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by Craig Hackney on 04 August 2008
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Well, they’re almost here. The Beijing 2008 Olympic Games are about to start and, after putting up with the obligatory three-hour kitsch and propaganda show, the stars will finally get to make the headlines that they so richly deserve.
Once the athletes hit the track, all of the peripheral crap about internet access and smog will take its rightful place in the background and we’ll remember what the Olympics are really all about.
These Games will undoubtedly deliver a number of unforgettable sporting memories but, in the meantime, here’s my top 10 (in no particular order) list of perfect (summer) Olympic moments.
1. Nadia Comaneci (Montreal 1976): Not many athletes get to force changes in their sport through the sheer weight of their individual brilliance, but that is what Comaneci achieved. In a sport reliant on the often questionable subjective views of judges, Comaneci achieved on the uneven bars what no one believed was possible - perfection. In fact, so unlikely was the prospect of a perfect 10, that the scoreboard was not able to cope with it, leaving Comaneci staring disbelieving at a score of 1.0, until the realisation crept in that she had forever changed her sport. She did it a further six times during the course of the Games.
2. Mark Spitz (Munich 1972): Seven events, seven gold medals, seven world records, one brilliant moustache. Nuff said.
3. Jesse Owens (Berlin 1936): Four gold medals in any Olympics is an outstanding achievement, but to do it in Berlin at the height of Hitler’s Aryan supremacy propaganda show provided a beautiful irony to underscore a superhuman effort.
4. Bob Beamon (Mexico 1968): Beamon’s remarkable long jump in the rarefied atmosphere of Mexico’s Olympic stadium moved the world record a remarkable 55cm and made Beamon the first man to jump both 28 and 29 feet. His record stood for 23 years and has only been bettered once in the intervening 40 years.
5. Abebe Bikila (Rome 1960): Bikila became the first African to win an Olympic gold medal - and he did it with typical African style and panache by running the marathon in world record time in BARE FEET. He also backed that up in Tokyo 1964 and extended his record, but this time he did it in shoes.
6. Paavo Nurmi (Antwerp 1920, Paris 1924, Amsterdam, 1928): One of the Flying Finns, Nurmi won nine gold medals running distances from 1500-10,000 metres and won 12 Olympic medals in total. Widely considered to be the greatest track and field athlete of all time, Nurmi would have extended his record in Los Angeles, but was by then considered a professional and inelligible – bloody silly rule.
7. Michael Johnson (Atlanta 1996): When you show up to an Olympic final wearing gold shoes, you really need to do something very special or you'll end up looking a prize tool. Johnson had already got the 400m gold medal in the bag, but his 200m performance was breathtaking. His time of 19.32 seconds has not only never been eclipsed, it hasn’t even been threatened. It was every bit as electrifying as his Canadian namesake Ben's Seoul performance from 1988 - the difference being Michael did it with talent, not chemicals.
8. Emil Zatopek (London 1952): For most people winning the 5000m and 10,000m Olympic finals would have been a pretty good way to round off an Olympic campaign, but Emil decided, on a whim, to run the marathon too. He’d never run one before, but won it anyway. It’s a performance that will probably never be equalled.
9. Cathy Freeman (Sydney 2000): Freeman’s victory in the 400m final in Sydney will never go down as a pivotal moment in pure athletic terms, but as a patriotic Aussie, the sight of her running that race in the futuristic bodysuit and carrying 20 million Aussies on her shoulders was unforgettable.
10. Dick Fosbury (Mexico 1968): Fosbury’s name became inextricably linked to the high jump after he revolutionised the sport with his famous “flop”. He won the gold medal with an Olympic record leap of 2.24m but, more importantly, forever changed the way athletes compete in his chosen sport. Not a bad legacy.
No doubt the next few weeks will add to the list. Michael Phelps looks certain to fight for his place as one of the all-time greats, although it’s just as likely to come from somewhere completely unexpected.
Let the Games begin.
