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Sunday, August 5, 2012

11 Really Strange Olympics Facts

Unless I get hit by some shot of absolute brilliant inspiration, this will be the last of my Olympics lists. And it's really quite a catch-all.

Here are 11 interesting, weird, obscure or just flat-out strange facts about the summer Olympics.

  1. Artist's rendering.
    Gandhi once covered the Olympics as a newspaper reporter. The 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles. I have no idea why, since it was right during his civil disobedient prime. But he did.
  2. The Olympic rings cover every flag in the world. They picked yellow, green, red, black and blue because at least one of those five colors appears in every flag in the world. (The five rings also allegedly represent the five continents of the world. But wait, you're saying, aren't there seven continents? Yes. But the Olympic committee has spun things to try to appease everyone. The way they've condensed the world into five continents: America, Asia, Africa, Europe and Oceania. Sorry, Antarctica. And apparently, we're now continent mates with Uruguay and Colombia. Cool.)
  3. Black athletes didn't win the marathon until 1960. It's impossible to picture now, but a black athlete didn't win the marathon until Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia did it in 1960. And he did it barefoot.

  4. Marian Woronin, the fastest white guy ever.
    No white person has ever run 100 meters in under 10 seconds. At this Olympics, Usain Bolt set a new world record, running the 100 meters in 9.69 seconds. And he kinda slowed down at the end.

    No white person in history has ever run the 100 in under 10 seconds. The closest was Marian Woronin of Poland, who ran it in 10 flat... 40 years ago.

    There's no count on just how many black athletes have broken the 10 second mark, but it happened first in 1968, and seems to have happened (at least) several hundred times since.
  5. Gold medals haven't been pure gold in 96 years. The 1912 Olympics was the last time that gold medals were solid gold. Ever since, they've been silver with gold plating.

  6. The equivalent of a bronze medal.
    The top prize at the first modern Olympics was the silver medal. In 1896 in Athens, first place winners got a silver medal and an olive branch. Second place got a bronze. Third place got nothing. (Not even the pink participation ribbon?)
  7. In 1900, in France, winners got paintings instead of gold medals. Gold, silver and bronze medals weren't given out until the third modern Olympics, in 1904. The French gave the winners paintings because they believed they were more valuable.
  8. The first Olympic drug suspension wasn't until 1968. At the 1968 Mexico City games, Hans-Gunnar Liljenwall, a Swedish pentathlete, was suspended because he tested positive for a banned substance. That substance: Alcohol. He drank several beers before the pentathlon... which was against the rules... so he was suspended.

    Frankly, he should've been applauded for attempting to do the pentathlon drunk. 99.999999999% of the world couldn't even do it sober.
  9. China didn't win its first medal until 1984. It's hard to believe now, since China seems to be a medal-winning monolith (sure, they may be getting it done by making death threats to judges' families and pets, but, hey, winning is winning). But China didn't get its first Olympic medal until 1984.

    Xu Haifeng won gold in the 50 meter pistol event.
  10. The Olympics once lasted 187 days. In 1908, the London Olympics went on for 187 days... they started in April and didn't end until October.

    That's a LOT of time for human interest stories. Has anyone else noticed that lots of Olympians have had to overcome things?
  11. There's a 62-year age difference between the oldest and youngest Olympians ever. The youngest Olympian ever was Dimitrios Loundras, a Greek gymnast in the 1896 Athens Olympics. He was 10.

    (I'm not sure when they started imposing age requirements. Although, as we've learned, age limits don't mean much when a government is willing to doctor a birth certificate to say anything.)

    The oldest Olympian ever was Oscar Swahn, a Swedish shooter in the 1920 Antwerp, Belgium, Olympics. He was 72.

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