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At the [[1900 Summer Olympics]], twenty-three track & field [[athletics]] events were contested. 115 athletes from 16 nations competed. In many countries, due in part to the conflagration of the Olympic Games and the [[World's Fair]] in [[Paris]], the media discussed only the athletics events under the "Olympic" name while ignoring the incredible variety of other sports featured at the time.
At the [[1900 Summer Olympics]],spud won the 100m with a time of 12.47 seconds a new worl record twenty-three track & field [[athletics]] events were contested. 115 athletes from 16 nations competed. In many countries, due in part to the conflagration of the Olympic Games and the [[World's Fair]] in [[Paris]], the media discussed only the athletics events under the "Olympic" name while ignoring the incredible variety of other sports featured at the time.


The 23 events listed are those currently considered to have been of Olympic stature by the [[International Olympic Committee]] and most Olympic historians. They exclude all events that used a handicap system as well as all events that were open to professional athletes.
The 23 events listed are those currently considered to have been of Olympic stature by the [[International Olympic Committee]] and most Olympic historians. They exclude all events that used a handicap system as well as all events that were open to professional athletes.

Revision as of 09:48, 26 May 2006

At the 1900 Summer Olympics,spud won the 100m with a time of 12.47 seconds a new worl record twenty-three track & field athletics events were contested. 115 athletes from 16 nations competed. In many countries, due in part to the conflagration of the Olympic Games and the World's Fair in Paris, the media discussed only the athletics events under the "Olympic" name while ignoring the incredible variety of other sports featured at the time.

The 23 events listed are those currently considered to have been of Olympic stature by the International Olympic Committee and most Olympic historians. They exclude all events that used a handicap system as well as all events that were open to professional athletes.

Competitions were held on 14 July, 15 July, 16 July, 19 July, and 22 July. This included Bastille Day, which is a French holiday, and a Sunday, which many of the American athletes protested. Even with many Americans not competing in finals because of confusion caused by the organizers' decision to count scores achieved on Monday, 16 July for finals held on Sunday, 15 July and subsequent rescission of that decision, the United States won more than 4 times as many medals as any other nation, including 16 of the gold medals.

The conditions of competition were also subpar compared even to those at the previous games in 1896. There was no track for the Paris Games, as a grass field dotted with trees and of unequal elevation was used. The course was 500 metres in length, an unusual distance for a track.

Daily summary

14 July

  • All rounds, including the finals, for the 100 metres and the 110 metre hurdles were held. The United States took 5 of the medals, missing only the bronze medal in the 100 metres won by Stanley Rowley of Australia. Frank Jarvis won the 100 metres, with Alvin Kraenzlein taking the gold in the 100 metre hurdles.
  • In the 400 metre heats, the United States took 5 qualifying spots for the final while Denmark secured the last one. The 800 metres was more balanced, with 3 Americans and one athlete each from France, Great Britain, and Hungary.
  • The 400 metre hurdles semifinals eliminated only one athlete, with the other four advancing to the finals.
  • Defending discus and shot put champion Robert Garrett failed to make a mark in the qualification round of the discus throw, but did advance to the final in the shot put. Bohemia advanced a thrower in the discus, an event which saw 5 athletes from 5 different nations qualify.
  • Surprising few, Kraenzlein and Meyer Prinstein took the top two spots in the long jump qualification, moving to the final along with a third American, a Briton, and a Frenchman.

15 July

  • In a busy day for the athletics program, 10 finals were held along with the semifinals of the 60 metres (which was one of the events with a final that day). The United States took 7 of the championships, with Great Britain, Canada, and Hungary each picking up one of the rest.
  • Kraenzlein took the top spots in the 60 metres and the long jump, the latter victory allegedly earning him a punch in the face from Prinstein, who had not competed because the final was held on a Sunday. This brought Kraenzlein's total to 3 gold medals, better than any athlete had done four years earlier. Irving Baxter also took gold in two events, the high jump and the pole vault.
  • Denmark won its first athletics medal, with a bronze in the 400 metres. Charles Bennett's gold in the 1500 metres gave Britain its first gold in the sport. Canada's George Orton took two medals, a gold and a bronze, for the debut nation. Hungary won its first gold with the discus throw, adding a bronze in the high jump. Bohemia, another nation making its debut, took the silver medal in the discus.
  • The steeplechase made its Olympic debut, with the 2500 metre version won by Orton.

16 July

  • 8 more finals were held on Monday the 16th. Kraenzlein picked up a fourth victory with the 200 metre hurdles, winning both his semifinal and the final to set a long-lived Olympic record for athletic gold medals in individual events. Ray Ewry won all three of the standing jumps, each of which made its Olympic debut in 1900. Great Britain picked up another pair of gold medals with the 800 metres and the 4000 metre steeplechase. Prinstein got his long-awaited victory in the triple jump, while John Flanagan's hammer throw earned the United States its 6th championship of the day.
  • India's debut Games reached a high point with Norman Pritchard's silver medal in the 200 metre hurdles.

19 July

  • The marathon was the only event held on the 19th. Michel Théato of Luxembourg won the gold medal, giving that nation a perfect 1:1 ratio of championships to entries. Sweden earned its first athletics medal with the bronze in the marathon.

