Saturday, June 30, 2012

Olympic Series


Olympics – 1988 Seoul
The Seoul Games were marked by a long – awaited reunion of athletes from the West (who had not competed at Moscow) and the East (who were absent from Los Angeles). However, they were perhaps made more famous by the drugs scandals that marred the events.
The 1988 Olympics took place in a strangely symbolic location - Korea, a nation divided by the Bamboo Curtain along the 38 th parallel since the 1953 armistice. The DMZ or de – militarized zone, fifty kilometers from Seoul, is a place of incomprehension, distrust and even contempt. The hut at Panmunjom – engaged in negotiations since 1952 – is the most explicit and distressing illustration of this sentiment.
When the international Olympic Committee chose Seoul to host the twenty – fourth Olympic Games on 30 September 1981, they were bombarded with criticism and disapproval. Boycott threats soon followed. The death of 269 passengers on a Korean Airlines Boeing, suspected of spying and struck down by a Soviet Sukhoi in 1983, did not help.
The future began to look brighter when Mikhail Gorbachev was appointed General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in March 1985. Somewhere between glasnost and perestroika, the Olympics were saved. Apart from some countries that remained hopelessly devoted to North Korea, the entire world was flocking to the Land of Morning Calm. Sadly, this geopolitical rapprochement is not how the Seoul Olympics will be remembered. They will go down in history as Games of scandal and doping. Ben Johnson and his steroids – and the disgraced sprinter’s disqualification – was just one of a long string of weightlifters, judoka, pentathletes, Bulgarians, Hungarians, Spaniard, Australians, Britons -------
Ben Johnson The Time Bomb
Rumours had been circulating for twenty – four hours. The word was that the third champion of the Games was to be disqualified. Two Bulgarian Gold medalist weightlifters had already been disqualified, along with other weightlifters and a pentathlete. Late on Monday 26 July in Seoul, a Korean newspaper was already printing the headlines that would hit the news stands in the early hours; ‘Olympic champion and world record holder Ben Johnson tests positive’. John Holt, General Secretary of the IAAF was visibly shaken on Tuesday and said “It may just be a rumour, but we are prepared for the worst”. Holt’s statement, made in a discreet British manner was indicative of, there still being some hope that the scandal would subside without harming the reputation of world athletics in general. But the IOC Medical Commission had no intention of keeping quiet. If the worst came true, the implication was clear: sport at its highest level was the subject of systemic manipulation.
Ben Johnson had been seeing an endocrinologist for several months, supposedly being treated for a thigh injury. It would seem astonishing if his coaching team which had highly sophisticated methods at its disposal, including gene therapy, would be imprudent enough to prescribe the world record holder a product easily detectable by the IOC laboratories, and specifically the Seoul laboratory, which was known to be extremely diligent. However, traces of anabolic steroids remain detectable six or seven months after their use, since this type of doping product is subject to qualitative, not quantitative analysis – unlike testosterone or caffeine – infinitesimal residues are enough to convict athletes treated with these products long before testing. On Tuesday 27 July, 10.30 am: Ben Johnson had been disqualified: Carl Lewis was declared the winner.
A Strange Angel  
After his 100 meters setback, Carl Lewis staged a comeback in the long jump and yet remained as distant as ever. He was detached and unconventional, with an air of self importance. Carl Lewis showed a physical beauty, perhaps never seen before on a running track. In the finals, a glimmer of gold reflected in his eyes, which expressed an anxious charm. By jumping 8.72 meters, he added to an incomparable series of jumps that had made him a sprinter and a long jumper; that amazing contradiction: who had often won but had never set any records.
Serhei Bubka Against Himself
Not yet twenty five, the world record holder in the pole vault had finally become an Olympic champion. Four hours into the competition, trouble was brewing as four vaulters still had hopes of a medal; three Soviets and an American. Serhei Bubka the world champion and the world record holder at 6.06 meters, was to clear 5.70 meters, which would have been a sideshow. But in the Olympics final, he had never been in a competition like this before. The pressure was tremendous. When Serhei cleared 5.90 meters in his third and final attempt, he let out an ecstatic cry. After five years of domination of the pole vault, he truly deserved this title.
The Incredible Flo – Jo
The easy victor in the 100 meters performed even better in the 200 meters, smashing the previous world record. A young woman of 28, who had been chasing glory for a decade, had taken a little over twenty seconds to become the very carnation of speed. It was strange to note that the incredible Flo – Jo belonged to a generation of athletes that had either retired or were ageing. She was a candidate for the 1980 US Olympic team, but the boycott meant she had to wait eight years, take second best several times and win a World Championship Gold medal as a member of the 4 x 100 meters relay team before her metamorphosis.
 The transformation took place in the off season, which she had previously spent writing poetry and children’s stories in which the fairy’s magic wand turned pumpkin into princesses, and eating fattening snacks. Ben Johnson’s training programme and Carl Lewis’ performances on the track were her two inspirations. What was seen on the track in Seoul proved that Florence Griffith – Joyner had taken on these two identities. Her power oozed from every pore in her thighs, the hypertrophy of which contrasted with the relative slenderness of her torso. As for her gait, it reproduced Lewis’ perfect equilibrium and harmonious, linear movements. The spectacle was captivating and intriguing, and turned the tables on athletes who had always beaten Flo – Jo.
The biography of this Californian athlete teaches us that she read the Bible every day, prayed before meals and phoned her mother twice a day. It is also mentioned that she trained hard all winter and did squat – lifts of 320 pounds/145 kgs. She passed away on 21 September 1998 during her sleep from an epileptic seizure. She was 38.
The Kenyans Clean Sweep the Distance Events
The poor East African nations dominated the 800, 1500, 3000 meters steeplechase and 5000 meters. Paul Ereng won the 800 meters; Peter Rono, the 1500 meters; John Ngugi, the 5000 meters; and Julius Karuki, the 3000 meters steeplechase.
Swimming and Diving
Kirstin Otto won six Gold medals, four of these individual in three different strokes; the great East German was a true champion. Matts Biondi the best men’s swimmer of the Seoul Games equaled Mark Spitz’s number of seven medals. In the spring board diving, Greg Louganis, of Samoan and North European ancestry, who was given up for adoption by his 15 year old parents, overcame a childhood blighted by racism and dyslexia and won the springboard Gold, despite being injured in the head in the qualifying rounds. He retained both his titles; springboard and platform, which he had won in Los Angeles in 1984, an unprecedented achievement.
Suleymanoglu, as Strong as an Ox
By taking the 60 kg weight category title, Naim, of Turkish origin and ancestry had broken thirty third world records and the sixth of the evening. Stefan Topurov of Bulgaria, who was challenging Suleymanoglu, was beaten by 15 kgs in the snatch. In the clean and jerk, Stefan who was drunk with exhaustion, was eliminated after the next increase of weight after 175 kgs. Though the competition was over, Suleymanoglu now turned on his style and lifted 177.5 kgs, 185 kgs, 187.5 kgs, 188.5 kgs and then finally 190 kgs. The crowd had gone wild and Turkish flags were waving frantically. Bulgarian flags were at half mast.
Steffi Graf: Real Gold
Germany’s Steffi Graf added a Gold medal to her Grand Slam. An unprecedented achievement in women’s tennis. Graf’s achievement was unequalled in the annals of tennis, which had been absent from the Olympic Games from 1924. Her ‘Gold Grand Slam’ was an incredible performance – a performance comparable to Bob Beamon’s 8.90 long jump in Mexico, or Ben Johnson’s 9.79 seconds in the 100 meters, if the timing was allowed. The five historic finals that Steffi had won were – Australian Open, Melbourne, 6 to 24 January 1988, French Open, Paris, 23 May to 5 June 1988, Wimbledon, 20 June to 3 July 1988, US Open, New York, 29 August to 11 September 1988 and Olympic Games, Seoul, 19 September to 1 October 1988.
The Games in Brief
Opening Date                             17 September 1988
Closing Date                                2 October 1988
Host Nation                                 South Korea
Nations Represented                  159
Athletes                                       8,465 (2,186 women)
Sports                                           23 (17 open to women)
Events                                           237 (86 open to women)
Games Opened By                        Roh Tae – woo, President
Olympic Flame Lit By                   Chong Sun-man, Kim Won-tak and Sohn Mi- chung (athletics)
Olympic Oath By                           Ms Hug-jae (basketball)
IOC President                                Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP)
For the first time ever, all three Golds in the equestrian dressage were won by women. Swedish fencer Kerstin Palm competed in her seventh Olympic Games, a new women’s record. Table tennis was introduced for the first time and tennis returned after a 64 year absence.
PS -: Matter researched from the archives of the Olympics Games museum in Laussane.
Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+919410900051 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Tilt at the windmills


