympic Games.
Vitaly Scherbo won six gold medals, including a record four in one day. Only
Marc Spitz has more medals at one games.
Greg Louganis qualified for the springboard final despite hitting his head on the
board. He went on to win the final, to follow up his achievement of winning the
same event 4 years earlier.
China's Fu Mingxia, 13, won the women's platform diving gold, becoming the
second-youngest person to win an individual gold medal.
After two failures, Sergey Bubka won the gold medal on his final jump in the
pole vault. In 1992 he would fail to clear any height.
XXV. 1992 Barcelona
Thankfully the boycotts were
now over, and all the top
countries attended. For the
first time since 1960 there was
a united German team. Talking
of teams, basketball allowed
professionals, thus it was a
shoo-in for the Americans with
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their dream team lead by Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson.
The star of gymnastics was Vitaly Scherbo from Belarus who won 4 gold medals
on one day and 6 overall.
On the athletics track Linford Christie won the 'blue riband' event, the 100m.
Sally Gunnell, also of Great Britain, won the women's 400m hurdles. As so
often, the Americans won the 100m and 400m relays. Will and Guy muse on
Carl Lewis (100m) metaphorically passing the baton to Michael Johnson
(400m) although they ran different distances, these two were the best sprinters
of their generation.
In marathon, the Olympic finale, Young-jo Hwang made history for Korea. His
marathon victory came as many as 56 years after Kee-Jung Sohn won the
Olympic marathon in Berlin in 1936 as a member of the Japanese team. The 80year-old Sohn was moved to tears to watch Hwang crowned with the laurel of
victory.
XXVI. 1996 Atlantahttp://www.guysports.com/olympics/olympics_1996_atlanta.htm
Games were given a dramatic start when the cauldron was lit by Mohammad
Ali.
Carl Lewis became only the fourth person to win the same individual event four
times and the fourth person to earn a ninth gold medal.
In the second round of the middleweight (82kg) freestyle wrestling tournament,
Elmadi Jabrailov of Kazakhstan faced Tucuman Jabrailov of Moldova. The two
were brothers from Chechnya, but chose not to represent Russia because of its
war against their homeland. Elmadi won the high-scoring but unusually friendly
encounter by 10 points to 8.
Sailor Hubert Raudaschl (AUT) became the first person ever to compete in nine
Olympics. Before he began his streak in 1964, he was a reserve in 1960.
Michael Johnson's (USA-athletics) double success over 200 and 400m was the
first for a man in Olympic history. His victory over 200m in 19.32 seconds
established a new world record which, in terms of quality, came close to the
8.90m in the long jump with which Bob Beamon astonished the world in Mexico
in 1968.
Naim Suleymanoglu (TUR-weightlifting) became the first weightlifter in history
to win three consecutive Olympic titles.' When he eats at a restaurant, nobody
asks him to pay the bill; if he breaks the speed limit, he does not get fined, and
the police wish him a pleasant journey, 'wrote a Turkish journalist.
XXVII. 2000 Sydneyhttp://www.guysports.com/olympics/olympics_2000_sydney.htm
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Home favourite Cathy Freeman was the star of a spectacular opening ceremony
which celebrated the Olympian ideal and Aussie culture. She then became the
first Aboriginal to win track gold - to
the delight of a rapturous capacity
crowd.
Britain's Steve Redgrave confirmed his
place in the Olympic Hall of Fame with
a fifth straight rowing gold medal in the
coxless fours event - one of 11 British
golds in Sydney.
Maurice
Greene
cemented
his
reputation as the world's fastest man
with victory in the 100m, while fellow
American Michael Johnson became the first man to successfully defend the
Olympic 400m crown.
American runner Marion Jones became the first woman to win five medals in
athletics at one Olympics. I wonder if her performances, like Ben Johnson years
earlier, will be expunged from the records?
The swimming competition was dominated by 17-year-old Australian Ian
Thorpe, who won broke his own world record to claim gold in the 400m
freestyle. He then went on to win another two gold and two silver medals.
However, the most prolific medal winner at Sydney was not Jones or Thorpe.
He may not have grabbed many headlines, but gymnast Alexei Nemov took six
medals back to Russia with him, equalling his Atlanta tally four years ago.
XXVIII. 2004 Athens
The 2004 Summer Olympic Games, officially known as the Games of the XXVIII
Olympiad, was a premier international multi-sport event held in Athens, Greece
from August 13th to August 29th, 2004 with the motto "Welcome Home".
Athens 2004 marked the first time since the 1996 Summer Olympics that all
countries with a National
Olympic Committee were in
attendance. It was also the first
time since 1896 that the
Olympics were held in Greece.
