OT: Five Favorite Olympic Performances? | The Boneyard

OT: Five Favorite Olympic Performances?

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The first Olympics I remember well is Mexico City in 1968. Here are my favorite performances. Now, of course, some of this is taste for which sports a person likes, athletes they like, etc. For many years, track and field was my favorite Olympic sport. Hence the preponderance of track and field athletes below.

1. Bob Beamon, long jump, 1968. Need I say anything?
2. Bill Toomey, decathlon, 1968: his long jump in the decathlon would have placed him 4th in the long jump competition. (The decathlon is my favorite track and field event.)
3. Edwin Moses, 400m IM, 1976: Moses came out of nowhere, made the team, and broke the world record in the Olympics. From 1977-87 (For ten long, long years he did not lose a race! I still cannot believe it.)
4. Jackie Joyner-Kersee, heptathlon, 1988: In her prime, JJK (formerly JJ), was unbeatable in the heptathlon. She broke her own world record in Seoul (and won the long jump gold too!). She has held the heptathlon world record for more than 30 years! (And there is no question in my mind that she competed clean, i.e., no drugs). And, she is a very, very sweet, nice person. She also played briefly in the WNBA or its predecessor, I believe.
5. Michael Johnson, 200m, 1996: After getting food poisoning two weeks before the 1992 Olympics (he was the heavy favorite in the 200 and could not really compete), his "golden shoes" run of 19.32 was wonderful. (I also have great respect for his coach, the legendary Clyde Hart, which only makes his victory that much sweeter.)
6. Michael Phelps (every race in Beijing), 2008: After winning 7 gold medals the year before in the world championships (with 7 world records, and would have had 8 but the US was disqualified in the medley relay), Michael withstood everything, including a truly great French relay team in the 4x100 free (Michael did not get much press on this race, but his opening 47.51 helped keep the US in contention), his goggles filling up with water in the 200 fly (OK, he just goes to Plan B and breaks his own world record), his famous out-touching of Cavic in the 100 fly, and his monster fly leg in the medley relay to put the US ahead for good. He brought his "A+" game to every swim, under so much pressure.

OK, I gave six, not five! :rolleyes:

Thoughts?
 
I'm big on "undisputed champions." Victories by very comfortable margins, where you are convinced that ten more runnings would all produce the same result.

Katie Ledecky so outclassed her opponents in the longer swimming distances in 2016, most noticeably in 800 meters. In 100 meter sprint, an event usually decided by leaning at the finish, Usain Bolt had a comfortable advantage. US Women's basketball team beating Serbia 96-66 for the gold was impressive, but they did struggle against Spain in the semis. I like it when the marathon leader enters the stadium for the last lap, and makes half a lap to a crescendo of cheers or more before #2 even appears.

Otherwise, Karrie Strugg's 1996 final Olympic vault, while badly hobbled, was simply amazing...………………..
 
Yes, Katie Ledecky is truly dominant, and with the 1500m added to the Olympics (it is in the World Championships), she could be more dominant in the 2020 Olympics.

Yes about Bolt, but I have stopped watching track and field, due to the use of drugs, which seems rampant. Now, Bolt was clean, for sure.
 
The first Olympics I remember well is Mexico City in 1968. Here are my favorite performances. Now, of course, some of this is taste for which sports a person likes, athletes they like, etc. For many years, track and field was my favorite Olympic sport. Hence the preponderance of track and field athletes below.