A Coup Is Not A Politically Incorrect Word In The Present Times In India

The National Defense Academy calendar comprises published routine, special training and administrative events, during each of the spring and autumn terms, into which the year is divided. The days are numbered on a D Day basis, with the month and weekday also mentioned alongside. With a view to broaden the horizons of the young and inquisitive minds of cadets, Wednesday evenings in the calendar contain listings of such events as are mostly organized for a gamut of information/knowledge imbibing activities, including talks/ presentations given by eminent civil/ military personalities, on a wide range of subjects and issues which have a contemporary relevance to the need of the society/nation/region and the world, at large or else in particular. Today, after many years having passed from the time that, I too was a cadet in this premier institution, my memory enables me to recollect one such evening, wherein in a talk given by an eminent military leader  on ‘Democratic India and the Future of Democracy in the Nation’, springs up to my mind. The speaker was an accomplished military thinker who adorned soldierly values on his sleeves and had on matters of principles bucked the system on many occasions, without a moment’s hesitation for the consequences which could derail his brilliant career. However, his merit and competence to reach the top of the organizational hierarchy was singularly marginalized by the first executive of the country, who felt threatened by his forthrightness and daring to stand up to the government, when it so demanded, on professional and governance matters. Democracy, an evolved form of government, which is lucidly explained by the towering political leader Abraham Lincoln in his memorable and famous quote, has endured the people’s choice and has grown deep roots in the public, administrative and social fabric of India.  Unfortunately, with the passage of time and institutionalization of corruption in public life and unethical practices in business, the process of choosing the elected representatives by the people has been manipulated to an extent of perversion, where money and muscle power decide the outcome of who gets past the  post and becomes the people’s elected representative. Unethical market and material forces form a nexus with the people’s representatives to, marginalize the essence and spirit of democracy and substitute it with a poor reality, which sucks. It was in such an environment that the speaker reached out to the audience with the popular and public demand of having a Military Rule to govern India.

