Women’s 100 Meter Freestyle Final -Melbourne - December 1956
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Women’s 100 Meter Freestyle Final -Melbourne - December 1956
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 11 - World Politics at the Olympics - the Hungarian Swimmers and Water Polo Team
The Hungarian Olympic Team arrived (probably) by ship in Melbourne, Australia in November, 1956. It was within weeks of Russia crushing the Hungarian Uprising.
Hungary was a Soviet Satellite State behind the Iron Curtain. It was to remain part of the USSR until 1989.
Their countrymen were being jailed and slaughtered at home. In January, 1957 Russia consolidated its grip on Hungary when it replaced the government and suppressed all public opposition.
When the Team arrived in the Olympic village and met their fellow athletes, they were welcomed and made to feel at home. These Games were known as the “Friendly Olympics”.
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Joan talks about the Hungarians...
“We got everybody together and we gave them clothes.”
“(After the Closing Ceremonies), when they wanted to go home… There was so much anger with the Russians.... They were afraid that the Russians were going to grab them, the Hungarians, and put them on their ship...”
“Suzie Ordoch (a 16 year-old Hungarian swimmer) got a telegram saying, ‘Both your parents have been killed. Don’t come home.’”
“One of our girls, ...women, Nancy Ramey Lethcoe, wrote home and told her family (of the situation) and they sent her a telegram, ‘Bring her home’. And she did, she brought her home, Suzie, to her family. Just like that. Isn’t that something?”
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Half of the Hungarian Olympic delegation defected after the Games.
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Water Polo - Russia vs. Hungary
The Final of the Men’s Water Polo match was marred by fighting between the teams. Hungary, always excellent in Water Polo, won the match and went on to win the Gold Medal against Yugoslavia. The match with Russia was cut short because of the altercations.
Here is the AP (Associated Press) story:
Melbourne - December 6th, 1956: Spectators boo Russians at Olympic Pool - Spectators and Officials stand as Hungarian water polo player Ervin Zador is led from the Olympic pool in Melbourne today after his right eye was cut by butting Russian during Water Polo Final. Incident, loudly booed by spectators, caused the match to be cut short by eight minutes. Russian team went to dressing room under police escort. Hungarians won, 4 - 0.
And from the Wikipedia entry:
At the Melbourne Olympics in 1956, the Soviet handling of the Hungarian uprising led to a boycott by Spain, the Netherlands, and Switzerland. At the Olympic Village, the Hungarian delegation tore down the Communist Hungarian flag and raised the flag of Free Hungary in its place. A confrontation between Soviet and Hungarian teams occurred in the semi-final match of the water polo tournament on 6 December. The match was extremely violent, and was halted in the final minute to quell fighting among spectators. This match, now known as the "blood in the water match", became the subject of several films. The Hungarian team won the game 4–0 and later was awarded the Olympic gold medal.
Reference articles:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_polo_at_the_1956_Summer_Olympics
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1956_Summer_Olympics
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_Revolution_of_1956
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rosazza
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Lethcoe
Videos:
An 11 minute documentary about the Revolution and the Blood in the Water Match.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5jeJdDrVqY
A 4 minute B&W film of the original 1956 Water Polo matches between Hungary and Russia and Hungary and Yugoslavia.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ORjIONFd8cU
A 7 minute clip of the Hungary vs. Russia water polo match taken from the movie, “Children of Glory”, that dramatized the event. The audio in Hungarian without sub-titles, and it sure looks like John Belushi plays the Hungarian coach.
https://youtu.be/MLoA5yLZ4l4
Here is a link to the original movie, Children of Glory, "Szabadság, szerelem"
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0486219/
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 10 - World Politics at the Olympics - the Hungarian Revolution
(Editors Note: There is no audio clip today. I can include either an image or an audio clip, but not both in the same post.
Next week’s episode is the first person account of how Joan and fellow athletes helped the Hungarians during the Games.
The image above is an Olympic Patch from the Games. Here is the story of the patch.)
The Hungarian Olympic Patch
Beginning as a student demonstration on October 23rd, 1956, spreading throughout Hungarian society for two-and-a-half weeks, and ending with a brutal Russian crackdown on November 10th, the Hungarian Uprising spilled over two months later at the Melbourne Olympics in December 1956.
