Former Olympic sports come right from playground
If you’ve been swimming, you probably tried it at least once: dive
into the water and see how far you can get without taking a stroke. Coast past
62 feet and you could have earned a gold medal at the 1904 Olympics.
The tug-of-war you played with friends at school? That could have
been worth a podium spot at six Games. A gym class favorite like the rope climb
and a game that looked like hopscotch — the standing hop, step, jump —
also were once medal events.
Long before the corporate sponsorships and billion-dollar
television deals, the Olympic Games were more like games kids might play in the
backyard. Some of the events may seem a bit strange — club swinging,
anyone? — but there was certainly a fun factor to the early days of the
Olympics.
“It’s was a different thing, kind of catch as catch can, particularly
the very early days before it got formalized,” said David Wallechinsky, vice
president of the International Society of Olympic Historians. “Eventually, as
it got bigger, they had to take it a lot more serious.”
The first few modern Olympics, which started in Athens in 1896,
were loosely organized. There were no national teams — athletes could
just sign up, pay an entry fee and compete — and the host countries were
allowed to pick what events were to be held.
That changed after World War I, when the International Olympic
Committee took over selection of the Olympic program because Sweden wouldn’t
allow boxing at the 1912 Stockholm Games.
And while there has always been a political slant to the Olympics —
St. Louis pulled a back-room deal to snatch the 1904 Games from Chicago —
there wasn’t much worldwide attention paid to the early Games.
A wild finish in the marathon at the 1908 Games — Italy’s
Dorando Pietri was disqualified for being helped across the finish line by two
officials after collapsing several times — and the Nazi presence at the
1936 Berlin Games helped increase media interest, eventually turning the
Olympics into the financial and political monster of today.
Before all that happened, though, the Olympics were a simpler
affair, filled with some, uh, interesting events.
One was the dueling pistols at the 1906 Athens Summer Olympics.
Despite the Wild West connotations, the participants didn’t actually shoot each
other; they fired upon mannequins dressed in frock coats with bull-eyes on their
chests.
Running deer shoot, where participants shot at moving cutouts of
animals, was another worse-than-it-sounds competition.
For the authentic blood and guts, you’d have to go back to the
1900 Paris Games and live pigeon shooting. Nearly 300 birds were killed during
the release-and-shoot competition, leaving a mess of feathers and blood after
an event that clearly wouldn’t fly today.
Less violent and perhaps more fun were some of the swimming
events.
There was the diving plunge — the aforementioned coasting
event — and an underwater race, where swimmers earned points based on how
long they could hold their breath and how far they could get before coming up
for air.
The swimming obstacle race in 1900 was another unusual one, with
swimmers climbing up and down a pole, then over and under boats in the Seine
River. Surely, some kid at the local swimming pool made that one up.
“It was probably tremendously entertaining,” says Olympic
historian John Lucas. “It was sort of like an X sport for the amusement of the
mob.”
Club swinging, held during the 1904 and 1932 games, would
certainly fall into that category. Like rhythmic gymnastics with bowling pins
or juggling without letting go, club swinging featured competitors whirling
clubs around their bodies in various patterns. The threat of getting donked on
the head like the Three Stooges would have been enough to get people to watch.
Maybe a bit less entertaining was the 56-pound toss. This featured
a weight — 56 pounds, of course — hooked to a handle that was
tossed over a pole vault bar in an event that had to look similar to those
strongman contests ESPN shows on slow weekends.
“It was usually won by some gigantic, 350-pound Irish-American
fellow,” Lucas said. “A very bizarre sport.”
Of course, peculiar events weren’t limited to the early days.
For the 1984 Los Angeles Games, Olympic organizers introduced solo
synchronized swimming. The idea was for the swimmer to synchronize with the
music, but viewers couldn’t get past the whole lack of a partner thing and the
sport was dropped after the Barcelona Games in 1992.
“What can I say?” says Wallechinsky, author of The Complete Book
of the Olympics series. “I asked them ‘how can you synchronize one person?’
Well, you’re synchronized to the music. In rhythmic gymnastics there’s music
but you don’t call it synchronized gymnastics. I just never liked it.”
Certainly, there have been bigger, more mainstream sports dropped
from the Olympic docket. Polo was part of five Games, rugby four, golf and
lacrosse two each. Even cricket, croquet and Basque pelota had at least one
shining Olympic moment.
When baseball and softball were dropped for the 2012 London
Olympics, it marked the first time since 1936 an entire sport had been removed
from the Olympic program.
Adding an event is a bit easier — cycling recently replaced
the 1,000-meter time trial with BMX racing — but only as a replacement.
The IOC is concerned about the Olympics becoming too unwieldy, so anytime a new
sport or event is added, another has to be dropped, preferably for something
more telegenic, like beach volleyball.
Because of that, it’s unlikely potential fan favorites like
swimming obstacle course, tug-of-war and club swinging will ever make it back
to the podium.
“It’s too bad,” Wallechinsky says.
“Some of them I pull for because it’s funny and I think it’s
something people can relate to.”
So much for the
dreams of those kids in the tug-of-war pit.