The general officer prefaced his talk with the preamble to the constitution and unequivocally stated its lofty ideals and enduring commitment to the principles of being a sovereign democratic republic, which is not only an instrument of legitimacy but also unflinching faith. The pillars of this dispensation are the constitutional institutions, which enshrine and adorn the pages of this comprehensive document, carved from the experience of the social reality which obtained in India during the years of colonial rule. While the speaker revealed that there was a friendly suggestion by some civilians for the Army to take over, he condemned it with all his force and authority in the same breath, as only a pipe dream which was impossible to happen in our country. His argument was premised on unassailable factors – size, population, deep rooted democratic culture, character and fealty of the armed forces, plurality of religion, diversity of language, lack of cohesiveness among the forces in the absence of a Chief of Staff to give a direction and purpose to such a venture et al. And, we who were under training then, continued to remain far removed from harboring any thoughts of some day subscribing to such a suggestion as that of participating in a coup, which would overthrow the democratically elected government and establish military Rule in the country. But today, the thought is perseveringly making an attempt to engage my mind with such a suggestion, only because the quality of polity in our country has stooped to such levels of venality that, a Military Rule could well be the only choice to resurrect governance and bring about discipline and accountability in public life. But, this comes with a rider, because the state of affairs which has engulfed the leadership in the biggest arm of the Military and which will necessarily remain the dominant force to bring about a coup, is itself under moral and ethical suspicion and therefore does not inspire the required confidence to deliver the people from the quagmire of a sham democratic republic, from which the people seek relief. As such the remedy may well be worse than the ailment. Anna Hazare, a veteran and a soldier has unambiguously made a bugle call against corruption and non governance and is heralding a democratic movement to prevail upon the elected representatives to bring a law which proceeds against all offenders, irrespective of their position and status. The mood of the public is rife with anger and wrath against an insensitive and corrupt government, which claims legitimacy under the provisos of the Constitution, but the very same parliamentarians and legislators who constitute the government are steeped in venality, crime and exploitation. It is a remote possibility that the fight for rectitude and probity in public life through social activism, will ever succeed in bringing about the desired changes to purge and cleanse the System.

The political masters have literally handed over governance to the bureaucrats in most states of the federation and in numerous ministries in the centre, and who in turn have arrogated unconstitutional authority to themselves in the subterfuge of civilian supremacy and made the System a handmaiden to their greed and growth. The politicians and the bureaucrats are today working hand in glove in wrongly and illegitimately acquiring wealth, which belongs to the public and continue to milk the Nation of its resources and assets. We all stand as mute spectators to this rapacious plunder of the Nation State and find ourselves helpless to the point of becoming wet noodles, spineless and directionless.  

Therefore, in an attempt to side with the patriots who are willing to martyr themselves for the cause of the Nation and its people, the Military could well do a great service to India by wresting the reins of authority from the civilian government and put it back on rails, to bring the impossible relief which the people are looking for through the civil society movements, which seem to be heading towards disaster. This suggestion is replete with many imponderables and will require a deliberate and determined effort by the three arms of the services, keeping in mind the security issues which engulf the country now and in the near future. The soldiers, who owe allegiance to the constitution of the country and the government, must rededicate themselves to the country and its martyrs, who made India into a Nation State.


PS – Some may consider this to be a tilt at the windmills, but the desperateness of the situation demands an equally desperate solution to a festering problem the country is burdened with. It’s a price which will not go waste, to bring about an enduring change. But the Military needs to watch out for similar untoward tendencies amidst its rank and file, lest the people rue Military Rule in a democratic republic of India.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+9410900051

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Olympics Series


Olympics – 1980 Moscow

Faced with an excessive number of absentees from the major events, a highly politicized atmosphere, a few dishonest judges and an overly chauvinistic public (especially in the Lenin Stadium), the Moscow Games were saved only by some outstanding sporting achievement.

“The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan will seriously affect present and future relations between us and the Soviet Union,” declared US President Jimmy Carter in early 1980, and the boycott of the Moscow Olympics became official on 20 January. Until 19 July, the date of the Opening Ceremony of the Games, there was a fierce battle between those who wanted to support the American decision (Japan, South Korea, Canada, West Germany and even China), those who wanted to participate unconditionally (all the socialist bloc countries) and those who wanted to go to Moscow under individual titles without emblems or national anthems (France, Spain, Australia, Great Britain, etc). A campaign was even launched for an Olympic Games with neither national anthems nor flags.
The pressure on the IOC and its Irish president, Lord Killanin, was enormous. The Games had to be saved. Though public opinion was divided, there was a majority among the athletes in favor of participation. On 19 July, eighty – one NOCs were represented. These flawed Games earned unanimous praise for the quality of the organization, but they were tarnished by excessive nationalism on the part of the Moscow public. Despite this, and despite the numerous absences, thirty four world records and sixty – two Olympic were set.
On 3 August during the Closing Ceremony, Misha the bear mascot shed a tear when the words ‘See you at the twenty – third Olympics’ appeared.
A Great Start and a Beautiful Finish for Dityatin: Lord of the Rings
After twenty – four years wait, the USSR finally won the men’s team title. The outstanding gymnast was, unsurprisingly, Aleksandr Dityatin. He had great talent for the rings, where he was awarded a well deserved 9.95. The man known as the playboy of international gymnastics breezed through the events watched by an enthusiastic crowd that supported its men with gusto, although their support made little difference to the outcome: the Soviets were far superior to the rest. On the occasion of his vault event, Dityatin had the remarkable honor of becoming the first male gymnast to be given a score of ten in an Olympic competition, four years after Nadia Comaneci and Nelly Kim did the same in Montreal. Four more perfect scores were given for various events: Stoyan Deltchev (Bulgaria) on the rings, Aleksandr Tkatchyov (USSR) on the horizontal bar and Zoltan Magyar (Hungary) and Michael Nikolay (GDR) on the pommel horse. Dityatin won a total of eight medals, three Gold, four Silver and two Bronze medals.
Stevenson’s Treasure Island
Cuba stole the show and among its six Olympic champions, Teofilo won his third Olympic title.  The highlight of the boxing tournament was the heavyweight final between him and Pyotr Zayev (USSR), in which he consecutively won his third Gold medal in the heavyweight division. By doing this he went down in history with Laszlo Papp of Hungary, who won the middleweight title in 1948, then the light middleweight in 1952 and 1956. Stevenson wielded a powerful right, who jabbed with his left; side stepped and then unleashed his fierce blow, to get a decision. In this Olympics the Cubans won six of the eight finals and gave a magnificent exhibition of the art and science of the pugilistic sport.  The 6 ft 5 inches and 220 lbs Teofilo, refused to become a professional, for the love of his country. For him a million dollars was nothing in comparison to the love of his countrymen and his leader Fidel Castro. Teofilo passed away at the age of 60 years on 12 Jun this year, and is survived by two children.
Salnikov the Czar: Earns a Place in History
No victory was ever more widely predicted than that of the Russian in the 1500 meters freestyle. The piece de resistance- the men’s 1500 meters freestyle, the longest race of the programme was expected to crown the Soviet Vladimir Salnikov. The only questions were how he would decide to win, and who would come second. Salnikov decided on the style of the solo victory. He attacked from the gun and as he touched the pad, the world record was his. By completing the 1500 meters in 14:58.27, he became the first man to break the fifteen minutes barrier. This immortal feat would secure him a place in sporting history. Two days later Vladimir won the 400 meter freestyle in a new Olympic record of 3:51.31. The absence of the Americans was not of much consequence in Salnikov’s victories, because of his distinct superiority and panache.
Steve Ovett and Sebastian Coe: All British Duel
Ovett and Coe the best middle distance runners of the times, were locked in a memorable duel in the 1500 and 800 meters. Coe had kept himself busy setting records in the preceding year, while Ovett was out of the spotlight. But this did not let Coe from being fooled, who knew that Steve would be in good shape in Moscow. Coe who was the favorite for the 800 meters was beaten by Steve. This was indeed the most disappointing day of Coe’s athletics career and he was determined to get back. The normally introverted and modest Steve let his hair down after the finals and did his lap of honor, with his joy speaking for him. The 1500 meters would now witness yet another fight between the two, in which Coe would have nothing to lose. Sebastian Coe’s joy overwhelmed his phlegmatic instincts, after winning the 1500 meters. He knelt on the track, kissed the ground and thanked the Gods, looking to the sky as if projecting his joy into eternity. Sebastian used his intelligence to resolve the conundrum of how to beat Steve Ovett. For him it was not a matter of speed but tactics and he pushed himself to the limit, for he would have rather dropped dead than lose.
 Lord Sebastian Coe who was later knighted is the CEO of the LOCOG 2012.