The Hungarian Olympic Team arrived in Melbourne in November 1956 with little else but the clothing they were wearing.
The Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland boycotted the Melbourne Olympics because of Russia’s participation at the Games.
The Hungarians’ symbolic protest in Melbourne was to cut out the Russian Star from their Olympic patches, (see the Blue arrow in the image above). A similar snipping-out took place back home where the Hungarian Flag was flown with a hole in the middle where the Russian Star used to be.
Eva Szekely, the great Hungarian swimmer, gave her Olympic Patch to Joan Rosazza. The image pictured above is Eva's patch.
Here is a link to a wiki-article on the Revolution:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_Revolution_of_1956
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 9 - The Olympic races, 100 Meter Freestyle
The Melbourne Summer Olympics.
A few statistics of women’s participation in Olympic sports:
Melbourne 1956 Games:
Athletes: 2,938 men, 376 women (Ratio: 8 to 1)
Nations: 72
London 2012 Games:
Athletes: 5,892 men, 4,676 women (Ratio: 1.3 to 1)
Nations: 204
The weather in Melbourne that first week of December was warm, in the low 80’s (28 C), mostly sunny with a humidity of 40 - 50%. A typical Australian summer.
Perfect conditions for any outdoor activity, but this Olympics was the first to hold the Swimming and Diving events indoors in a new Stadium built for the purpose.
The venue was state of the art, however, the architects underestimated the passion for swimming in the DNA of the Australian public. The spectator capacity of 5,500 was inadequate to meet the demand and the events were sold out many months ahead.
The Women’s 100 Meter Freestyle:
There were 35 entrants, far fewer than the 57 entrants at the Olympic Trials in America.
The event was scheduled over three days.
Friday, 29-November - Five Heats - The top 16 swimmers advance to the Semi-Finals the next day.
Saturday, 30-November - Two Semi-Final Heats
Sunday, 1-December - The Final - 8:35 pm
Friday Qualifying:
Hear # 1:
Joan Rosazza and Lorraine Crapp of Australia were in this first Heat. Lorraine won the heat in 1:03.4, a new, and short lived Olympic Record. Joan came in second in 1:05.5. The rest of the field was far behind.
Heat # 5:
Aussie Dawn Fraser broke Lorraine’s Olympic Record to qualify first for the semi-finals the next day.
It was to become a World Record setting Olympics.
Joan was remarkably consistent in her three swims:
Qualifying: 1:05.5
Semi-Final: 1:05.9 (qualifying 7th for the final)
Final: 1:05.2 equaling Joan’s time from the Olympic Trials, a personal best.
Sunday Olympic Final:
Assessing the 8 swimmers in the Final there were two obvious favorites, Lorraine Crapp and Dawn Fraser in the 1:03 range followed by 6 other closely matched swimmers, all with times in the 1:05 range.
Joan was seeded 7th. Which meant she was assigned to Lane # 1, an outside lane. She could see the swimmer in Lane # 2, whom she overtook in the last few meters of the race. But it was unlikely that Joan could see Faith Leech, the Australian in Lane # 3. (There were no swim goggle in 1956 to improve underwater visibility.)
Lane Assignments:
Lane # 1: Joan Rosazza (USA)
Lane # 2: Virginia Grant (CAN)
Lane # 3: Faith Leech (AUS)
Lane # 4: Dawn Fraser (AUS)
Lane # 5: Lorraine Crapp (AUS)
Lane # 6: Marrion Row (NZL)
Lane # 7: Shelley Mann (USA)
Lane # 8: Natalie Myburgh (ZAF)
The Start:
Most swimmers used a wind-up start which was the standard at the time. Lorraine Crapp (Lane # 5), uses an older technique with arms back at the Take-your-Mark command.
In the first strokes after the start, Joan is tied, or slightly in the lead due to her excellent reaction time and racing start.
The first 50 meters:
Joan reaches the wall in 7th place. Shelley Mann of the USA in in 6th.
Marrion Row of New Zealand in Lane 5 is tied for 4th at the turn. She uses an Open Turn instead of the more modern Flip Turn and loses time.
The last 50 meters to the finish:
Dawn Fraser and Lorraine Crapp pull away.
