To become an Olympic hero in our book, it takes more than athleticism. Whether they were cross-dressing their way to the podium or somersaulting with one leg, these athletes deserve infinite points for style. Some of them lost big-time, but all of them won our twisted little hearts.
A scrawny, asthmatic child, Tamio Kono developed his weightlifting physique in the most unlikely place—a Japanese internment camp. During World War II, he and his family were forced from their home in San Francisco and moved to a detention center in the California desert. For three and a half years, they endured brutal conditions along with other Japanese immigrants. Although the situation was terrible, the climate wasn’t. The desert air agreed with Tamio’s lungs, and he started lifting weights to pass the time.
After the war, Kono kept training, and within a decade, he was the lynchpin of the U.S. national weightlifting team. Despite his family’s detention, he proudly lifted for the Americans. Using his freakish ability to raise and lower his weight quickly, Kono helped the team fill gaps in its roster. During his career, Kono lifted competitively at weights ranging from 149 lbs. to 198 lbs. To bulk up, he’d devour six or seven meals a day, and to slim down, he’d “starve” himself with three meals a day. He won his first gold as a lightweight during his Olympic debut in 1952, his second as a light heavyweight in 1956, and then a silver as a middleweight in 1960. All in all, he set seven Olympic records and 26 world records. Plus, he went on to become Mister Universe three times. Not bad for a boy who’d once been a 105-lb. weakling.
In 1944, Danish horseback rider Lis Hartel contracted polio while pregnant. Although the illness left her almost totally paralyzed, she gave birth to a healthy baby girl. She also kept training for her event—equestrian dressage. By 1947, she was riding again, even though she couldn’t use the muscles below her knees. Despite needing help mounting and dismounting her horse, she competed for Denmark at the 1952 Games, winning a silver medal in a sport that was almost entirely dominated by men. In an indelible image of Olympic sportsmanship, Swedish gold medalist Henri Saint Cyr helped Hartel onto the platform at the awards ceremony. In the following years, Hartel kept on riding and won another silver at the 1956 Games.
Honorable Mentions in Competing Without Your Entire Body
• The One-Handed Gunner: Hungarian rapid-fire pistol champ Karoly Takacs was known for his steady right hand. But while he was serving in the army in 1938, a grenade accident destroyed it. Undeterred, he taught himself to shoot with his left hand and won gold medals at the 1948 and 1952 Olympics.• The One-Legged Gymnast: At the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis, American gymnast George Eyser grabbed one bronze, two silvers, and three gold medals—all while competing with a wooden leg.
Cuban boxer Teofilo Stevenson burst onto the heavyweight scene at the 1972 Munich Games by knocking down his first opponent in just 30 seconds. He was a force in the ring, and commentators often joked that the “honor” of facing him should go to the loser—not the winner—of previous matches.
After Stevenson cakewalked his way to the gold in 1972, boxing promoters clamored for the Cuban to go pro, but he resisted. He believed passionately in the Cuban revolution and preferred to fight on behalf of his country. After he nabbed another gold at the 1976 Montreal Games, promoters became even pushier. Stevenson passed up millions of dollars and was hailed as a national hero for his convictions. Then he picked up his third straight gold in 1980, at age 28. After retiring, Stevenson worked as a boxing consultant in Cuba, earning about $400 a month. When asked about all the money he turned down, he often replied, “What is a million dollars against 8 million Cubans who love me?”
Although professional athletes can compete in certain Olympic events today, the modern Games were founded on the purity of amateurs competing solely for the glory. However, this often forced star athletes out of the competition just for taking money to make ends meet. Legendary track-and-field champion Jim Thorpe, for example, lost his amateur status for earning $35 a week in minor-league baseball games.
Italian gymnast Alberto Braglia’s “professional” adventures were even more pitiable. After winning the all-around gymnastics gold at the 1908 Games, Braglia hit upon hard financial times. So, he turned to the place best-suited for small, athletic fellows—the circus. Performing as the Human Torpedo, Braglia delighted audiences across Europe with his daredevil stunts. In the process, he broke his shoulder and several ribs.