1. Bob Beamon, long jump, 1968. Need I say anything?
2. Bill Toomey, decathlon, 1968: his long jump in the decathlon would have placed him 4th in the long jump competition. (The decathlon is my favorite track and field event.)
3. Edwin Moses, 400m IM, 1976: Moses came out of nowhere, made the team, and broke the world record in the Olympics. From 1977-87 (For ten long, long years he did not lose a race! I still cannot believe it.)
4. Jackie Joyner-Kersee, heptathlon, 1988: In her prime, JJK (formerly JJ), was unbeatable in the heptathlon. She broke her own world record in Seoul (and won the long jump gold too!). She has held the heptathlon world record for more than 30 years! (And there is no question in my mind that she competed clean, i.e., no drugs). And, she is a very, very sweet, nice person. She also played briefly in the WNBA or its predecessor, I believe.
5. Michael Johnson, 200m, 1996: After getting food poisoning two weeks before the 1992 Olympics (he was the heavy favorite in the 200 and could not really compete), his "golden shoes" run of 19.32 was wonderful. (I also have great respect for his coach, the legendary Clyde Hart, which only makes his victory that much sweeter.)
6. Michael Phelps (every race in Beijing), 2008: After winning 7 gold medals the year before in the world championships (with 7 world records, and would have had 8 but the US was disqualified in the medley relay), Michael withstood everything, including a truly great French relay team in the 4x100 free (Michael did not get much press on this race, but his opening 47.51 helped keep the US in contention), his goggles filling up with water in the 200 fly (OK, he just goes to Plan B and breaks his own world record), his famous out-touching of Cavic in the 100 fly, and his monster fly leg in the medley relay to put the US ahead for good. He brought his "A+" game to every swim, under so much pressure.

OK, I gave six, not five! :rolleyes:

Thoughts?
Just US? Usain Bolt was pretty amazing,
 
This guy--Abebe Bikila! He was born on the day of the 1932 Olympic Marathon, a sign of things to come. He won the 1960 Olympic Marathon in Rome. He repeated in Tokyo in 1964, setting a world record and becoming the first marathoner to repeat with gold. He ran barefoot.

Abebe Bikila - Wikipedia

Thank you, MilfordHusky. Bikila was just a bit before my time. What an amazing athlete.
 
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This guy--Abebe Bikila! He was born on the day of the 1932 Olympic Marathon, a sign of things to come. He won the 1960 Olympic Marathon in Rome. He repeated in Tokyo in 1964, setting a world record and becoming the first marathoner to repeat with gold. He ran barefoot.

Abebe Bikila - Wikipedia
He showed up in Tokyo with shoes! At that point his competitors might as well have packed it in. :)
 
Al Oerter (1936 - 2007). Olympic Gold Medalist - Discus 1956, 1960, 1964, 1968. Al Oerter is the only athlete to win the same Olympic event four times in a row ...
 
Al Oerter (1936 - 2007). Olympic Gold Medalist - Discus 1956, 1960, 1964, 1968. Al Oerter is the only athlete to win the same Olympic event four times in a row ...

Al (whom I met and seems in person to be twice the shoulder width and chest depth he looked to have on TV) is the only 4-time individual sport winner. There are at least 2 who have won 4 golds in team sports, each with a realistic chance to win a 5th in 2020. I don't know if there are others beside Sue & Diana who have won four.
 
1) Miracle on Ice (1980) - USA college hockey players beat the vaunted Soviet Machine.

2) Mark Spitz (1972) - US swimmer earns 7 gold medals by setting 7 world records. He was Michael Phelps before Phelps was. Plus he could totally pull off having a p.orn stache.

3) Bruce Jenner (1976) - I remember well his quest to be named "the world's greatest athlete." I believe he set a world record as well.

4) Michael Phelps (2008) Uh 8 Olympic gold medals? Yikes. I think he finished with 18 overall. Just amazing.

5) Kerri Strug (1996) - Injured her ankle on first vault. US need her points to get a gold so she goes again on a bum leg and nails it! Torn ligaments in ankle. Just so gutsy for a young girl!





There are a lot more good ones but these stick in my mind.
 
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Al (whom I met and seems in person to be twice the shoulder width and chest depth he looked to have on TV) is the only 4-time individual sport winner. There are at least 2 who have won 4 golds in team sports, each with a realistic chance to win a 5th in 2020. I don't know if there are others beside Sue & Diana who have won four.