Miruts Yifter of Ethiopia won the double of 5,000 and 10,000 meters and in doing so gave a stunning example of how to win with a final lap sprint. It will endure as the classic image of the Games and will be remembered as the greatest track performance of the Moscow Olympics. Marita Koch of East Germany despite her disrupted preparation gave a fine display of her superiority to win the 400 meters. She won the race by running the fastest 400 meters in history. Daley Thompson of Great Britain won the decathlon with a score of 8,495 points and saw off the competition by the two Soviet Russians Kutsenko and Zhelanov. Despite a hostile stadium, Wladyslaw Kozakiewicz of Poland won the pole vault and created a world record of 5.78 meters.
India won the Gold in men’s field hockey and this was the last time it did so.
The Games In Brief
Opening Date                                        19 July 1980
Closing Date                                        3 August 1980
Host Nation                                         Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Nations Represented                           81
Athletes                                                5,217(1,125 women, 4,092 men)
Sports                                                   21 (12 open to women)
Events                                                  201 (50 open to women)
Games Officially Opened By              Leonid Brezhnev, President of USSR
Olympic Flame Lit By                        Sergei Belov (basketball)
Olympic Oath Taken By                     Nikolai Andrianov (gymnastics)
IOC President                                     Lord Michael Kilanin (IRL)

These were the first Games to be ever held in a Socialist country. Moscow was boycotted by most of the capitalist world. One unusual feature of the Games occurred in rowing, where in the coxless pairs the winners of both the Gold (East Germany) and the Silver (USSR) were actually identical twins.
PS -: Matter researched from the archives in the Olympics Museum in Lausanne.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+919410900051 

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Olympic Series


Olympics – 1976 Montreal

The dramatic events of the Munich Games had left their mark, and 16,000 men were drafted in to look after security at the Games. The real political threat, however, was the African boycott.

First there was the Canadian government’s decision to gratify Communist China by revoking the visa of the Taiwanese, already resident in the Olympic Village. The IOC protested, then backed down, and the Taiwanese left. The Chinese stayed at home anyway, since the IOC had admitted Taiwan. Then there was New Zealand, whose rugby team had recently toured South Africa, banned from the Games because of apartheid. The shooting of several hundred black Africans by the South African police at a student protest in Soweto in June 1976 provoked the African nations to demand New Zealand’s exclusion. When the IOC stood its ground, twenty seven African nations withdrew, depriving the Games of John Akii – Bua of Uganda (400 meters hurdles), Mike Boit of Kenya (800 and 1500 meters), Mohamed Gammoudi of Tunisia (5,000 and 10,000 meters) and Filbert Bayi of Tanzania, the world 1500 record holder, whose duel with New Zealander John Walker, the world mile record holder, was eagerly awaited.
The facilities at Montreal were big, beautiful and expensive (the projected budget had doubled from 1972 to 1976). Strikes during the construction caused concern but the facilities were ready on schedule. The Montreal Games are mostly remembered for the performances of Nadia Comaneci, Alberto Juantorena and Lassie Viren.
Nadia : the Child of Tranquility
Perfection exists: at Montreal, the tiny Romanian gained a perfect ten no less than seven times. You thought you had seen everything and what had been done could never be outdone. Then Nadia Comaneci arrived and perfection was redefined. Never before had the human body been more exquisitely manipulated both aesthetically and physically, to the limits of the possible. Beautiful was an under-statement. The stunning 15 year old was inexorably bewitching. Comaneci’s rise had been prodigious, when one thinks that two years ago no-one in the world of gymnastics even knew that she existed. But one can’t help reflecting that, four years ago when Olga Korbut was wowing viewers throughout the world, Nadia an eleven year old was spending four hours everyday training at the state sporting academy. At the age of six, she was spotted by a national scout and placed under the care of Bella Karoly, who brought the Romanian team from a bronze in Melbourne and Rome to a Gold here, pushing the dominant Russians and the emerging East Germans to second and third place, respectively.
Nadia Comaneci’s arrival on the scene was leading into a mesmerizing era in this sport. Women’s artistic gymnastics was tending more and more towards gymnastic dance, a tendency parallel to that of figure skating, influenced by the demands of television coverage.
The End of The Journey
Undisputed star of the tournament, American Sugar Ray Leonard, announced he would never box again. The 21 year old, who had an enviable record of 137 wins in 142 bouts,   faced the press after the protocol ceremony with rare maturity, for a young man of his age and said “I’m ending my career today because I made a promise to my mother, my fiancée and myself. I set myself a goal and achieved it. I want to be an example to young people. Being a champion is great but it’s not everything. I want to be fulfilled, perfect my knowledge and be somebody.” In response to comments about the millions he could have made from boxing, he said, I’ve decided to study administration and public relations. Later on I’d like to get involved with training young people. My path is there, nowhere else. “I want to use the intelligence I’ve been told I show in the ring in other areas. That will be my next fight.”
Sugar Ray Leonard became the World Boxing Council (WBC) welterweight champion on 30 November 1979, and undisputed world champion in 1981.

