A Timeline of the Modern Olympic
Games
~ Author
Unknown: Posted on http://gtresearchnews.gatech.edu (up to Atlanta 1996) ~
The Olympic Games were celebrated 320
times -- every four years -- in the sacred stadium at Olympia, Greece,
beginning in 776 B.C. Though boxing and wrestling were added later, the first
Olympic event was a sprint. The prize was an olive leaf and deification by
poets, as well as recognition as a hero forever.
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The Modern Olympic Games
Athens 1896
In 1892, French educator Baron Pierre
de Coubertin proposes a renaissance of ancient Greek competition. In 1896, his
dream is realized as England, Greece, Italy, Russia, Spain, Sweden and the
United States open Games. James B. Connolly wins triple jump (the first medal
in modern Olympic history); American flag is raised and Star Spangled Banner
played, beginning tradition of honoring victor and his/her country.
Paris 1900
Games opened to women. First female
winner: Charlotte Cooper of Great Britain in singles tennis. Margaret Abbot of
Chicago wins a gold medal in golf. Alvin Kraenzlein of U.S becomes first to win
4 gold medals.
St. Louis 1904
Staged as part of St. Louis World's
Fair, Games are reduced to exhibition because many European athletes refuse to
travel to American Midwest. Boxing staged for time, U. S. wins all 7 weight
classes.
London 1908
2,000 athletes compete, Britain
dominates with 141 medals. Marathon -- 26 miles to Olympic stadium and 365
yards inside it -- is run for the first time at its current length.
Stockholm 1912
First use of electronic timing
devices and a public address system. Jim Thorpe, an American Indian, wins both
pentathlon and decathlon -- a feat that remains unmatched.
Berlin 1916
Games not celebrated because of World
War I.
Antwerp 1920
Defeated in WWI, Austria, Bulgaria,
Germany, Hungary and Turkey are not allowed to participate. Olympic flag
unfurled for first time; its five colored rings (black, blue, yellow, green and
red) incorporate at least one color found in flag of every nation on earth.
Paris 1924
44 nations send 3,000 competitors.
Scotland's Eric Liddell wins 400-meter race, England's Harold Abrahams wins
100-meter. Their story becomes 1981 movie Chariots of Fire.
Amsterdam 1928
Slow-motion film techniques used to
judge close finishes; women's track and field competitions held for first time.
Mikio Oda wins men's triple jump to become Japan's first gold medalist. Johnny
Weismuller of U.S. defends his 100-meter freestyle title.
Los Angeles 1932
16 world records and 33 Olympic
records set -- 105,000 attend opening ceremonies, 65,000 go per day. Eddie
Tolan of U.S. becomes first African-American to win Olympic gold.
Berlin 1936
Before 100,000 spectators, Jesse
Owens wins 4 gold medals, he is one of six African-American stars on team that
captures 12 gold medals. Olympic torch run is established -- more than 3,000
runners carry the flame between Olympia, Greece, and Berlin.
Tokyo 1940
Games not celebrated because of World
War II.
London 1944
Games not celebrated because of World
War II.
London 1948
Fanny Blankers-Koen of Netherlands is
first woman to win 4 gold medals in a single Game. Bob Mathias of U.S., age 17,
becomes youngest American Olympic decathlon champion.
Helsinki 1952
Soviet Union rejoins Games after
40-year absence. Mathias wins his second decathlon gold.
Melbourne 1956
11 world records, 36 Olympic records;
Australian swimmers capture 8 of 13 golds in sweeping men's and women's
freestyle events.
Rome 1960
83 nations, 5,000 athletes. Abebe
Bikila of Ethiopia shatters world mark in marathon. Cassius Clay wins boxing
title with soon-to-be legendary flamboyance.
Tokyo 1964
Japan invests $3 billion in
preparation. Opening ceremonies broadcast via satellite to U. S. for first
time. Larissa Latynina of Soviet Union dominates women's gymnastics.
Native-American Billy Miles wins 10,000 meter run.
Mexico City 1968
American Bob Beamon leaps
29-feet-21/2 inches, shattering previous long jump record by almost two feet.
