The
eyes of the world are slowly turning to Sochi,
Russia where in two weeks Vladimir Putin’s pride and joy will get
under way. Despite a dazzling array of
talented athletes, however, attention to the XXII Olympic Winter Games has been focused on Russia’s repressive anti-Gay laws and policy and on threats
of terrorism by disgruntled Caucus Muslims. But while NBC relentlessly bangs the drums to promote the Games—and their
otherwise dismal ratings—perhaps we can take a moment to reflect on how it all
began.
On
January 25, 1924 athletes from 16 nations gathered at the foot of Mont Blanc in Chamonix, and Haute-Savoie,
France for an International Winter Sports Week.
The event was considered by its host, the French Olympic Committee to be an informal extension of the Olympics Games held that summer in Paris.
It was in response to a clamor, particularly by Nordic countries for an international venue for amateur winter
sports.
It
was only after the conclusion of the successful games that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to formally inaugurate the
Winter Games at their meeting in
1925, that they retroactively proclaimed the Chamonix games the I Olympic Winter Games. Thereafter the games would be held every four
years in the same years as the Summer Games—interrupted by World War II—until 1994 when the current schedule or holding the
game two years after the last Summer event was adopted.
The
French event was not, however the first time some winter sports were part of
Olympic games. Figure Skating had been an Olympic event in both London and Antwerp, and Ice Hockey
was contested in Antwerp on indoor rinks.
Obviously those events which had to be held outdoors could not be
accommodated in a normal Olympic schedule.
The
first games were totally dominated by Nordic teams. Norway
won four Gold Medals and 17
total medals, Finland had four Golds
and 11 total. The United States only took a Gold in Speed Skating, a very distant Silver
in Hockey, Silver in Lady’s Figure
Skating, and a Bronze for Men’s Ski Jump. But that was better than the hapless home
team, despite fielding the second largest number of athletes. The French won just three Bronze medals, one
of them not actually awarded until 2006.
Curling had been
presented during the games, but was not considered an official sport. In 2006, the IOC retroactively awarded medals
to the 1924 curling teams after an appeal on behalf of the victorious British by a Glasgow newspaper.
The
Curling medals were not the only ones awarded tardily. When officials in 1974 discovered a miss entered score in a ski jumping
event, American Anders Haugen was
elevated from fourth place to third and the 86 year old athlete finally
received his Bronze.
The
last medal presented during the competition was awarded to a sport that was not
even contested during the games. The
French Olympic Committee presented a Gold Medal for alpinisme to Charles Granville Bruce, the leader of
the expedition that tried but failed to climb Mount Everest in 1922.
Athletes
at the games competed in 16 events in 9 sports—Bob Sled, Curling, Ice Hockey,
Military Patrol, Figure Skating,
Speed Skating, Cross Country Skiing,
Nordic Combined Skiing, and Ski
Jumping.
In
Figure Skating Sweden’s Gillis Grafström
became the first—and last—individual to successfully defend a Gold Medal won at
a previous Summer game, Antwerp in 1920.
He would go on to notch a third win in 1928 and a Silver in 1932. On the distaff side 11 year old Sonja Henie skated for Norway. She finished last but became the darling of
the competition. She would go on to win
the next three consecutive Gold Medals, a career as one of the highest paid movies
stars in Hollywood, and the first ice show queen.
Then
there was Ice Hockey. The Canadians, like Grafström defending Gold
won at Antwerp, achieved the most devastating complete domination of an event
in Olympic history, Summer or Winter.
They finished their qualifying round with 4 wins, and a total score of
110–3 against Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, Sweden, and Great
Britain then breezed to a win topping the U.S.
This domination continued through most of early Olympic history. The Canadians won six of the first seven Gold
Medals. Frankly, the whole country has
had a swelled head and been a dick about this ever since.
All
in all it was an exciting and successful week of completion. Unlike the enormously expensive Summer games
that year in Paris, the winter events even turned a modest profit. They helped popularize winter sports in Europe and North America. Not a bad
debut.
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