Irked by his stint in the circus, Italy’s governing body for gymnastics declared that Braglia had forfeited his amateur status. Just like that, his Olympic days were over. Fortunately, cooler heads realized that being a human torpedo wasn’t quite the same as being a professional gymnast, and Braglia regained his amateur status in time for the 1912 Games in Stockholm. There, the Italian wonder picked up two more golds. After the Games, he returned to the circus, where he enjoyed a long and successful career.
At the 1988 Games in Seoul, Canadian sailor Lawrence Lemieux was moving along at a quick clip, even though the seas were exceptionally rough. About halfway through the race, he seemed to have a firm grip on the silver medal when disaster struck.
Lemieux heard the cries of two Singaporean sailors competing in a different event nearby. One of them was clinging desperately to his boat, which had capsized under the 6-ft. waves. The other had drifted 50 feet away, swept off by the currents. Instead of staying in his race, Lemieux set course for the sailors and pulled them out of the water. His hope for a medal all but dashed, Lemieux waited for rescue boats to arrive. By the time they did, he’d fallen to 23rd place. But Lemieux’s bravery did not go unrewarded. The Olympic committee gave him the Pierre de Coubertin medal, a special award for sportsmanship.
The Japanese men’s gymnastics team won gold at every Olympic Games from 1960 to 1972. So when the 1976 Games began, capturing a fifth straight gold was a matter of national pride.
Things started to come apart, however, when gymnast Shun Fujimoto felt something pop in his leg during the floor exercise. He knew he’d broken his kneecap, but hesitated to tell his coaches for fear of being pulled from competition. Knowing that his team needed every tenth of a point to win, Fujimoto decided to downplay the injury. He dusted himself off and hopped on the pommel horse, scoring a 9.5 despite the searing pain in his knee. Fujimoto later credited his injury with helping him to focus, because he knew the slightest error could have caused permanent damage. “I was completely occupied by the thought that I could not afford to make any mistakes,” he said.
Following the pommel horse was Fujimoto’s strongest event—the rings. For his dismount, he flew through the air in a triple-somersault and made a near-perfect landing with clenched teeth and tears in his eyes. The judges awarded him a 9.7, a personal best. After sticking the landing, Fujimoto collapsed from pain. Even then, he only withdrew from the competition after doctors told him he would risk permanent disability by continuing. Fujimoto’s teammates rallied around their friend’s gutsy performance and edged out the Soviets for the gold.
Before Cassius Clay became Muhammad Ali, he was a cocky 18-year-old boxer at the 1960 Games in Rome. His masterful performance in the ring won him the gold, but his friendliness and chatty demeanor won him the hearts of journalists. Hoping to capitalize on Clay’s loose tongue, the Soviet press tried to bait him into talking trash about America. One Soviet reporter asked him how he felt about being barred from certain restaurants back home, and Clay quickly responded, “Russian, we got qualified men working on that problem. We got the biggest and the prettiest cars. We get all the food we can eat. America is the greatest country in the world.”
After Clay returned home to Kentucky, he proudly wore his gold medal around his neck. But his American pride didn’t last long. In Louisville, a whites-only restaurant refused to serve him, and a white gang made the mistake of trying to attack him. After the incidents, the medal lost its luster for Clay. According to popular legend, he reacted by abruptly chucking it into the Ohio River. Four decades and one Civil Rights movement later, the Olympic committee gave Ali a replacement medal during the 1996 Games in Atlanta.
While planning the first modern Games in Athens in 1896, French historian Michel Breal wanted to come up with an event that linked the competition to its ancient roots. He suggested a footrace that was the distance from Athens to Marathon, because a messenger had once supposedly sprinted between the two cities to spread news of a Greek military victory. The Greek people were captivated by the notion of a race with such strong ties to their country’s history, and they become obsessed with dominating the event.
