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Cycling at the 1936 Summer Olympics – Men's team road race

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cycling - Men's team road race
at the Games of the XI Olympiad
VenueAvus North Curve, Berlin
Dates10 August 1936
Competitors88 (individuals) 22 (teams) from 22 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Robert Charpentier
Robert Dorgebray
Guy Lapébie
 France
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Edgar Buchwalder
Ernst Nievergelt
Kurt Ott
 Switzerland
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Auguste Garrebeek
Armand Putzeyse
Jean-François Van Der Motte
 Belgium
← 1932
1948 →

The men's team road race cycling event at the 1936 Olympic Games took place on 10 August and was one of six events at the 1936 Olympics. It was competed as a 100 km massed start event in conjunction with the Men's individual road race. Teams had four riders and the team time taken as sum of the team's three best finishers.[1] Only the first five teams across the line recorded a time, due to a failure with the timekeeping system.[1]

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  • 1936 Summer Olympics

Transcription

In 1936 Nazi Germany hosted two Olympic games. First the winter games in the bavarian market town of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, then the lavish summer games in Berlin. These were understandably controversial and politically charged events. In the years leading up to the XI olympiad Jews were already being systematically persecuted under Hitler to the extent that by 1935, the first concentration camps were well established and German Jews were stripped of their citizenship. These conditions were more or less well-known throughout the rest of the world. There was, for the first time widespread talk of boycotting the games. In the end however, 28 nations competed in the winter Olympics, and 49 competed in the summer Olympics, the highest levels participation to that date. Both athletes and visitors alike were duly impressed with the spectacular ceremony, the state-of-the-art facilities, and the exciting competition that ensued. Massive stadiums and an idyllic Olympic village were built for the Berlin games. New technologies were used. These were the first games be televised. Hitler himself invited filmmaker Leni Riefensthal to document the games. The footage would later be used in the making of Olympia: the hugely successful propaganda film still acclaimed for its technical and aesthetic innovations. No expense was spared in marketing the XI Olympiad. In doing so, the Third Reich was also marketing an image of a new German empire. This set of 144 trading cards are part of the Heinrich Collection at the University of the Regina Archives and Special Collections. They belonged to Theodore Heinrich, an American officer stationed in Germany from 1943 to 1950. He was a junior officer on the intelligence staff of General Eisenhower and remained in Germany after the war assisting with the recovery and restitution of looted art. The trading cards are part of a large collection of papers, photographs and memorabilia acquired in 1989 and organized and described in 2000. The winter games, most commentators remarked, were a glowing success. Global concern about fascist politics interfering with the convivial spirit of the games had largely been quelled. There was nary a trace of anti-semitic sentiment at the winter Olympics. The spectacular opening ceremonies of the summer Olympics were the first to feature the torch relay, an event conceived by Carl Diem, the chief organizer of the games. Carrying the torch from Athens to Berlin established a connection between the ancient greeks, re-envisioned in Nazi ideology as blond blue-eyed Aryans, and the contemporary German people. Skiing competitions were not without controversy. Ski instructors were barred from competition because of their professional status. Some skiers from Austria and Switzerland were so angry about this decision that they boycotted the events. Great Britain reigns supreme on the hockey ice at the games, crushing Canadian and American hopes of the top prize. A small consolation to the Canadians was the fact that several members of the British team were living in Canada at the time. India's field hockey team shone brightly in the summer. With only one goal scored against them in the entire games they beat out Germany for the gold. Scoring 10 out of 30 goals during the games, Dhyan Chand was a three time Olympic champion by the age of 31. India's winning streak would last 32 years. Two Koreans Sohn Kee-chung, running under the name Son Kitei, and Nam Seung-yong we're forced to compete for Japan as Korea was then occupied by Japanese forces. Winning gold brought humiliation in a victory celebrated by raising the Japanese flag and by playing the Japanese national anthem. The modern pentathlon tested a broad spectrum of military skills. Germany did not place first in any of the five disciplines but an overall score won them the gold. The German army easily swept away all six gold medals in equestrian events. African American, James Cleveland Owens, better known as Jesse Owens, gave gold medal performances in the 100- and 200-meter dashes, the long jump and the 4 by 100 relay. The relay team's world record time of 39.8 seconds would last for 20 years. While 21 other cyclists collided near the end, a cyclist from France took gold in the 100 km road race. This guy had more than luck and skill on his side. A photo of the finish showed that he had tugged on the jersey of another competitor in order to pull ahead in the last second. The United States won the first Olympic basketball championship, defeating Canada .. 19 to 8?! The outdoor court was turned into a skating rink of mud by an incessant downpour. To add to the difficulties, a high wind did weird things with the soggy ball. In the closing half the teams were so worn out from trucking through the mud and cold that they slowed to a walk. Competition was fierce in the pool. The Dutch women were a force to be reckoned with. It was the Japanese and American swimmers who dominated the men's matches. An American coach reasoned that among the Japanese teams attributes was the fact that .. the Japanese boys aren't interesting in girls. They regard their swimming as a matter of national honor, and they work like the devil. Under the Nuremburg laws of 1935, people of Jewish ancestry were not considered German citizens. However, perhaps to give the illusion of fairness, two athletes of Jewish descent were invited to compete for Germany. One of these individuals was the great fencer, Helene Mayer. Mayer won silver for her country, but she would never regain her German citizenship. The games of the XI olympiad were an opportunity for Nazi Germany to present itself on the world's stage as a technologically advanced, culturally sophisticated, powerful, yet peaceful nation. It was also a chance to test national socialist claims of Aryan supremacy. In the overall medal counts at the winter games, Germany came in second behind Norway and ahead of Sweden. Although German medal counts at the summer games were by far the highest, Nazi racial theory was challenged by Germany's closest competitors, the Americans. Eighteen Black athletes, including Owens were on the American team, and they dominated the track and field events, winning seven gold medals, three silver, and three bronze among them. These games were the last to be held for 12 years: the anticipated 1940 and 1944 games were cancelled due to the outbreak WW II, just three short years after the celebrated spectacle of the XI olympiad.