Joan makes her move and overtakes three other swimmers.
Joan finished 4th, one tenth of a second out of 3rd.
It was an Australian sweep of the medals.
Here is the official report of the Women’s 100 Meter Freestyle Final:
The extraordinarily high standard of the three Australian girls, Fraser, Crapp and Leech demanded that any competitor hoping to gain even a minor placing would need to show outstanding ability. It seemed, however, to be a race between Fraser and Crapp.
All three won their heats very comfortably and with equal ease headed the semi-finals, Leech being second to Fraser. Winning times in the semi-finals were both more than 2 secs. better than the Helsinki record of 1 min. 05.5 secs. by Temes (Hungary).
The final was keenly anticipated and from the start Crapp and Fraser, swimming side by side, were the only two in the race. Fraser slightly ahead at the half-way point, Crapp coming level at 75 metres, but Fraser with a furious sprint was able to withstand the challenge and gained the verdict. The official timing gave them a difference of three-tenths of a second, but the finish seemed closer than this would indicate. Only seven-tenths of a second divided third from eighth and the first seven swimmers bettered the previous record, as had eighth, Myburgh (South Africa), in the first semi-final. This made eight in all.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swimming_at_the_1956_Summer_Olympics_–_Women%27s_100_metre_freestyle
http://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/summer/1956/SWI/womens-100-metres-freestyle.html
Here is the final placings and times::
Dawn Fraser (AUS) 1st (1:02.0) - Gold
Lorraine Crapp (AUS) 2nd (1:02.4) - Silver
Faith Leech (AUS) 3rd (1:05.1) - Bronze
Joan Rosazza (USA) 4th (1:05.2)
Virginia Grant (CAN) 5th (1:05.4)
Shelley Mann (USA) 6th (1:05.6)
Marrion Row (NZL) 7th (1:05.6)
Natalie Myburgh (ZAF) 8th (1:05.8)
Here is a video of the 100 Meter Freestyle final.
https://youtu.be/5D4tAegQD10
Link to the Slo-Mo version:
https://youtu.be/uSyHKjORwdw
Joan is in Lane # 1 at the top of the screen.
Again, here are the Lane Assignments from the top in Lane #1:
Joan Rosazza (USA)
Virginia Grant (CAN)
Faith Leech (AUS)
Dawn Fraser (AUS)
Lorraine Crapp (AUS)
Marrion Row (NZL)
Shelley Mann (USA)
Natalie Myburgh (ZAF)
Tomorrow’s Olympic Journey post is about the Women’s 100 Meter Freestyle race in the Melbourne Olympics.
The image above shows the eight finalists on the starting blocks.
The date is 1-December-1956 at 8:35 pm.
Here are the Lane Assignments from the top in Lane #1:
Joan Rosazza (USA)
Virginia Grant (CAN)
Faith Leech (AUS)
Dawn Fraser (AUS)
Lorraine Crapp (AUS)
Marrion Row (NZL)
Shelley Mann (USA)
Natalie Myburgh (ZAF)
Also in tomorow’s post will be a link to a video of the race in both regular speed with commentary, and Slo-Mo.
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 6 - Women’s Sports in America - Title IX
Recently, I attended an age-group swim meet at a local YMCA to watch a friend’s 6 year-old daughter compete. Glancing at the heat sheets I noticed that the ratio of girls to boys was 78 to 22. Curious.
Yet, at the Melbourne Olympics in 1956 the ration of women to men was 13 to 87.
What happened in the intervening 58 years? What enabled or encouraged more women and girls to participate in swimming and other sports?
Maybe it was a U.S. Federal Law called, “Title IX” that was passed in 1972. It has proven to be a landmark piece of legislation. It is controversial for some.
To sum up Title IX in a sentence:
No person in the United States shall, on the basis of gender, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.
Title IX covers all educational activities, but it has had a singular effect on women’s collegiate sports.
Basically, if State University has a Men’s swim team, it must also have a Women’s swim team.
Title IX became a turning point in opportunities for women in collegiate athletics, which was pretty near zero before 1972.
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 5 - The Birth of the Butterfly
Inside the secret world of elite swimming behind the Iron Curtain, two members of the Hungarian Women’s Olympic Swimming Team are discussing a turn of events.