While the other nations barely prepared for the competition, the marathon-crazed Greeks held two qualifying trials to choose their entrants. Except for the Greek runners, only one other contestant had run a full marathon before the Olympic Games. On the day of the race, the lack of proper training quickly took its toll. By the halfway point, runners started dropping like flies.
After nearly three hours, fans at the finish line learned that a Greek runner named Spiridon Louis had taken the lead, despite stopping along the way for a glass of wine. Greece’s Prince George and Crown Prince Constantine got so excited that they joined Louis for his last surge to the finish line. Louis, a peasant farmer, quickly became a national hero, and his name even entered the Greek vernacular. The term egine Louis, which translates as “become Louis,” is still used to mean “run quickly.”
Talk about Cinderella stories. After spending her childhood running through the streets of Casablanca, Morocco’s Nawal El Moutawakel used her speed to earn a track scholarship to Iowa State University, where she won four individual Big Eight titles. In 1984, she became the only woman on the Moroccan team at the Los Angeles Olympics.
Moutawakel blew away her competition in the 400-meter hurdles, handing Morocco its first gold medal. At the same time, she also became the first Muslim woman and the first African woman to win a gold medal. As she ran her victory lap with a large Moroccan flag in hand, her elated countrymen back home poured into the streets of Casablanca in the middle of the night.
As a national hero, Moutawakel has used her celebrity to help other women in sports. Although Morocco largely supported her career, she knew women in other Islamic countries weren’t so lucky. One of her greatest triumphs has been organizing a women’s 10k race in Casablanca, which now draws more than 27,000 participants. As Morocco’s Minister for Youth and Sports and a major player in the International Olympic Committee, Moutawakel led the task force that chose London as the site for the 2012 Games. She has summed up her triumphs by saying, “My athletic race was the 400-meter hurdles, but it has been a metaphor for my life … You have to get over the hurdles and keep running.”
For the Brazilian team, getting to the 1932 Los Angeles Games was an Olympic trial all its own. The Brazilian government was bankrupt, and it couldn’t afford to pay for the team’s expenses. So, the athletes traveled via coffee barge, stopping at ports between Brazil and Los Angeles to peddle roasted beans. All they needed was to sell the 50,000 bags on board.
Unfortunately, the team made only $24. At the time, the tax to enter the United States was $1 per person, meaning only 24 members of the squad were able to leave the ship. The other 45 teammates had to set sail for the Pacific Northwest to try to unload the rest of the coffee.
Sadly, the athletes who did make it to the Games didn’t fare particularly well. After losing to Germany 7-3 in water polo, the Brazilian team jumped out of the pool and started pounding on the referee. The police pulled the Brazilians off the battered official, and the team was disqualified from the rest of the Olympics.
When the Los Angeles Olympics rolled around in 1932, a 19-year-old typist named Mildred “Babe” Didrikson faced an unusual problem. The rules dictated that an athlete could only enter three track-and-field events, and Didrikson had qualified for five. So, she simply picked the ones in which she already held world records—javelin, 80-meter hurdles, and the high jump.
Her first event didn’t get off to an auspicious start. The javelin slipped from her hand and tore the cartilage in her right shoulder. For most athletes, that would have meant instant defeat, but Babe’s compromised throw sailed more than 143 feet and set a new world record. Two days later, Babe set another world record in the 80-meter hurdles. She looked poised to sweep her events, but was disqualified in the high jump competition for diving headfirst over the bar, which was illegal at the time. She had to settle for silver.
Didrikson had an outsized personality to match her athletic prowess. Reportedly, she’d greet her opponents with the taunt “Yep, I’m gonna beat you.” And during training sessions for the Los Angeles Games, she would irritate her teammates by literally running circles around them while playing her harmonica.
The Babe’s sports dominance didn’t stop with track and field. In 1935, Didrikson picked up golf, and by 1950, she’d won every available women’s title in the game. She’s still considered one of the greatest golfers of all time, male or female. Never humble, Didrikson wrote in her autobiography, “My goal was to be the greatest athlete who ever lived.”