Yes, Al O was a magnificent athlete, always with a late throw to win.

Hmm, Michael Phelps won 4 200 Individual Medley's in a row: 2004-2016. :rolleyes:
 
1) Miracle on Ice (1980) - USA college hockey players beat the vaunted Soviet Machine.

That was magnificent!


2) Mark Spitz (1972) - US swimmer earns 7 gold medals by setting 7 world records. He was Michael Phelps before Phelps was. Plus he could totally pull off having a p.orn stache.

Yes, especially after his disappointing Mexico City Olympics. As we know, he was a bit of a different swimmer than Michael: a sprinter (100 and 200 free and fly).

3) Bruce Jenner (1976) - I remember well his quest to be named "the world's greatest athlete." I believe he set a world record as well.

Yes, he set a world record at Montreal.


4) Michael Phelps (2008) Uh 8 Olympic gold medals? Yikes. I think he finished with 18 overall. Just amazing.

23 golds. 13 in individual events.


5) Kerri Strug (1996) - Injured her ankle on first vault. US need her points to get a gold so she goes again on a bum leg and nails it! Torn ligaments in ankle. Just so gutsy for a young girl!

She was so courageous;





There are a lot more good ones but these stick in my mind.


See above in-line.
 
Thank you all for posting on this thread. You all helped me remember some other great Olympic memories.

Happy holiday to all.
 
Franz Klammer, downhill, 1976 Winter Olympics - Innsbruck
The downhill is truly an on-the-edge event and Klammer was incredible. Getting it done with the home crowd screaming deliriously

1980 Miracle on Ice
Made me believe in miracles
 
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I was also going to list Franz Klammer at the 1976 Olympics. He had all the pressure on him as the favorite in his home country. The defending gold medalist Bernhard Russi had a great run and over a half second lead when Klammer came to the line. There was no way he was going to settle for anything but the gold. Football great Frank Gifford was one of the announcers.
 
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How can one be sure that Jackie Joyner-Kersee did not use performance enhancing drug? (Legal or not at that time) some people do dispute that the cause of her death could be the aftermath of it. Remember the greatest US male sprinter years later was found out that he too took it, and the greatest cyclist. Even if some of them were detected, the US Olympic committee helped to cover it ....
 
How can one be sure that Jackie Joyner-Kersee did not use performance enhancing drug? (Legal or not at that time) some people do dispute that the cause of her death could be the aftermath of it. Remember the greatest US male sprinter years later was found out that he too took it, and the greatest cyclist. Even if some of them were detected, the US Olympic committee helped to cover it ....

I assume you mean Florence Griffith Joyner not Jackie Joyner-Kersee.
 
Sorry, mixed them up. Was Jackie Joyner-kersee’s husband was also found out helping doping?

I know Bobby Kersee was accused of being a "drug coach" but I don't think it was proven.
 
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Joan Benoit winning the First Women’s Olympic Marathon.
It was questionable whether Joan would qualify having had arthroscopic knee surgery only 17 days before the trials. At the Olympics she made a risky move breaking away from the field early in the race. The other great runners let her go thinking she would come back to the field in the heat and humidity of LA. Well, that never happened and it was a great sight to see her come into the stadium all alone and take her well deserved victory lap. Greta Waitz of Norway who won several NYC marathons took the silver.
Joan’s US women’s marathon record set in 1985 lasted for 20 years.
As an aside, I ran against Joan in the 1980 Litchfield Road Race. Joan won the women’s division and to the surprise of many I managed to complete the race.
 