One of their teammates, Eva Szekely, had perfected a new way of swimming Breaststroke. (This may be the way the conversation went...)
“Did you see Eva’s Breaststroke? Her arms are coming out of the water.” - Eva Novak (Breaststroker # 1)
“Yes, Eva says it is legal. It doesn’t break the rules.” - Klara Killermann (Breaststroker # 2)
“Wait, really? Do you think she will use it in meets? Oh, I forgot, she probably won’t be allowed to swim in some of the meets. She is really killing me in practice. I can’t figure out how to do that stroke. She showed me but I don’t get it.”
“They have to let her swim in Helsinki, don’t they?”
“Yeah, the Ruskies will want her to swim for Communism, you know, even though she’s Jewish.”
“I thought I had a chance for the podium. Do you think we are the three fastest Breaststrokers?”
“In Hungary?, yes, hahahahahaha.”
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In America, embroiled in the Cold War, the swim coaches were worried.
There were no U.S. women Breaststrokers topping the world rankings.
People were experimenting with new techniques, but no one had figured out what Eva Szekely had figured out. And the result would be an embarrassment that would shock the U.S. swimming community into action.
(In Helsinki, Eva used the Butterfly arm stroke combined with the frog/whip kick from the Breaststroke - a hybrid.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaststroke
Just four years earlier, in the London Summer Games, the U.S. Women Breaststrokers came in 18th, 19th, and 20th, nearly dead last except for the two lowly swimmers from Iceland. (Thank you Iceland.)
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Helsinki, Finland
Swimming competition: 25-July to 2-August, 1952
Weather: Highs of 70 and lows of 52, (21C - 11C) The heated outdoor swimming pool must have felt warm at 75 (24C). If the pool wasn’t heated the temperature would certainly been in the 60’s (16C - 20C), during the competition.
(Footnote # 1: Helsinki was chosen to host the 1940 Olympic Games but World War II made that impossible.)
(Footnote # 2: It was an outdoor pool, and was heated to 75 degrees Fahrenheit, (24 Celsius). It is, after all, Finland.)
Eva Szekely of Hungary swam the Butterfly in Helsinki in the Breaststroke event. She won the Gold, setting an Olympic Record. She improved her time by 9 seconds over her London performance in 1948 (where she came in fourth).
Eva Szekely had another fate awaiting her four years later in Melbourne, when the 1956 Hungarian Revolution had just been quashed by Russia.
Three Hungarians qualified 1-2-3 for the Final. But Elenor Gordon of Great Britain tied Klara Killermann of Hungary on the stopwatch, but Gordon was judged 3rd to win the Bronze and prevent a sweep by the strong Hungarians.
(There were no touch pads that electronically recorded the time and order of finish. One set of Officials used handheld stopwatches to time the race. Another set of Officials were Judges who decided the order of finish for each swimmer regardless of the time on the stopwatch.)
The top American, Gail Peters, came in 24th (!!), followed by Della Sehorn, 26th, and Julia Cornell, 28th. No American made it into the Semi-Finals. One would think something had to be done before Melbourne in 1956.
Here is the official record of the Women’s event:
The winner of the 200 metres breaststroke, Éva Székely, used the butterfly stroke, the runner-up Éva Novák swam in orthodox style. All the Hungarians finished within the Olympic record already in the heats. In the final, a triple win for Hungary seemed a certainty until with her last stroke Gordon of Great Britain forged past Hungary's Killerman.
The women's 200 metres was the only swimming event in which a representative of the U.S.S.R. reached the final, Gavrish finishing sixth.
It seems the women swimmers weren’t as converted to the Butterfly as the men..
All eight of the men in the 200 Meter Breaststroke Final swam the Butterfly stroke.
Here is the official record of the Men’s event:
In the Men’s 200 metres breaststroke the majority of the 40 participants used the butterfly stroke. The race was remarkably even. Holan of the U.S.A., who clocked the best time in the heats (2.36.8), was eliminated in the semi-finals. The nerves of the German world record-holder Herbert Klein proved unequal to the strain of the final. The Australian Davies, (fourth in London in 1948) and Stassforth of the U.S.A. overtook him in the last lap. Davies, whose victory was unexpected, was a cool and calculating competitor, aware to a hair of his staying power. Alike in his heat and semi-final and the final he was still lying fifth at half-distance, only to glide irresistibly past his competitors in the second half. In this event the Olympic record was beaten 18 times (3 times in the heats, 9 in the semi-finals and 6 in the final). The event demonstrated that the butterfly stroke and the orthodox breast stroke are two different styles, which should be contested separately and for which there should be separate records. Now, not a single exponent of the orthodox breaststroke reached the final.