No one ever questioned the athletic prowess of Tamara and Irina Press, two Russian sisters who were unstoppable in track and field. People did question their sex, though.
At the 1960 Games in Rome, the Presses became the first sisters to win gold at the same Olympics. Tamara set an Olympic record in shot put, and Irina won the 80-meter hurdles. At Tokyo’s 1964 Games, they were even more dominant. Tamara won the gold in both discus and shot put (beating her own record), while Irina won the first women’s Olympic pentathlon.
Given their hulking stature and mannish features, rumors started to spread about their gender. Rivals derisively labeled them “the Press Brothers.” But the whispers turned into shouts after the International Amateur Athletic Federation announced that it would begin gender testing at the 1966 European championships. Both sisters promptly withdrew from the event and disappeared from competitive track and field.
The Western media gleefully interpreted their retirement as a tacit confession. A Soviet spokesman dismissed the accusations as jealousy and claimed the sisters had stayed home to care for their ailing mother. The truth remains an Olympic mystery.
Olympic Cheating: The Creativity Prize
This Old Sword: We’ve all heard of marathon runners hitching rides and athletes dosing up on performance enhancers, but who knew Olympic chicanery could come in the form of hacking? During the fencing competition at the 1976 Games in Montreal, the electronic scoring system started giving Soviet Boris Onishchenko credit for hits even when he didn’t make contact with his opponent. Turns out, the clever comrade had rewired his sword with a hidden circuit breaker so that he could give himself points at the touch of a button.
At the 1936 Berlin Games, Japanese pole vaulters Shuhei Nishida and Sueo Oe tied for second place. The teammates were offered the opportunity to have a jump-off for the silver medal, but the two friends declined out of mutual respect for one another. For the purposes of Olympic records, Oe agreed to the bronze while Nishida took the silver.
Upon their return to Japan, the teammates came up with a different solution. The pair had a jeweler cut their medals in half and fuse them back together, creating half-silver, half-bronze pendants. The “Medals of Friendship,” as they’re now known in Japan, are enduring symbols of friendship and teamwork.
Ethan Trex co-writes Straight Cash, Homey, the Internet’s undisputed top source for pictures of people in Ryan Leaf jerseys. This article originally appeared in the July-August issue of mental_floss magazine. If you’re in a subscribing mood, here are the details.
Funny, I had entered the honorable mention of George Eyser into the Fact Generator awhile back.
posted by marty on 8-14-2008 at 4:36 pm
I like this story from the 1904 Olympic. Fred Lorz was running the marathon when a cramped leg set in and forced him to stop. He caught a ride in a car, but it broke down soon after and he was forced to walk the rest of the way back. When he arrived to the Olympic park, he was crowned the winner. The farce was soon discovered and he was striped of us medal.
posted by marty on 8-14-2008 at 4:43 pm
I like the story about the paralyzed rider. I’m hemiplegic (I lost the use of one side of my body due to a childhood stroke) and competed in dressage too. Although I didn’t go as far as the Paralympics, I was ranked second Nationally!
posted by Meghan on 8-14-2008 at 5:32 pm
Fascinating stuff!
posted by Beth on 8-15-2008 at 11:04 am
I like this article a lot!
The last story is my favorite, although I tried to locate a picture of the “friendship medal” and was unable to :(
posted by Candy on 8-15-2008 at 12:22 pm
I liked the one about a Flying Sikh, published on BBC website. It was an inspirational story.
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7532626.stm
posted by Imran on 8-15-2008 at 1:50 pm
Pretty amazing stories indeed. Wow, heart wrenching.