10,625 athletes competed, some
600 more than expected,
accompanied by 5,501 team
officials from 201 countries.
Therewere 301 medal events in
28 different sports.
Kostas Kenteris and Ekaterini
Thanou were rightly banned for
failing to turn up for a drugs test.
While their story of a motorcycle
crash was fascinating, few believe
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it was a true account of that evening. This saga contrasts with the 1980 Moscow
Olympics where drug taking was probably rife, but those who tried to catch the
cheats were hamstrung by ineffective rules and tests.
British pride was given a boost when Kelly Holmes won both the women's 800m
and 1500m on the athletics track. We British had another boost when our men
won the 4x100m relay in a photo finish from the USA.
XXIX. 2008 Beijing
The 8th August 2008 is an important date in the Olympic calendar, because that
is when the XXIX Olympic Games officially open in Beijing, China. The eyes of
the world will focus on China as the world's largest outside extravaganza begins.
As with all festivals held in the open air one thing is paramount to ensure the
attendance of tourists, athletes, locals and the media: that is, of course, the
weather.
Now, the Chinese have, throughout history, been extraordinarily clever in their
invention and ability to use their natural surroundings. But, can they, are they
able or ready to work on the most unpredictable of all the elements - the rain
and, indeed, the Summer is the rainy season in this area of China?
Will and Guy have learned that the Beijing Olympic organisers are going to do
just that because they are determined that nothing will spoil their party.
We know that the organisers have ordered a team of climatologists to do the
impossible: make sure it doesn't rain during the opening ceremony on 8th
August. This team has been trained, we have discovered, and their preparations
are complete reported Wang Jianjie, a spokeswoman for the Beijing
Meteorological Bureau.
These imaginative scientists have perfected a complex technique, involving
catalytic agents, which will reduce the size of raindrops; this would delay any
rain until the overhead clouds move further away or conversely, make it rain
before it reaches the stadium. They will use this method over the 91,000 seater
Olympic Stadium, [nicknamed the 'bird's nest'] effectively creating 'a
meteorological umbrella'.
Will and Guy are unable to confirm the veracity of these statements but await
developments with bated breath.
The Bird's
Stadium
Nest
Olympic
Herzog
and
DeMeuron
of
Switzerland together with the
China Architecture Design Institute
designed this 'Birds Nest'. There
was certainly nothing like it when
Beijing was known as Peking. It is
located at Olympic Green and seats
91,000 spectators, it will host the
athletics and also the football. Here
is a photo, taken at night, the
National Stadium for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.
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Will and Guy have learned that China is organising classes in cheering aimed at
preparing Chinese sports fans for the Olympic Games next year. For the Chinese
government, the Beijing Olympics are a big part of the country's emergence onto
the international stage. It wants the games to be perfect - right down to the
applause. Therefore, the Chinese are training volunteers on the finer points of
cheering, including when to clap and the importance of avoiding unsporting
behaviour.
XXX. 2012 London
London will host the
Olympic Games for the
third time after previous
games in 1908 and 1948.
This makes London the
first city to host the
modern Olympics for a
third time. The games
are expected to be close
to downtown London
around 20 min from 80%
of the sporting events.
26 sports with a total of
39 disciplines feature in
the 2012 London Games.
The Olympic Village will
be based in Stratford,
including the newly built Olympic Stadium, Aquatics Centre, Hockey Centre,
Velodrome and a BMX trac
XXXI. 2016 Rio Janeiro
The city of Rio de Janeiro will host the Games of the XXXI Olympiad. This
followed three rounds of voting by members of the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) on 2 October 2009 at the 121st IOC Session, in Copenhagen,
Denmark.
Seven cities were initially proposed
by
their
National
Olympic
Committees to host the 2016 Games:
Chicago (USA), Prague (CZE), Tokyo
(JPN), Rio de Janeiro (BRA), Baku
(AZE), Doha (QAT) and Madrid
(ESP). On 4 June 2008, the IOC
Executive Board selected four cities
to enter the Candidate City phase of
the bid process. Listed in the official
order of drawing of lots, these cities
were:
- Chicago (USA)
- Tokyo (JPN)
- Rio de Janeiro (BRA)
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- Madrid (ESP)
During the vote on 2 October 2009, Rio de Janeiro eventually triumphed by
taking 66 votes compared to Madrid’s 32. This gave Rio the majority that it
needed to be elected as the host city for the 2016 Games. Rio had to overcome
stiff competition, however, in the form of Chicago, Tokyo and Madrid in order to
get the Games.
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