In no particular order.
1. Lt Billy Mills(back when a number of world class athletes served in the military) thrilling come from behind victory in the 10,000 meters in 1964.
2. Kipchoge Keino wining the 5000 meters in 1968 starting and establishing Kenyan/east African dominance in the distance races.
3. The 1976 Olympic boxing team(Leon Spinks, Michael Spinks, Ray Leonard, Howard Davis, Leo Randolph). the 1976 Olympics also featured outstanding Cuban heavyweight Teofilo Stevenson
4. Usain Bolt's 100 and 200 meter sweep in three different Olympics.
5. Simone Manuel's victory in the 100 meter freestyle in 2106. I do not have the words, but it was huge.
Honorable mention and, possibly, my favorite Olympic moment - Derek Redmond's last place finish in the 1992 400 meters that he was favored to win.
 
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The first Olympics I remember well is Mexico City in 1968. Here are my favorite performances. Now, of course, some of this is taste for which sports a person likes, athletes they like, etc. For many years, track and field was my favorite Olympic sport. Hence the preponderance of track and field athletes below.

1. Bob Beamon, long jump, 1968. Need I say anything?
2. Bill Toomey, decathlon, 1968: his long jump in the decathlon would have placed him 4th in the long jump competition. (The decathlon is my favorite track and field event.)
3. Edwin Moses, 400m IM, 1976: Moses came out of nowhere, made the team, and broke the world record in the Olympics. From 1977-87 (For ten long, long years he did not lose a race! I still cannot believe it.)
4. Jackie Joyner-Kersee, heptathlon, 1988: In her prime, JJK (formerly JJ), was unbeatable in the heptathlon. She broke her own world record in Seoul (and won the long jump gold too!). She has held the heptathlon world record for more than 30 years! (And there is no question in my mind that she competed clean, i.e., no drugs). And, she is a very, very sweet, nice person. She also played briefly in the WNBA or its predecessor, I believe.
5. Michael Johnson, 200m, 1996: After getting food poisoning two weeks before the 1992 Olympics (he was the heavy favorite in the 200 and could not really compete), his "golden shoes" run of 19.32 was wonderful. (I also have great respect for his coach, the legendary Clyde Hart, which only makes his victory that much sweeter.)
6. Michael Phelps (every race in Beijing), 2008: After winning 7 gold medals the year before in the world championships (with 7 world records, and would have had 8 but the US was disqualified in the medley relay), Michael withstood everything, including a truly great French relay team in the 4x100 free (Michael did not get much press on this race, but his opening 47.51 helped keep the US in contention), his goggles filling up with water in the 200 fly (OK, he just goes to Plan B and breaks his own world record), his famous out-touching of Cavic in the 100 fly, and his monster fly leg in the medley relay to put the US ahead for good. He brought his "A+" game to every swim, under so much pressure.

OK, I gave six, not five! :rolleyes:

Thoughts?
Breaking the world record by 6% and having it stand for 20+ years is very impressive.

“Beyond the limit of the measuring instrument”—yikes!!

 
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Edwin Moses’s claim to fame wasn’t necessarily any particular event. It was his reliability and durability. He was unbeatable for a decade in an event where the slightest misstep led to disaster.

If I recall correctly, this was his secret: He took 1 fewer stride between hurdles than his competitors did.
 
In Tokyo in 1964, Bob Hayes’s USA team in the 4 x 100 was in about 6th place. He looked like Secretariat or an early Usain Bolt as he passed everyone and won going away. It was by far the fastest relay leg for another 20 years or more.



He also blew away the field in the 100 m.

Not too long after that, he changed the way football is played forever.
 
Two more:

Cathy Freeman, 400m, 2000, Sydney. She was the first Aboriginal Australian to medal in an individual event.

Eric Heiden, 1980, Lake Placid. Five events, five golds :)
I was in Sydney and really wanted to see Michael Johnson run. But he was running on the same night as Cathy Freeman, and tickets were impossible to get at any price. So I watched from a pub. Cathy carried the hopes of a nation and won with a strong, pressure-packed performance. She was the front page of the Sydney paper the next day. Not on the front page. She was the whole front page.

How about the great Mo Farah winning the 5,000 and 10,000 in his adopted country of England in 2012 and then repeating in Rio?
 
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