The-times-they-were-a-changin.
Official Report on the 1952 Olympic Summer Games:
http://library.la84.org/6oic/OfficialReports/1952/OR1952.pdf
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Four years later.
Melbourne, Australia
Women and Men competed in the Butterfly for the first time at these Olympics.
Now there are four Official strokes: Backstroke, Breaststroke Butterfly, and Freestyle.
Oddly, there were only 12 women entered in the 100 yard Butterfly - apparently because it was so new. (Just beat 4 competitors and you make the Final. Hooray.)
In the years between 1952 and 1956 Butterflyers experimented with the Dolphin kick. They swam much faster.
Led by the American practitioners, they arrived in Melbourne in 1956 doing the Dolphin kick and promptly sweep the medals.
Shelley Mann took Gold, Nancy Ramey, the Silver, and Mary Sears, the Bronze. A U.S.A. sweep.
From 24th in the Breaststroke to 1st in the Butterfly four years later. It was a huge turnaround for USA Swimming and a glorious day for Mann, Ramey and Sears.
On the USA Men's Team, Bill Yorzyk won the Gold Medal in the 200 Meter Butterfly by a whopping 4.5 seconds (2:19.3). He set an Olympic and World record in that event in Melbourne. Bill is a graduate of Springfield College in Springfield Massachusetts and the University of Toronto Medical School. Bill swam for many years in U.S. Masters Swimming and is an inductee in the International Swimming Hall of Fame.
The American Women and Men were now the dominate force in Butterfly.
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Sidenote: Eva Szekely stuck with the Breaststroke in Melbourne rather than switch to the Butterfly. Eva took the Silver Medal in the 200 Meter Breaststroke in Melbourne with a time of 2:54.8. Her Olympic Record (2:51.7) set in Helsinki in 1952 was erased from the record books because she used the Butterfly arm stroke. (She kept her Gold Medal.) The Silver Medalist in the Breaststroke from Helsinki, the Hungarian, Eva Novak’s time of 2:54.0 was the Official Olympic Record at the start of the Games in Melbourne.
On the Men’s side the Breaststroke Olympic Record set in Helsinki by Australian John Davies (2:34.4) was also erased from the record books. (He kept his Gold Medal.) What is strange is that the Lords-of-the-Rings did not restore American Joe Verdeur’s record of 2:39.3 from the London Games in 1948. They went all the way back 12 years to the last Summer Olympics in Berlin and set the Breaststroke Olympic record going into Melbourne of 2:42.5 set by Tetsuo Hamuro of Japan.
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The debate rages on over who invented the Butterfly.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterfly_stroke
Here is 94 year-old Gary Weisenthal in a 6 minute video on the beginnings of the Butterfly.
http://youtu.be/tib69HtefWM
Joan Rosazza - An Olympic Journey
Part 3 - " ...I knew that I had a chance for the Olympics "
The scene:
Florida AAU Nationals. Junior year in High School.
Doris Murphy, Joan Rosazza, Bea Minetto, and Sandra Ruwet from Torrington traveled by train to "Nationals" in Daytona Beach. (It was a 24 hours train ride. The girls slept in their seats.) Joan was entered in the 100 yard freestyle.
Result: 10th in the 100 yard freestyle with a time of 1:02. 10th in the country at the National Championship swim meet.
Next year. Senior year in High School. Doris and Joan and some Torrington girls travel again to Florida for the AAU Nationals.
This time...
"I think I had had a breakthrough."
Result: 3rd place in the 100 yard freestyle with a time of :59. - breaking the all important 60 second barrier, which only 8 women in America - across all age groups - had broken at that time. Joan was 18 years old. A three second drop in one year. Huge.
Did you push yourself?
"Oh yeah."
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freestyle_swimming