| Olympics: the bizarre and the beautiful
For all its glamour, its prestige, its superstars, the sporting excellence and the corporate sponsors, the Olympic Games has also delivered its fair share of bizarre athletes and incident. We look back at some of the more colourful, headline-hitting characters and occurrences that have graced the Olympics over the years Going it aloneThe Games of the I Olympiad were held in Athens in 1896. Lasting ten days and staging only nine events, the inaugural spectacle was an all-male affair. Women were not allowed to compete. But one head-strong lady wasn't going to let that deter her. Enter Stamata Revithi. She was desperate to take part in the long-distance race. Denied by the event organisers, as a gesture of protest, Revithi ran the race alone the next day, taking five hours to complete the course. The crowd soon warmed to her and subsequently gave her the nickname Melpomene, after the Greek muse of tragedy. No pay, no playAt the 1932 Summer Games held in Los Angeles, only 24 members of Brazil's Olympic team of 69 actually competed! Brazil was so poor from the Great Depression that the only way it could get the athletes to the USA was to pack them on to a barge with 25 tons of coffee to sell at ports along the way. Not as adept in sales, the team only managed to sell $24 worth of coffee and the United States required a $1 head tax per person entering the country. The only hope of getting the whole team ashore rested on the Brazilian consulate in San Francisco, who sent out a courier with a cheque written out for the equivalent of $45, but by the time the courier arrived in L.A. the Brazilian currency devalued so much that the cheque was only worth $17. To add insult to injury, the cheque bounced! Gender bendersTamara and Irana Press, two sisters, won five track and field Olympic gold medals for the Soviet Union and set 26 world records in Rome (1960) and Tokyo (1964). They were a formidable duo who won almost everything that there was to win. However, after gender verification for all international sporting events was made compulsory in 1968, both women vanished from the sporting stage. It was said of both sisters that their gender could not be determined. Some even thought that they might be hermaphrodites; still another opinion was that they were being injected with male hormones in order to make them stronger. Tabloids called them the 'Press Brothers'. The sole bearer
The most extraordinary aspect of her running was that she always trained and raced barefoot. However, while representing Great Britain at the 1984 Games, during the women's 3000 metre track final, U.S. contender Mary Decker collided with Budd, who was leading at the time. The American stumbled and fell onto the infield, unable to continue. The partisan crowd began jeering at Budd who reacted by falling back to a 7th place finish. Clowning gloryAt the 1972 Games held in Munich, Frank Shorter, Munich-born but representing the USA, won the Olympic marathon, but not before facing the most bizarre reception. As Shorter was nearing the stadium, a German student wearing a track uniform, emerged from the sidelines and joined the race for the last quarter-mile as a joke. Outrageously, he entered the stadium and ran part way around the track. Thinking he was the winner, the crowd began cheering him. Arriving seconds later, Shorter was perplexed to see someone ahead of him, and what's more, had to run to the finishing line enduring the boos and catcalls directed at the prankster! We kneed the goldAt the 1976 Games in Montreal, Canada, Japanese gymnast Shun Fujimoto competed with a broken right knee and helped the Japanese team win the gold medal for the team! Fujimoto broke his leg on the floor exercise portion of the discipline. He could have pulled out but due to the closeness in the overall standings with the USSR, decided to hide the seriousness of the injury. With a broken knee, Fujimoto dug deep and somehow managed to complete his event on the rings, performing a perfect triple somersault dismount, maintaining perfect posture. Ouch! Unbelievably, he secured gold for Japan. Derailed by her nails
Considered a certainty to be part of the US relay team in the same year, officials denied her a spot because they considered her six-inch fingernail to be too long and dangerous for passing the baton. There was no way Flo-Jo would put a nail clipper to those beauties. Cracking dive!American diver Greg Louganis, already a double Olympic champion in the 3m and 10m diving event (1984 Games), repeated this extraordinary achievement at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, although this time it was not without incident... During the preliminary rounds, Louganis miscalculated a dive and cracked his head on the diving board while performing a reverse 2 1/2 pike. Despite suffering a horrible cut and concussion he completed the preliminaries, then went on to repeat the dive during the finals, with near-perfect scores, earning him the gold medal. Why, I must protestThe men's marathon event at the 2004 Summer Olympics took a turn for the bizarre late on. During the final quarter of the race, an Irish protester appeared from nowhere and pushed race leader Vanderlei de Lima of Brazil into the crowds. The protester had a sign on his back that read 'The Grand Prix Priest. Israel Fulfilment of Prophecy Says The Bible. The Second Coming is Near.' A shocked De Lima managed to pick himself up and carry on racing although he?d lost about 15 to 20 seconds of his running time and struggled to re-gain his rhythm. He finished third in the event, robbed of what until then seemed like a definite gold. Blade Runner
In 2007, Pistorius raced in his first international able-bodied competitions. However, his artificial lower legs generated claims that he has an unfair advantage over able-bodied runners. The IAAF has since ruled him ineligible for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Pistorius appealed against the IAAF decision. |