Alberto Juantorena – The Cool Cuban
The new champion considered his unprecedented 400 and 800 meters double, simply a stage in his life. Juantorena was simply astonishing – prodigious. His incredible calmness took everyone aback. Lucidly analyzing the two races that won him that many titles, Alberto Juantorena said “Of course I am very happy to have won both competitions as that’s never been done in the history of the Olympics. He won the 800 meters with a new world record.
Viren Laps it Up
After four anonymous years, this Finn reappeared to perform the same 5,000 and 10,000 meters double as he did in Munich. He responded to the doping rumors by praising the benefits of reindeer milk from Lapland and that’s what worked for him. After winning the double in Munich, during the interregnum, he had a serious injury on his thigh and was operated upon. Thereafter, he was training, running 50 kms every day. After winning the 10,000 meters, Viren ran his lap of honor with his running shoes in hand and for which, he was summoned by the IOC to explain the transgression. Lassie, truthfully came out that it was not for publicity but because he had blisters on his feet. Viren also ran the marathon, but could not manage a podium finish and came fifth.
Kornelia’s Coronation
With four titles, four world records and a unique double! Cornelia Ender of (GDR) takes it all. Ender had won the 100 meters butterfly in a record breaking time and within 26 minutes of that victory, followed it up with another record in the 200 meters freestyle. The stadium erupted into applause, recognizing this unique milestone in women’s swimming.
Men’s Swimming
America’s Jim Montgomery won the 100 meters freestyle and broke the fifty second barrier by clocking 49.99 secs. As also, his teams mate John Naber, who won Gold in the 100 meters backstroke and Silver in the 100 meters freestyle, within sixty minutes of each other. An incredible feat. John Naber overcame the fatigue of a gruelling week of competitions to win his second Gold medal in the 200 meters backstroke. A historic race not only because the distance was covered in less than two minutes, but also because the time was faster than the 200 meters butterfly record, the butterfly having been considered a faster stroke until now.
The Games in Brief
Opening Date                                          17 July 1976
Closing Date                                            01 Aug 1976
Host Nation                                             Canada
Nations Represented                               92
Athletes                                                    6,028
Sports                                                       21(11 open to women)
Events                                                      198 (49 open to women)
Games Opened By                                   HRH Queen Elizabeth II
Olympic Flame Lit By                             Sandra Henderson (athletics) and Stephane
                                                                  Prefontaine (athletics)
Olympic Oath Read By                           Pierre Saint – Jean (weightlifting)
IOC President                                         Lord Mickael Killanin (Ireland)

The Olympic Flame was sent by air. It was sent – in the form of an electronic signal- to a transmitter pointed at an Intelsat satellite, and then to a receiver where the stored energy set off a laser beam that restored it to a physical Flame. Clarence Hill of Bermuda by winning the bronze medal in boxing, became the first to do so in Olympics, from the least populated nation (53,500)  

PS -: Matter researched from the archives of the Olympics Museum in Lausanne.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal  
+919410900051                        

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Olympic Series


Olympics – 1972 Munich

Twenty six years after the Berlin Games – remembered with such horror – Germany became the setting for a hostage situation. Once more the Games showed that, despite themselves, they were the perfect reflection of their time.