Comments (20)
by mie ite on August 05, 2008
The year is correct, but Zatopek did his incredible deed in Helsinki, not London.
by Lance Braun on August 05, 2008
American Greco-Roman wrestler Rulon Gardner beat Russian Alexander Karelin at the 2000 Olympics for the gold medal, and that didn't make the list? Karelin was undefeated for THIRTEEN YEARS before he lost to Gardner, including not even being scored on for SIX YEARS. Possibly the second greatest upset in Olympic history behind the "Miracle on Ice" in 1980.
on August 05, 2008 on August 05, 2008
I'm supprised the Keri Strugg vault wasn't on here.
by j o on August 05, 2008
apparently nobody remembers kerri strug? 1996 olympics in atlanta. us olympic team needs a great vault from kerri to win the team gold, but her leg is extremely crippled with severe laterial sprain and tendon damage. but she performed the vault to near perfection anyway, as the largely american crowd cheered her on. that was inspirational. amazing.
in addition to rulon gardner i'm a bit surprised on two other moments not being included, Joe Louis vs Max Schmeling (1936) and Tommie Smith & and John Carlos (1968), well peter Norman too :)
by Kev C on August 05, 2008
NO US HOCKEY? No One Legged Land? NO US HOCKEY? No One Legged Land? NO US HOCKEY? No One Legged Land? NO US HOCKEY? No One Legged Land?
by cdvf asdf on August 05, 2008
She didnt even need to do her last run, the team had already won, her coach new this and yet still pressured her into doing it.
by Wes R on August 05, 2008
US Hockey team beating the vaunted Soviet machine in 1980, Lake Placid, New York. You don't include this??... you've got to be kidding me. All the others pale with the exception of Jesse Owens in Berlin.
by P S on August 05, 2008
This must only be summer olympics.
no, she really did need to do the last run. if she hadn't, the us team would have lost. look it up. if you can't find it, ask me. she needed to.
by bob bob on August 05, 2008
Russian Alexander Karelin Google him. Undefeated for over 12 years! Then go to youtube and search for him!
by Craig Hackney on August 06, 2008
Thanks for the comments guys. The article is only about the summer games as I stated in the 3rd para, hence no miracle on ice. As for Strugg, she probably deserved to be in there in place of Cathy Freeman - it's a bit of a patriotic indulgence. Cheers
by kristie glascock on August 06, 2008
I think this is only a list of the summer Olympic great moments, seeing as it is the summer Olympics that's about to start. Nadia's accomplishment I think should go down as number one. I do think Keri Strugg's vault should be on the list. That took a lot of determination and courage to do what she did. When the winter Olympic list comes in two years, the US Hockey team will be on it and so should Torvill and Dean (ice dancers who got all those perfect 6's)
by Paul Harris on August 06, 2008
I'd add in Steve Redgrave's 5 gold medals in 5 consecutive games - only one Olympian has done better, and that was in a non-endurance event.
by Peter Kolding on August 06, 2008
Franz Klammer, 1976 Winter Olympics. The greatest downhill run anyone has ever seen.
by Thrower Guy on August 08, 2008
What about Al Oerter? He won 4 Olympic gold medals in the Discus throw in 4 different, consecutive Olympics!! A feat only repeated by Carl Lewis. Oerter set 4 Olympic records, each year beat the world record holder and was not the favorite to win. He also had to overcome injuries, once throwing an Olympic record with TORN RIB CARTILIDGE! He gets my vote...
by Steven Brown on August 08, 2008
Kieren Perkins of Australia Atlanta 1500m swimming defending his title from lane 8 - pure grit pure emotion ultimate champion.
by Jamie Sorrentino on August 16, 2008
Cathy Freeman's 400 meter victory still sends chills up my spine.
by carolyn morrison on August 24, 2008
The jamaicans are awesome!!!!!! especially Usain Bolt wow! what a character very entertaining to watch. The females Gold and 2 silver medals victory was intense. Finally drug testint has brought about natural quality performance.
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