Get Paid To Promote, Get Paid To Popup, Get Paid Display Banner

Animals in the Olympics

To celebrate the opening day of the 2012 Olympics, let's look at some Olympic animals ...



Australia's Henry Pearce stopped rowing in his 1928 Amsterdam games
quarter-final to allow a family of ducks to pass safely in front of his
boat. He still won the heat and took gold in the final.



The 2012 Aquatic Centre, built for £269m, has been designed in the shape
of a stingray - the fish branded "rank and disagreeable" in Francis
Day's 1884 opus The Fishes of Great Britain and Ireland.



Remember the music that greeted water polo teams as they entered the arena in
2008? Beijing’s brilliant choice: the theme from the movie “Jaws”. 






Though modern Olympians shoot at clay pigeons, contestants in the 1900
Games took aim at real birds. More than 300 were killed, 21 of them by
winner Leon de Lunden of Belgium. It was the only time animals were
killed on purpose during an Olympic event.



The first Olympic Games in which doves were released to symbolize peace was 1920. The traditional release of live doves at the Olympic opening ceremony
was abandoned after Seoul 1988, when around 10 chose not to swoop
majestically across the skies but instead to settle on the rim of the
Olympic cauldron just as it was being lit and were instantly burned to
death.



The London Olympic site will feature more than 500 bird boxes and 150
bat boxes to help maintain the local wildlife. But they will not be
opened until after the Games, lest the winged beasts disrupt athletes'
preparations.



The 1900 Paris Games included a long jump for horses and a high jump for
horses. Extra Dry won the former with a leap of 6.10m, beating Oreste,
who finished joint-first in the latter.



The London Olympic Park spans 500 acres -  more than 100 toads and 2,000 newts were saved from the Olympic Park site during construction.



 Tough Australian quarantine rules meant that all the equestrian events
at the 1956 Melbourne Games were held 9,700 miles away in Stockholm.





 Waldi The Dachshund, created for the 1972 Munich Games, was the first Olympic mascot.  Waldi proved so popular the 1972 Marathon route was arranged in the shape of his body.



Olympic
mascots were only introduced in 1968 when Mexico used both a red jaguar
and a white dove to help them communicate their Olympic message.



See a listing of all Olympic Mascots at Wikipedia.



 Ladbrokes are offering competitive odds of 2012-1 for the Loch Ness
Monster to be spotted in the Thames during the London Olympics.



Upset when his mount Ranchero refused at three jumps in the 1968 Mexico
Games' modern pentathlon, knocking him out of medal contention, West
Germany's Hans-Jurgen Todt leapt out of the saddle and began slapping
the fussy horse. Team-mates had to restrain him.



Athens 2004 saw the Olympics Games’ first cases of horse doping. Germany
was disqualified from gold in the team jumping event for a substance
thought to have been used in a cream to treat a horse’s sore skin.
Irish rider Cian O’Connor became a hero overnight when he won gold
at the same Games. But his horse, Waterford Crystal, tested positive for
two antipsychotic drugs normally given to humans. 




Sources:

London 2012 Olympics: 100 quirky facts from Olympic history

Olympic Games Trivia

Olympic Games - Interesting Facts

Mad Olympic Games: Quirky stories and facts

No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...