Guernsey Press

On this day in 1896: The first modern Olympics begins in Athens

Competing field was made up of a limited number of athletes across 10 sports.

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Little could its 241 contestants have envisaged the extent of the history they were making when they gathered to mark the opening of the 1896 Olympic Games in the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens.

Even the sight of an Olympic flame was more than a quarter of a century away: modern issues likes hormone-suppression were not only inconceivable, but unnecessary, since every one of the athletes was resolutely male.

Fulfilling Pierre de Coubertin’s vision of reprising the ancient Athens Olympiads, the first modern Games comprised 10 sports, although sailing was scrubbed from the competitive schedule due to a lack of entrants.

Athens
The Olympics would return to Athens in 2004 (PA Archive)

The weightlifting competition, split into events for one-handed lift and two-handed lift, yielded Great Britain’s first Olympic champion in the Mumbai-born Launceston Elliot.

Elliot won the one-handed lift and had to settle for silver in the two-handed lift despite lifting the same total as Denmark’s Viggo Jensen, because Jensen was adjudged to have a superior style.

Elliott also competed in the 100 metres, which was won by Tom Burke in 12 seconds, and the rope-climbing, in which competitors tried to climb a 14-metre outdoor rope in the quickest time.

The 12-hour cycling event resulted in just two finishers, with Great Britain’s Frederick Keeping just pipped by Austria’s Adolf Schal, long after their rivals had admitted defeat, possibly out of boredom.

The tennis tournament, which did not involve any of the leading British or American players, nevertheless saw a surprise winner in Dublin orphan John Boland, who was holidaying in Athens at the time with a Greek acquaintance.

Andy Murray
Andy Murray was preceded as Olympic tennis champion by John Boland (PA Wire)

Despite financial concerns, the 1896 Games proved to be a success – certainly much more than the ungainly episodes that were to follow in 1900 and 1904. The boys of 1896 had earned their place in history.

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