22 July

  • The two remaining events were held on Sunday the 22nd. The semifinals of the 200 metres and the finals of that event and the 5000 metre team race were held.
  • Pritchard won his second silver medal in the 200 metres, while Rowley won his third bronze in the same event. The race was won by John Tewksbury, bringing his total for the Games to 5 medals, including 2 gold medals.
  • The 5000 metre team race was won by the British team, assisted by Rowley of Australia. This made Rowley the only athlete in Olympic history to win gold medals for multiple nations in the same Games, with the establishment of National Olympic Committees making that accomplishment one which will always be unique. Rowley did not even finish the race, which was far longer than the sprinter was accustomed to running; he stopped after everyone else had crossed the finish line to accept last place.

Medal table

These medals are retroactively assigned by the International Olympic Committee; at the time, winners were given a silver medal.

Position Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 United States United States 16 13 10 39
2 Great Britain Great Britain 4[1] 3 2 9
3 Australia Australia 1[1] 0 3 4
4 Canada Canada 1 0 1 2
Hungary Hungary 1 0 1 2
6 Luxembourg Luxembourg 1 0 0 1
7 France France 0 4 2 6
8 India India 0 2 0 2
9 Bohemia Bohemia 0 1 0 1
10 Denmark Denmark 0 0 1 1
Norway Norway 0 0 1 1
Sweden Sweden 0 0 1 1
- Austria Austria 0 0 0 0
Germany Germany 0 0 0 0
Greece Greece 0 0 0 0
Italy Italy 0 0 0 0

Medal summary

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's 60 metres United States Alvin Kraenzlein
United States
United States John Tewksbury
United States
Australia Stanley Rowley
Australia
Men's 100 metres United States Frank Jarvis
United States
United States John Tewksbury
United States
Australia Stanley Rowley
Australia
Men's 200 metres United States John Tewksbury
United States
India Norman Pritchard
India
Australia Stanley Rowley
Australia
Men's 400 metres United States Max Long
United States
United States William Holland
United States
Denmark Ernst Schultz
Denmark
Men's 800 metres Great Britain Alfred Tysoe
Great Britain
United States John Cregan
United States
United States David Hall
United States
Men's 1500 metres Great Britain Charles Bennett
Great Britain
France Henri Deloge
France
United States John Bray
United States
Men's 110 metre hurdles United States Alvin Kraenzlein,
United States
United States John McLean
United States
United States Frederick Moloney
United States
Men's 200 metre hurdles United States Alvin Kraenzlein
United States
India Norman Pritchard
India
United States John Tewksbury
United States
Men's 400 metre hurdles United States John Tewksbury
United States
France Henri Tauzin
France
Canada George Orton
Canada
Men's 2500 metre steeplechase Canada George Orton
Canada
Great Britain Sidney Robinson
Great Britain
France Jacques Chastanié
France
Men's 4000 metre steeplechase Great Britain John Rimmer
Great Britain
Great Britain Charles Bennett
Great Britain
Great Britain Sidney Robinson
Great Britain
Men's 5000 metre team race Great Britain Great Britain
Australia Australia
Charles Bennett (GBR)
John Rimmer (GBR)
Sidney Robinson (GBR)
Alfred Tysoe (GBR)
Stanley Rowley (AUS)
France France
Henri Deloge
Jacques Chastanié
André Castanet
Michel Champoudry
Gaston Ragueneau
None
Men's marathon Luxembourg Michel Théato
Luxembourg
France Emile Champion
France
Sweden Ernst Fast
Sweden
Men's long jump United States Alvin Kraenzlein
United States
United States Meyer Prinstein
United States
Great Britain Patrick Leahy
Great Britain
Men's triple jump United States Meyer Prinstein
United States
United States James Connolly
United States
United States Lewis Sheldon
United States
Men's high jump United States Irving Baxter
United States
Great Britain Patrick Leahy
Great Britain
Hungary Lajos Gönczy
Hungary
Men's pole vault United States Irving Baxter
United States
United States Meredith Colkett
United States
Norway Carl-Albert Andersen
Norway
Men's standing long jump United States Ray Ewry
United States
United States Irving Baxter
United States
France Emile Torcheboeuf
France
Men's standing triple jump United States Ray Ewry
United States
United States Irving Baxter
United States
United States Robert Garrett
United States
Men's standing high jump United States Ray Ewry
United States
United States Irving Baxter
United States
United States Lewis Sheldon
United States
Men's shot put United States Richard Sheldon
United States
United States Josiah McCracken
United States
United States Robert Garrett
United States
Men's discus throw Hungary Rudolf Bauer
Hungary
Bohemia František Janda-Suk
Bohemia
United States Richard Sheldon
United States
Men's hammer throw United States John Flanagan
United States
United States Thomas Truxton Hare
United States
United States Josiah McCracken
United States

Notes

  1. ^ a - Australia's gold medal and one of Great Britain's gold medals came as a mixed team, with 4 British athletes and 1 Australian in the team race. If this team is counted separately, Great Britain remains second with 4/2/2, the mixed team is sixth with 1/0/0, and Australia is ninth with 0/0/3.

References

  • International Olympic Committee.
  • De Wael, Herman. Herman's Full Olympians: "Athletics 1900". Accessed 18 March 2006. Available electronically at [2].
  • Mallon, Bill (1998). The 1900 Olympic Games, Results for All Competitors in All Events, with Commentary. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. ISBN 0-7864-0378-0.