Vera Caslavska of Czechoslovakia is first woman to win 4 individual golds in a
Summer Games.
Munich 1972
Worldwide TV audience:1 billion. Mark
Spitz wins 7 gold medals in swimming and sets 7 world records. Olga Korbut of
Soviet Union wins 3 gold medals in gymnastics; Soviet Union defeats U.S. in
basketball. But stunning tragedy overshadows games: Arab terrorists assassinate
9 athletes from Israeli team.
Montreal 1976
4'11", 88 pound Nadia Comanici
becomes first Olympic gymnast to score a perfect 10 in competition; her 7 perfect
scores result in 3 gold medals, 1 silver, 1 bronze. Edwin Moses of U. S. wins
gold in 400 hurdles; American Bruce Jenner wins decathlon; Sugar Ray Leonard
takes light welterweight boxing championship.
Moscow 1980
U.S. leads 50-nation boycott to
protest Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. USSR gymnast Alexander Dityatin wins
record 8 medals.
Los Angeles 1984
Despite Soviet boycott, record number
of athletes and nations, 6 million spectators, and largest TV audience in
history. American Joan Benoit wins first women's Olympic marathon. Carl Lewis
wins 4 gold medals in track and field, matching Jesse Owens' long-standing
record.
Seoul 1988
9,600 athletes, including American
Florence Griffith Joyner, who captures 3 golds. Anthony Nesty of Surinam sets
Olympic 100-meter butterfly record, the first Black swimming champion and
Surinam's first medalist. Ben Johnson of Canada and 10 other competitors
disqualified for using performance-enhancing drugs. Matt Biondi wins 7 gold
medals in swimming; Greg Louganis earns gold medals in platform and springboard
diving.
Barcelona 1992
More than 15,000 athletes, coaches
and officials from 165 countries, including South Africa's first integrated
team. Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia celebrate independence by competing for
first time. U.S. "Dream Team," with Larry Bird and Magic Johnson,
easily dominates basketball. Carl Lewis takes two more gold medals in track and
field.
Atlanta 1996
A record 197 nations, all current IOC
member nations, take part, with a record 79 of them winning at least one medal.
The 1996 Summer Olympics celebrated the
100th anniversary of the games. A pipe bomb exploded at the Centennial Olympic
Park in Atlanta. One person was killed and another 111 people were injured. 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.
Sydney 2000
Korea (South Korea) and Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) marched together under the same flag. The
first medal won by Vietnam since it began competing in the Olympic Games in
1952. Marion Jones (USA-athletics) was the first woman to win five medals in
athletics in the same Olympics. She began with a crushing victory in the 100m
and scored an easy win in the 200m. She won the bronze in the long jump and the
4x100m relay, and finally ran for the 4x400m relay squad that won the Gold
medal. Steven Redgrave (GBR- rowing) became the first athlete to win Gold medals
in five consecutive Olympics.
Athens 2004
72,000 spectators and billions of
television viewers watch the Athens Games opening ceremonies. American swimmer
Michael Phelps wins his sixth gold medal of the games in the 4x100m medley
relay, having raced in the qualifying heats. This gives him a total of eight
medals at Athens, including two bronze. Phelps is now tied with Russian gymnast
Aleksandr Dityatin for greatest number of medals won in a single Olympics. And
he's only 19. Windsurfer Gal Fridman wins Israel’s first-ever gold medal.
Beijing 2008
Usain Bolt, the Jamaican sprinter
broke three world records and won three gold medals, and the style and
confidence of his running suggested that the 22-year-old, later voted Male
Athlete of the Year. Of the 11,028
athletes who competed at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, none was more awesome than
or as successful as swimmer Michael Phelps. He cemented his place in history by
winning a staggering eight gold medals, the most at any single Olympics. Before
the Olympics, about 400 million young Chinese pupils in more than 500,000
schools around China took lessons about the Olympics. After 1936 it was the
first time that a country other than the United States or the Soviet Union has
led the medal count. Roughly 4.7 billion people watched the Olympics.
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