JT
http://www.FireMe.To/udi
posted by Jim McDish on 8-16-2008 at 7:17 am
Candy – Just google to find a picture of the Medals of Friendship. It only took me a couple of tries to find this page: http://www.waseda.jp/student/weekly/english/2007/e138b.html that includes a lovely picture of one of the medals.
posted by Benenglish on 8-18-2008 at 8:42 am
There was another Hungarian, who won two gold medals, and had one leg missing:
Oliver Halassy (see link for details)
posted by Szasza on 8-18-2008 at 9:01 pm
I was just at the Muhammed Ali museum a few weeks ago and I learned that the story about him throwing his medal in the river is totally false. There was a section of the museum dedicated to the Olympics and it said that that story is just a rumor. Instead, Ali just misplaced the medal.
posted by AAA on 1-9-2009 at 10:56 pm
@AAA,
Omg, how could anyone misplace an olympic medal? That just seems totally outrageous to me (missing socks, sure, but medal?), but a lot about Ali and his life came across as outrageous, I suppose…
Recapthca: Nixon Goldens…(what?)
posted by OkieMelissa on 1-25-2010 at 1:56 pm
Mildred “Babe†Didrikson is a perfect example of why people don’t like Americans. She was arrogant. Americans have this terrible attitude that winning is everything. We Australians like winning but our attitude is that its more important to try your hardest than win and to do so with dignity and honour. There is nothing better than seeing arrogant people lose (although they usually blame something else for that loss).
posted by tasmanian devil on 2-1-2010 at 7:13 pm
Wow, T-Devil… your rather ignorant and racist view fascinates me. You have seemed to embody all of America in your brief comment. I didn’t know all Americans have the attitude that winning is everything. I knew a football coach that would end every practice with a simple message and three rules he lived by: Do what’s right, Do your best, and the “Golden Rule†Do unto others as you would have done to you. This coach didn’t care if the kids he coached won a single game, as long as they lived and played by these rules. It saddens me that Mildred had such a disrespectful attitude but it happens in all countries and I’m sure that the Aussies aren’t as clean as you make them out to be. There are bad eggs everywhere and please try to refrain from encompassing all Americans by the actions of one and I’ll try to refrain from calling all Aussies as ignorant because of your comment. So again, please keep your ignorant slander off this board, there is no need. There is nothing better than seeing ignorant people use the phrase, We Australians (as if they speak for an entire country).
posted by Uncle Sam on 2-3-2010 at 1:11 am
I forgot to add that I loved this article! Keep ‘em coming.
posted by Uncle Sam on 2-3-2010 at 1:13 am
You forgot Billy Mills!
posted by Seamus on 2-3-2010 at 3:06 pm
not sure but think it was the last Winter Olys…Canadian Cross-Country skier broke one of her poles on the course, Norwegian coach runs out and gives her one to continue, Canadian ends up beating Norwegian skier. True Olympic spirit!
posted by Mick Slick on 2-3-2010 at 9:59 pm
I love the story about Lemieux. After all of the training, all of the time he put in to win, he gave it up to save the lives of two other competitors. What a lesson he has taught us all – Being a champion isn’t necessarily about getting a medal.
posted by Jess on 2-6-2010 at 3:21 pm
I wish I could remember the name of the athlete, but I will never forget the image of the runner who cramped up in a long distance run and could barely stand, then his dad came down from the stands and helped him walk across the finish line. Gives me chills just thinking about it!!
posted by Jenny on 2-13-2010 at 11:47 am
I’ve always loved the story of Korean marathon runner Sohn Kee-chung (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sohn_Kee-chung), who won the gold medal at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Because Korea was a Japanese colony at the time, Sohn was forced to run under the Japanese flag, but he always signed his name in Korean and refused to identify himself as Japanese in interviews. At the medal ceremony, he refused to acknowledge the Japanese flag, a pretty bold move considering the Japanese imprisoned members of a newspaper that edited out the Japanese flag on his clothes in their photos. Korea honored him decades later by making him the torch bearer in the 1988 Seoul Olympics.
posted by Jina on 2-16-2010 at 12:36 pm
tasmanian devil: Maybe you should go have a chat with Dale Begg-Smith. Canadian born he might be, but he skis for your country because he didn’t like how the Canadian teams train. When he lost to Alexandre Bilodeau, his face said it all. There was no dignity and honour there, only a spoiled rotten brat who didn’t get what he wanted.