Results

Final

Rank Name Nationality Time Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Robert Charpentier
Robert Dorgebray
Guy Lapébie
Jean Goujon
 France 7:39:16.2
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Edgar Buchwalder
Ernst Nievergelt
Kurt Ott
Gottlieb Weber
 Switzerland 7:39:20.4
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Auguste Garrebeek
Armand Putzeyse
Jean-François Van Der Motte
Jef Lowagie
 Belgium 7:39:21.0
4 Pierino Favalli
Glauco Servadei
Corrado Ardizzoni
Elio Bavutti
 Italy 7:39:22.0
5 Virgilius Altmann
Hans Höfner
Eugen Schnalek
Karl Kühn
 Austria 7:39:24.0
AC Mārtiņš Mazūrs
Arvīds Immermanis
Aleksejs Jurjevs
Jānis Vītols
 Latvia 8:21:24.0e Estimated time
Kanyo Dzhambazov
Aleksandar Nikolov
Gennadi Simov
Nikola Nenov
 Bulgaria no time
Rusty Peden
George Crompton
George Turner
Lionel Coleman
 Canada no time
Jesús Chousal
Jorge Guerra
Manuel Riquelme
Rafael Montero
 Chile no time
Hans Leutelt
Josef Lošek
Miloslav Loos
Vilém Jakl
 Czechoslovakia no time
Frode Sørensen
Arne Petersen
Knud Jacobsen
Tage Møller
 Denmark no time
Fritz Scheller
Emil Schöpflin
Fritz Ruland
Willi Meurer
 Germany no time
István Liszkay
János Bognár
István Adorján
Károly Nemes-Nótás
 Hungary no time
Franz Neuens
Jacques Majerus
Paul Frantz
Rudy Houtsch
 Luxembourg no time
César Peñaranda
Gregorio Caloggero
José Mazzini
Manuel Bacigalupo
 Peru no time
Stanisław Zieliński
Wacław Starzyński
Mieczysław Kapiak
Wiktor Olecki
 Poland no time
Arne Berg
Berndt Carlsson
Ingvar Ericsson
Sven Johansson
 Sweden no time
Talat Tunçalp
Kirkor Canbazyan
Kazım Bingen
Orhan Suda
 Turkey no time
Albert Byrd
Charles Morton
John Sinibaldi
Paul Nixon
 United States no time
August Prosenik
Franc Gartner
Ivan Valant
Josip Pokupec
 Yugoslavia no time
Charles Holland
Jackie Bone
Alick Bevan
Bill Messer
 Great Britain no time DNF
Nico van Gageldonk
Gerrit Schulte
Philippus Vethaak
René van Hove
 Netherlands no time DNF

References

  1. ^ a b "Cycling at the 1936 Berlin Summer Games: Men's Road Race, Team". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
This page was last edited on 21 May 2020, at 03:04
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