These Games were to be the greatest ever; Germany was determined to erase the shadow cast by the Berlin Games. Yet the nightmare that unfolded on the night of Tuesday 5 September made the Munich Olympics synonymous with fear. Masked Palestinian gunmen forced their way into the building in the Olympic Village housing the Israeli delegation, taking athletes and officials hostage and murdering two in cold blood.
For the first time in the history of the Olympics, the Olympic truce had been violated. The tragedy culminated in a shootout at the airport where the Palestinians had planned to escape with their Israeli hostages. Nine more Israelis, five Palestinians and a police officer perished. By comparison, Mark Spitz’s seven Gold medals seemed meaningless and so too did the performances of two remarkable sixteen – year – olds, high jumper Ulrike Meyfarth and gymnast Olga Korbut. The 640 kg lifted by the indomitable Soviet weightlifter Vassily Alekseyev, the cap worn by the exuberant David Wottle in the 800 meters, and the laughter of the magical Ugandan Akii Bua, 400 meters hurdle Gold medalist, could do nothing to relieve the sense of shock.
In the words of IOC President Avery Brundage, “Peace must prevail over violence”. So the Games went on. East Germany and the USSR pushed Americans to the limit and the Finns challenged the dominance of their African counterparts. Yet sport paled into insignificance in the face of tragedy, described as a tragedy in paradise by 1956 Olympic discus champion Olga Connolly, an intimate witness to the terror. September 1972 was a black month indeed.
2.16 am: It’s Gone Badly Wrong 
On the morning of 05 September, gunmen belonging to the Palestinian faction Black September burst into the Israeli pavilion in the Olympic Village. Never before had murder been committed in the Olympic Village. Palestinian terrorists stormed the Israeli apartment building at 31 Connoly Strasse, killing wrestling trainer Moshe Weinberger and weightlifter Yossef Romano. By the next morning nine more Israelis had died. The Fedayeen had taken hostage members of the Israeli delegation and made a demand for the release of Palestinian detainees in Israel, with a threat to shoot the hostages if their demand was not met. At 9.39 am the kayak – canoe heats were held and at 10.39 am Avery Brundage, the President of the IOC announced that the ‘Games must go on’. At 3.39 pm the Egyptian basketball team refused to play their match against the Phillipines and the Games were suspended until 10 am the following day. The rescue operation mounted by the German police went horribly wrong and all the nine hostages were killed along with four Palestinians.
An Emotional Ceremony at The Olympic Stadium
The delegations slowly entered the Olympic stadium, which should have rung with the sounds of athletic competition. Only sorrow filled it then. The faces of the Israelis were terse. The Munich Philharmonic performed the Funeral March from Beethoven’s symphony. It was overwhelming. The head of the Israeli delegation addressed the crowd in Hebrew: “Those who have died were true sportsmen, cut down in their prime”. He then listed the names of the victims. The crowd of 80,000 spectators all rose to their feet. “In spite of this abominable crime, we have decided to continue competing in these Olympic Games, in a spirit of harmony and integrity.”
Spitz in All Humility
Seven Gold medals, seven world records in swimming. Yet these outstanding achievements on the part of the American seemed almost derisory, in light of the tragic events of the past few days – as Spitz himself was all too aware. Spitz truly was a phenomenon. No man had ever come as close to embodying the majesty of dolphins as him. Every atom of his being was efficient. Mark Spitz had dominated the butterfly stroke since 1969. Since 1968, he had favored the 100 and 200 meters double in both free style and butterfly. This turned out to be the best possible combination for picking up titles and medals by opening the doors to the relays. Spitz’s exceptional flexibility and power of recuperation were instrumental in giving his outstanding performances.
Shane Gould – Superstar at Fifteen
The Australian swimmer finished the Games with three titles, five medals and three individual world records. From the time she began to compete at the Games, her timings were without precedent. So it was that the Americans had to play second fiddle to this Australian, in terms of both their motivation and their results – in spite, too, of their momentary conviction that they had escaped her iron rule.
The Fall of The American Empire
For the first time in the history of Olympic sport the American basketball team had been beaten. However, the eagerly anticipated final between the USA and USSR ended in confusion, and in the closing seconds the Americans lost a game they thought they had won. A score of 50 – 51 meant victory for the Russians and the Americans outraged, protested against what they considered as daylight robbery! The main feature of the protest by the Americans was the granting of three extra seconds as, according to the FIBA rules the match was over.
Finland Dominates The Middle Distance Races
Nearly half a century later, after the Finns had won the middle distance races of 1500, 5,000 and 10,000 meters and Paavo Nurmi and Ville Ritola had achieved success; did they once again dominate the events in Munich, and Pekka Vasala and Lassie Viren emerged winners. While Pekka won the 1500 meters beating Kip Keino in the finals, but the race lacked the flavor which it would have had, had Jim Ryun the winner in 1968 Mexico Games, also been there. Unfortunately, Jim was eliminated in the fourth qualifying heat as he had fallen on the curb and injured himself. Lassie Viren achieved the double of winning the 5,000 and 10,000 meters and joined the greats like Hannes Kolehmainen (Finland) in 1912, Emil Zatopek (Czechoslavakia) 1952 and Volodomyr Kuts (USSR) 1956.
Darling of The Games
Tiny Olga Korbut of USSR gave everything to her sport, enchanting the public and the media with her charm and the vulnerability that would cost her the overall victory. Olga, who was leading the pack after the floor and vault and with two more disciplines to go, fell during her routine in the assymetrical bars and missed her remount, due more to nerves than lack of skill. When she was scored 7.5, she burst into tears. A spectator who had evaded the stewards, handed her a bouquet of dried flowers and she with tears streaming down her face, stood up, flowers in hand. She received a roaring ovation.
The Games in Brief
Opening Date                                                         26 August 1972
Closing Date                                                          10 September 1972
Host Town                                                              Munich
Nations Represented                                              121
Athletes                                                                   7,123 (1,058 women, 6,065 men)
Sports                                                                      21 (8 open to women)
Events                                                                     172
Games Opened By                                                  Gustav Heinemann, President of West
                                                                                 Germany
Olympic Flame Lit By                                            Gunther Zahn (athletics)
Olympic Oath Read By                                           Heidi Schueller (athletics)
IOC President                                                          Avery Brundage (USA)

Officials swore the Olympic oath and a woman athlete took the oath for the first time, and Archery returned to the Olympic programme after a 52 year absence.
PS -: Matter researched from the archives of the Olympic museum in Lausanne.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+919410900051
                                            

