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Punctuality
The Stockholm Games exemplified efficiency. The Swedish organizers introduced the first-ever Olympic implementation of automatic timing tools for track events, the photo finish technology, and a public announcement system.
Last Competitor Standing
If there was an unspoken theme of the 1912 Games, it revolved around endurance. The route for the cycling road race spanned 320km (199 miles), marking the longest race of any sort in Olympic history. In Greco-Roman wrestling, the middleweight semi-final clash between Russian Martin Klein and Finland’s Alfred Asikainen extended over 11 hours.
First-Time Appearances
This edition marked the first occasion where athletes represented all five continents. It also marked Japan’s inaugural participation. The modern pentathlon, women’s swimming, and women’s diving all made their debut at the Olympics.
Powerful Jim
Jim Thorpe, an Indigenous individual from Oklahoma, claimed victory in both the pentathlon and decathlon by significant margins, with King Gustav V of Sweden referring to him as “the greatest athlete in the world”. However, he was later disqualified upon the discovery that he had received a small amount of money for playing baseball prior to the Games. In 1982, the Executive Board of the International Olympic Committee resolved to reinstate Jim Thorpe and return his medals to his daughter. His accomplishments were immortalized in the film “The Bronze Man,” directed by Michael Curtiz, featuring Burt Lancaster portraying Thorpe.
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