One Hundred Years of Olympics.
Publié le 14/05/2013
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Getting over the Hurdles
The next three Olympics attracted more athletes and saw stronger performances but otherwise did not measure up to Athens.
The 1900 Paris Olympics were upstagedby the concurrent Exposition Universelle and were spread out over two months.
The 1904 games in remote St.
Louis were subordinated to the Louisiana PurchaseExhibition; over three-fourths of the competitors were Americans, and even Coubertin did not attend.
The 1908 London Olympics were also overshadowed byanother event (the Franco-British Exhibition), and the competition was stained by nasty arguments over rules between the visitors and their British hosts.
But the 1912 games in Stockholm were a success.
Over 2,500 athletes took part, including 57 women.
(They had first been allowed to participate in 1900—in golfand tennis.
By 1912 women's swimming was on the program.) The star of the games was Jim Thorpe of the United States.
Thorpe, who was primarily of AmericanIndian descent, began with a victory in the pentathlon so decisive that he could have sat out the final event and still won the gold medal.
He followed with a decathlontriumph that obliterated the world record by nearly 1,000 points.
Thorpe's subsequent history is a sad tale.
It was discovered that he had once earned $25 a weekplaying minor league baseball, and his medals were rescinded; he died in poverty in 1953.
Three decades later his medals were restored—to his children.
Because Thorpe earned money by playing a sport, he was technically not an amateur, and as early as 1892 the IOC insisted that every Olympic competitor be one.Yet the question of who is—and isn't—an amateur perplexed the IOC from the start.
At first, the amateurism requirement barred not just persons who played sportsfor money but anyone who received wages for labor of almost any kind.
Eventually amateurism came to exclude only those—like Thorpe—who profited fromathletics.
Yet as early as the 1920s the British complained that U.S.
college athletes were violating the spirit of amateurism by accepting scholarship funds.
And whenCommunist regimes began building their sports machines, they claimed that because professional sport did not exist in their lands, all of their athletes were, bydefinition, amateurs, even though state funds were poured into training them.
In 1988 the IOC decided to let the various international sporting federations determinewhether professionals could compete in the Olympics.
Today, only Olympic baseball and boxing bar professionals (soccer admits them, but to a limited extent).
A Parade of Stars
Because of World War I, the 1916 games, scheduled for Berlin, were not held; the Olympics picked up again in Antwerp in 1920.
The 1920s saw the emergence of aphenomenal group of athletes from Finland.
Led by the runner Paavo Nurmi, whose record of nine lifetime gold medals in track and field went unequaled until CarlLewis of the United States won his ninth in 1996, the Finns went on a rampage extending over three Olympics.
In the 1924 Paris Games, for example, Finlandfinished second to the United States with 14 gold medals, 13 silver, and ten bronze.
The first Winter Olympic Games were held in Chamonix, France, in 1924.
The 1928 Winter Games in St.
Moritz, Switzerland, witnessed the first of threeconsecutive gold medals in figure skating by the Norwegian Sonja Henie, who revolutionized her sport with her balletic moves.
In 1932 the Olympics came to Los Angeles, where the first bona fide female track and field star emerged—Mildred ('Babe') Didrikson of Texas, who set worldrecords in the high jump and 80-meter hurdles and won the gold medal in the javelin on her first throw.
Controversy and Politics
The 1936 Olympics were awarded to Berlin in May 1931; no one had a clue that less than two years later, in early 1933, Adolf Hitler would be the Germanchancellor, with nightmarish consequences for the entire world.
As the date of the games approached, many called for a boycott, but others argued that to bolt thegames would be to mix politics with sport—never mind that Hitler was doing that as furiously as possible, expecting that the pageant would legitimize his regime.
In a sense the Olympic movement had always been political—Coubertin, after all, saw the games as a way to promote world peace.
Paradoxically, Coubertin'sinternationalist ethos sanctioned nationalism in a way that would inevitably be exploited.
From the beginning, national flags were raised after victories, and by 1908it was no longer possible for an athlete to compete as an individual, but only as part of a national team.
In 1921 the IOC denounced the publication of tables showingmedal counts by nation, but fans inevitably began to see the games as a competition not between individuals but between countries.
Thus the games came to be regarded as a place for partisan statement.
A notable instance was the 'black power' salute that U.S.
sprinters Tommie Smith and JohnCarlos gave on the victory stand in Mexico City in 1968.
Four years later members of the Palestinian extremist group Black September chose the Munich Olympicsas a venue for publicizing their grievances by breaking into the Olympic Village; 11 Israeli athletes were killed.
South Africa was excluded from the Olympics from.
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