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Olympic Series


Olympics - 1968 Mexico

The world was in rebellion. In China, the Cultural Revolution was at its height. In the United States, activists were demanding an end to the intervention in Vietnam, and the black community was campaigning for civil rights. Student demonstrations had paralyzed France, Germany and Brazil. Czechoslovakia saw the Prague Spring crushed by the Soviet Union. Then, in Mexico, just ten days before the opening of the Games, government troops opened fire on students, leaving more than 250 lying dead in Mexico City’s celebrated Plaza of the Three Cultures.
The prospect of holding the Games at an altitude of 7,000 feet struck fear into the hearts of doctors, trainers and athletes alike. Other environmental factors characterized the Games: the track – synthetic – the wind, which remained strangely constant at 2 m/sec during the major finals. Other innovations combined to incite another revolution: in athletics, every record was broken up to 400 m, including the relays. Africans monopolized the distance events from 1500 m to the marathon. Dick Fosbury re – invented the high jump and Bob Beamon achieved the feat of the century with his giant long jump of 8.90 m. Never had the Games been so affected by their setting. These exploits, and the emotion they aroused, made Mexico a global stage, on which Black Americans made peaceful protests, just six months after the assassination of Martin Luther King. Tommie Smith and John Carlos handed out badges marked ‘Olympic Projects for Human Rights’ and raised black- gloved fists on the podium.
Tommie Smith and John Carlos, Expelled from the American Camp
After the 200 meters final, two Black American athletes took advantage of the Olympic stage to express anger at the ‘victimization’ of their community. Tommie Smith and John Carlos mounted the podium to receive their 200 meters medals. Both wore the famous button bearing the slogan ‘Olympic Projects for Human Rights’, a black glove, a black silk scarf and leotard under open jackets, black socks and no shoes. During the US national anthem they raised their gloved fists to the sky and looked down instead of up at the American flag. This was to protest against the shameful conditions Black people endured in the USA and elsewhere. Following this, the American Olympic Committee decided to suspend Smith and Carlos and asked them to leave the Olympic Village with the least fuss possible.
Beamon Out Of ThisWorld    
By pulling off 8.90 meters in the long jump, Bob achieved a jump from another time. And it is, without doubt, the achievement of the century. As the sky rolled overhead with heavy, thunderous clouds and the horizon passed vibrantly from blue to burgundy to purple; Beamon perfected his run – up and hit the take – off board with the precision of a laser guided missile. His take – off, the result of the perfect coincidence of power and speed, propelled him high into the air, and he performed an astonishing scissor movement with his unfeasibly long legs. Leaning over his lower limbs, he remained suspended between the sky and the earth, rocket like, for longer than seemed possible. Bob delayed his landing like a ski – jumper, and finally came down well beyond the range of the optical measuring device. Several verifications were necessary before Beamon, who had bounced twice after his terrific jump, performed a wild jig and finished up in the arms of fellow American Boston.
A shriek went up in the stand as the most fantastic result of these Games, and perhaps in athletics history, was displayed in fiery letters: 8.90 meters! Was there a mistake? No: with a legal tailwind of 2 meters/sec, Beamon had broken the world record by 55 cms.
Al Oerter Victorious On four Continents  
This American achieved an unprecedented four consecutive Olympic victories in Melbourne, Rome, Tokyo and now Mexico. He resembled a gladiator, with his blond locks plastered to his forehead and a bulging chest. The discuss throwers battled with the elements for over half an hour. Oerter nursed his own discuss in a white cloth like a new born child. Finally, the twelve competitors gave up and headed for the shelter of the stands, as the storm grew increasingly violent. When the contest resumed, the 6 ft 3 inch and 277 pounds Oerter, an electric engineer in an aeronautical company, threw the discuss to 64.78 meters and snatched victory.
Fosbury, Revolutionizes The High Jump
Four years after Valerie Brumel’s belly – roll, Dick Fosbury pioneered a new technique – to great success. Fosbury stood perfectly still, at a forty – five degree angle to the bar. He then carried out a number of bizarre series of movements to aid concentration, involving mysterious hand signals and a bending of his torso, almost to the point of losing balance. He then took off, racing towards the bar at top speed in a wide arc. He reached the bar as if to perform a scissors jump. But as he launched himself into the air, he twisted and flung his body backwards, passing over the bar in an almost horizontal position, before he brought his legs up towards his body as he landed on the other side. This had been a remarkable international debut for Dick Fosbury. It was none the less strange to witness this new technique which departed so abruptly from the Soviet ‘belly – roll’.

Jim Hines of USA won the 100 meters final, which had eight black athletes competing against each other for the first time and the race lived up to expectations. In women’s swimming, Debbie Meyer was a cut above the rest, as the young American’s explosive performance in the pool won her the Gold in 200, 400 and 800 meters freestyle. Vera Caslavska of Czechoslavakia, a woman gymnast who had won Gold in the all-round competition in Tokyo, repeated her victory in Mexico and followed it by marrying a fellow Czech athlete in the Olympic village. George Foreman of USA won the Gold in the Heavyweight boxing title fight and demonstrated his solidarity for the ‘Black Power’ movement – without forgetting to show that he was also competing as a US athlete.

The Games In Brief
Opening Ceremony                                              12 October 1968
Closing Ceremony                                                27 October 1968
Host Nation                                                          Mexico
Nations Participated                                            113
Athletes                                                                 5,531 (761 women, 4,750 men)
Sports                                                                   18 (7 open to women)
Events                                                                  172 (39 open to women)
Games Officially Opened By                              Diaz, President of Mexico
Olympic Flame Lit By                                        Enriqueta Basilio de Sotel (athletics)
Olympic Oath By                                                Pablo Garrido (athletics)
IOC President                                                    Avery Brundage (USA)

At 2,240 meters, the Olympic Games had never been held at such high altitude. The German Democratic Republic team competed under the name of East Germany. Winners had to undergo drugs testing for the first time ever and Swede Hans Gunther Liljenwall, an entrant in modern pentathlon was disqualified for testing positive for excessive alcohol.
In athletics, cycling, rowing, canoeing, swimming and equestrian sports, official timings were taken both manually and electronically, although the electronic readings were considered to be the true times.

