Good morning all. I’ve just had a glance at tomorrow night’s
specialist subjects on the Mastermind website. They are – the playing career of
Sunil Gavaskar, The Hunger Games, the composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein
and Edvard Munch. I’ll be honest, it’s a case of - pools dividend forecast poor
- for me. Cricket is not my favourite sport (unlike several relatives. Both my
first cousin and my daughter’s soon to be father-in-law work in cricket in the
South East.) I’ve only seen the first film of The Hunger Games series and never
read any of the books. I know very little about Leonard Bernstein and as regards
Edvard Munch, I’ve seen one version of the Scream in Oslo, but that’s about the
length of it. I hope there will be some pieces of low hanging fruit in at least
a couple of these rounds, because if I get any points, that will be where they’re
most likely to come from.
We got a lot of points in Thursday night’s quiz, but
typically it was one of the points we didn’t get that I remember most. Thursday
night’s question master, whom I like a great deal as a person, is the same one
who has been nicknamed Captain Slapdash by my team. It’s a nickname he’s
earned, I’m afraid, by giving some answers that he could have found were just
plain wrong by the simplest google search. Well, he was going great guns on
Thursday until we got to round 7 out of 8. “Sport.” He announced. “Who was the
only British swimmer to win a gold medal in the 1980 Summer Olympics, and you
can have a bonus if you give me the event.” – Easy – said I – Duncan Goodhew,
100m breaststroke.- The answer the Captain gave ? Sharron Davies – 400m individual
medley.- I couldn’t stop myself from protesting but it did no good.
Being the kind of person I am I thought – well, Duncan
definitely won gold, and Sharron definitely got silver on the podium, but in
light of revelations about the East German doping programme, and Gold medal recipient
Petra Schneider’s subsequent admission that she was doped, has Sharron Davies,
I wondered – been retrospectively awarded gold? Apparently not, which is a bit
of a scandal if you want my opinion. It’s not even as if she was the only
silver, either. Phil Hubble – who I think was swimming for Hounslow at the time
- won silver in the 200m butterfly.
Is it some comfort that at least the East German cheating
was eventually revealed to the world, even though Sharron Davies has yet to
receive the gold medal that her performance deserved? You’d have to ask her
that. She’s been quite open about the fact that everyone in the sport knew the
East Germans were at it at the time.
Still, it is interesting to speculate how many cheats who won
Olympic titles who have never been conclusively revealed as such. The first
three Olympic Marathons have all had the finger of suspicion pointed in their
direction. First across the line in 1904, Fred Lorz, was definitely cheating,
and found out too. He said he had caught a lift after dropping out, and ran
into the stadium after being dropped off a mile or so away as a prank. In 1900 baker’s
roundsman Michel Theato has been accused of using his local knowledge to take
shortcuts enabling him to win. A similar accusation has been levelled at the inaugural
1896 winner, Greek shepherd Spiridon Louis. Host nation Greece were without a
win going into the final event, and to an outpouring of national joy the first
three men to finish the race were Greek. However, 4th placed runner
Gyula Kellner from Hungary reported that the third placed man had boarded a
carriage for at least part of the journey. Kellner was awarded third while the
hapless cheat had the athletics vest stripped from his back in front of the
stadium. The speculation goes that Louis, the winner, may have cheated in a
similar way. I suppose you have to say, though, that considering any Greek
winner had been promised free haircuts for life, you can understand the
temptations.
Probably the most famous case of a disqualification in an
Olympic Marathon, in 1908, wasn’t a case of conscious cheating at all. Dorando
Pietri entered the White City stadium comfortably ahead of the field. However
he was in a bad way. A group of officials kind of gathered him up and ushered
him over the line, by the Royal Box. When the second person over the line was
an America athlete called Johnny Hayes the US officials protested and Pietri
was disqualified. Urban myth has it that one of the officials in the photograph
taken as Pietri was bundled over the line was Sir Arthur Coan Doyle. I suppose
there is a vague resemblance, but it has been proven that it wasn’t.
Dorando’s is not quite as sad a story as it may sound,
since there was a huge outpouring of sympathy for him and he was presented with
an inscribed silver cup by Queen Alexandra. This cup is still in existence and
is currently kept in the vault of the Unicorp branch in Carpi in the province
of Modena in Italy. For the centenary of the Dorando Marathon, it was displayed
in London during the London Marathon.