posted by EastOfEden on 2-16-2010 at 8:05 pm
Jenny, the athlete who hobbled around the track after a hamstring problem was Derek Redmond.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nifq3Ke2Q30
posted by Big-Iain on 5-29-2010 at 1:23 pm
Dorando Pietri was an Italian marathon runner who came into the stadium at London (1908) ahead of the field, but so dehydrated that he started running the wrong way. Officials turned him round, and later helped him up (still in the lead) when he fell over, and finally assisted him across the line to beat the US competitor in second place.
Not unreasonably, the US team protested and Pietri was stripped of his medal but became a folk hero in the UK and was awarded a gilded silver cup by Queen Alexandra.
On another topic, Australians are notoriously the most arrogant and offensive players and teams in the world of cricket.
posted by Gollum on 6-5-2010 at 7:14 pm
There’s also Gabriella Anderson-Scheiss from Switzerland, who was one of the runners in the first-ever Women’s Marathon. She was the one who came in to do her final lap nearly bent double and staggering because she was suffering severe heat exhaustion, but when people tried to rush out and help her, she waved them off — because if they touched her, she would be disqualified. Medics saw she was still perspiring, which meant that she still was somewhat hydrated, so they decided to let her keep going, but keep an eye on her. She staggered around the stadium for her final lap — it took her 5 minutes — and then after she crossed the finish line she collapsed and the medics jumped to work. Technically she came in 37th, but everyone remembers her.
posted by Kim W. on 6-9-2010 at 9:33 am
Gymnasts are legendary for their ability/stupidity in sucking up the pain of an injury. I don’t know how that Japanese gymnast even landed a dismount with a broken knee cap!
posted by Joe on 12-22-2010 at 1:00 am
At Pomona College in Claremont CA, I was fortunate enough to take a semester of fencing (foil only) with Dr. Francis Zold, who in 1948, was a captain of the Hungarian Fencing Team at the Olympic Games in London. He was a well-loved teacher at Pomona, and everywhere he taught. He made us all feel we could make our bodies do anything we set our minds to make happen.
His wife, Anna, worked in the binding department of the main library, and always produced beautifully bound items to sell at Yuletide boutiques. They were wonderful people, and I miss them both.
posted by A. Marina Fournier on 1-6-2011 at 2:09 am
Elvis Stojko’s long program at the Nagano Olympics of 1998, where he continued to skate in spite of a pulled groin muscle. that was a result of not letting the previous injury there heal long enough. I remember him saying that he only had four more minutes to go, and he kept telling himself that until he finished his routine. THEN he collapsed.
There have been times when I’ve danced in pain, and told myself, only X more minutes. If Stojko could do it, I can try to follow his example.
posted by A. Marina Fournier on 1-6-2011 at 2:20 am
In the 2006 winter games, Chinese pairs skating couple Zhang Dan and Zhang Hao attempted a throw quadruple Salchow. She fell and injured herself; most people thought they wouldn’t be able to finish. They were allowed two minutes to sort out the problem, then went back onto the ice, finished their routine, and won silver medals.
posted by demaris on 9-8-2011 at 1:58 am
What about Joannie Rochette from the 2010 Vancouver Olympics? She’s practically Canada’s sweetheart. She was a fan favourite before she even performed her figure skating routine. She was expected to win and already had a huge following. Then, a day before her final performance, her mother (known to have perfect health) unexpectedly died in her sleep. They had been very close. Joannie had trained her whole life for the Olympics and although she was heartbroken, she chose to skate. Her beautiful number was all about extreme pain. At the end of the routine, she collapsed, sobbing on the ice. She won the bronze medal and was praised as an Olympic hero.
I’m young and haven’t seen many Olympics, but she’s definatley the Olympic hero of my generation.
posted by Mary on 1-4-2012 at 6:34 pm