PS -: Matter researched from the archives of the Olympic Museum in Lausanne.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+919410900051

Olympic Series


Olympic Games – 1964 Tokyo

Nineteen years after hundreds of thousands had died, Emperor Hirohito of Japan had surrendered and sixty percent of Tokyo was destroyed; that Yoshinori Sakai, an athlete born not far from Hiroshima on 06 August 1945 put the torch to the Olympic Flame. Now in 1964, Japan had put its past behind it and the country was no more bellicose. It had rebuilt, and was back on its feet. It spent lavishly on the Games: a sum of two billion dollars, a colossal sum. The organization was flawless in every aspect and the first television broadcasts via satellite assured a global public.
The Games were a convincing display of Japanese efficiency, but lacked emotion: the public was calm, polite, respectful and disciplined, but to the Western eyes seeing Asia for the first time, seemed cold. It may be easier to forget the catastrophes of recent history than to change the intimate habits of centuries of tradition. Nonetheless, tensions persisted between China and the USSR, the United States and Cuba, and in Vietnam. During the Games, China, a conspicuous absentee, conducted its first nuclear tests.
Geesink Puts Japan In Shock
Antonius Geesink, a judo instructor from Utrecht, Holland reduced Japan to tears by immobilizing Akio Kaminaga in the open division. Kaminaga had the look of a trout, exhausted by its own efforts. Geesink, his 253 pounds comfortably installed on Kaminaga’s broad chest, his butcher’s arms firmly around his rival’s neck, having passed one of them under the shoulder of the Japanese, looked his rival ferociously in the eyes. He could have spent the whole evening in this position. It was over before the bell announced the end, and for Japan, watching on television, it was a moment of terrible anguish. Students wept in the restaurant, their hopes shattered with one blow. Japan’s total judo supremacy had been surrendered to a Westerner. The cameras, aimed at the Tatami – the rectangular matting – didn’t allow viewer’s to decipher Geesink’s outstretched arm during the bout. He was pointing towards the Japanese coach Matsumoto, who had been crouching at the edge of the Tatami yelling advice at Kaminaga. The gesture astonished the referee, who hadn’t even noticed. He sent the Japanese eighth dan to his chair in a state of confusion.
Dawn Fraser, Wayward Genius
No author would have dared dream up such a heroine for a piece of fiction. Nothing seemed to stop her. Neither convention nor criticism could deter her from fulfilling the destiny of her extravagant gifts in the water. It is almost as if she deliberately sought obstacles to overcome to enhance her unique achievements. She was the first woman to swim 100 meters and break the one-minute barrier with 59.9 secs in Oct 1962. She had won gold medals in Melbourne, Rome and Tokyo. The unprecedented third gold should have put any other news about Dawn Fraser in the shade, to wit, her secret participation in the Opening Ceremony, her outlandish shirt, her bugle calls at the edge of the pool and even a bizarre episode in which  she stole the Olympic flag flying over the Imperial Palace.
Don Schollander, The First Swimmer To Win Four Golds  
On his way to an unprecedented four Gold medals, the young American outclassed his rivals in the 100 meters, freestyle. Schollander won in the 100, 400, 4x100 and 4x200 meters thus becoming the first swimmer to win four medals in one Olympic Games.
The Fastest Man In The World
The American Bob Hayes became the fastest athlete in the Games with a wind assisted 9.9 secs world record. In the finals, Hayes took on Cuba’s Enrique Figuerola. A dense matrix of politics underlay the encounter, although no – one in the stadium cared for anything but the individuals on the blocks. It was only after the race that the search for some encrypted meaning began. It emerged in the warm, sincere handshake between the American and the Cuban, a rare event those days. It was a wonderful moment which left all believing, just for a while, that sport really can bring people together.
Peter Snell Overcomes His Fear Of Defeat
Snell, who was the 800 meters champion four years ago in Rome, retained that and added the 1500 meters title to it. When the officials were looking for Peter to award him his second Gold medal, they panicked. For, he had taken refuge with his wife Sally, behind a wall, at the exit of the changing room and was embracing her tenderly. He was finally located and on approaching the victory stand he said that he was tired, very tired.
Bikila Rises Through The Ranks
Once again, the slender figure of Abebe Bikila delighted the spectators by the purity of his style and the remarkable radiance he emanated, being a thoroughbred. He was four years older than he was in Rome, approaching 32 years. He won in 2:15:16.2 secs in 1960 and this time he achieved 2:12:11.2 secs, to become the first marathon runner to keep his title.
India regained the Hockey Gold which it had lost to Pakistan in Rome.
Valery Brumel the world record holder with 2.28 meters, went one better. Although a magnificent technician, Brumel failed his first two attempts at 2.03 meters, a height normally well within him. He cleared it at the last attempt. Then his form returned and he jumped better. His strongest rival John Thomas, who also cleared 2.18 meters, lost out on the number of failed attempts and Valery the master of the roll, won the Gold.

The Games In Brief
Opening Ceremony                                 10 Oct 1964
Closing Ceremony                                  24 Oct 1964
Host Nation                                             Japan
Nations Represented                              94 Nations
Athletes                                                   5,140 (683 women, 4,457 men)
Sports                                                      19
Events                                                     163 (33 open to women)
Games Officially Opened By                 Emperor Hirohito
Olympic Flame Lit By                           Yoshinori Sakai
                                                                (Born in Hiroshima on 06 Aug 1945)
Olympic Oath By                                    Takashi Ono (Gymnastics)
IOC President                                         Avery Brundage (USA)

The Tokyo Games were the first to be held in Asia. The most touching symbol of the Games was the final torchbearer, Yoshinori Sakai; born in Hiroshima on the day the atomic bomb exploded over the city, he was chosen in honor of the victims. Two new sports, judo and volleyball (both men’s and women’s), were included in Tokyo. In another first, competitors in the Pole Vault used fiberglass poles. Tokyo was the last Games in which athletics events were run on a cinder track.
The first ‘Fair Play’ prize was awarded by the IOC to the Kali brothers of Sweden who, during a regatta, gave up their chance of victory to help two fellow competitors who had capsized.

PS -: Matter researched from the archives in the Olympic Games museum in Lausanne.

Brigadier (retd) S D Dangwal
+919410900051