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The Olympics' Strangest Moments: Extraordinary But True Tales from the History of the Olympic Games (Strangest Series)
 
 
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The Olympics' Strangest Moments: Extraordinary But True Tales from the History of the Olympic Games (Strangest Series) [Paperback]

Geoff Tibballs
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Robson Books Ltd; Re-issue edition (7 July 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1905798237
  • ISBN-13: 978-1905798230
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 13.5 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 133,010 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

The Olympics' Strangest Moments recounts the bizarre, controversial, inept, heroic and plain unlucky from the first modern games in 1896 to the return of the games to their birthplace in Athens in 2004 and up to the Beijing 2008 games. The world's greatest sporting occasion has been packed with unusual occurrences as well as creating unlikely heroes such as Dorando Pietri, who missed out on marathon gold after being helped over the finish line by over-anxious officials, and "Eric the Eel" from Equatorial Guinea who was acknowledged as the slowest swimmer in the history of the games.

About the Author

Sports writer Geoff Tibballs is the author of several bestselling titles in the Strangest... series, on a range of sports including motor-racing and the Olympics. He also wrote Great Sporting Scandals published by Robson.

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By Peter Durward Harris #1 HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Like others in the series of books about strangest moments, this book merely offers selected episodes, making no attempt to chronicle a definitive history. Other books do that, but they aren't necessarily more enjoyable. The book includes an introduction giving a brief history of the ancient Olympics, which began in 776 BC and continued until banned in 393 AD. One wonders what might have happened had they continued unbroken to the present day.

The episodes are presented in historical order, the first three being from the inaugural Olympics (in the modern era) of 1896. It seems that the very first winner (an American) was refused permission to take leave from his university, so quit his studies and spent his life savings on the trip to Greece. It's an interesting story but not exactly strange. As I've learned from other books in the series, strange is interpreted loosely, though some of the episodes really are strange, and they don't all concern the winners. Indeed, many of the best stories are about the losers. Still, it is important to point out that this book confines itself to the summer Olympics, so neither the exploits of Eddie the Eagle nor the Tonya Harding scandal find a place here.

The early episodes offer a glimpse into a very different world than the one we know today. The 1896 swimming events were held in the bitterly cold and choppy waters of the Mediterranean, the winner eventually coming second in the 1924 Olympics special arts competition for architecture, although it seems that he should have won that event. Now, whatever happened to that Olympic architecture event? The 1900 Paris Olympics featured a cricket competition with only two teams entered, the winners being a British team from Devon and Somerset, with the losers being a French team made up of staff from the British embassy. The swimming events were staged in the River Seine. How things have changed since then.

Fascinating as the early episodes are, I suspect that most people buying this book will do so to be reminded of more recent events that they originally saw live on TV. Mexico in 1968 earned its place history because of the black power salutes, Bob Beamon's long jump and Dick Fosbury's new style of high jumping, which has since become the standard method of performing the high jump. Four episodes represent the 1972 Olympics, though they are remembered mainly for one of them - the terrorist outrage.

The eighties are famous for Budd versus Decker in 1984 and for a nasty accident to Greg Louganis in 1988, both of which are featured here, but most of all they are remembered for the cheating that occurred in 1988. If the dubious decisions in the boxing competition constituted a scandal, Ben Johnson's 100 metres sprint performance was an even bigger scandal that still reverberates around the sporting world over twenty years later. Six pages are devoted to this episode here, though that is miniscule compared to all the coverage that it has received elsewhere.

More recent episodes remind us of Derek Redmond limping up the track in Barcelona, Linford Christie's false start and disqualification in Atlanta and Eric the Eel's modest performances swimming in Sydney. He was swimming's answer to Eddie the Eagle.

This book is sometimes funny, occasionally tragic, but always entertaining. You don't have to be fanatical about the Olympics to enjoy this book.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  1 review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A fun look at the Olympics since 1896 1 April 2009
By Peter Durward Harris - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Like others in the series of books about strangest moments, this book merely offers selected episodes, making no attempt to chronicle a definitive history. Other books do that, but they aren't necessarily more enjoyable. The book includes an introduction giving a brief history of the ancient Olympics, which began in 776 BC and continued until banned in 393 AD. One wonders what might have happened had they continued unbroken to the present day.

The episodes are presented in historical order, the first three being from the inaugural Olympics (in the modern era) of 1896. It seems that the very first winner (an American) was refused permission to take leave from his university, so quit his studies and spent his life savings on the trip to Greece. It's an interesting story but not exactly strange. As I've learned from other books in the series, strange is interpreted loosely, though some of the episodes really are strange, and they don't all concern the winners. Indeed, many of the best stories are about the losers. Still, it is important to point out that this book confines itself to the summer Olympics, so neither the exploits of Eddie the Eagle nor the Tonya Harding scandal find a place here.

The early episodes offer a glimpse into a very different world than the one we know today. The 1896 swimming events were held in the bitterly cold and choppy waters of the Mediterranean, the winner eventually coming second in the 1924 Olympics special arts competition for architecture, although it seems that he should have won that event. Now, whatever happened to that Olympic architecture event? The 1900 Paris Olympics featured a cricket competition with only two teams entered, the winners being a British team from Devon and Somerset, with the losers being a French team made up of staff from the British embassy. The swimming events were staged in the River Seine. How things have changed since then.

Fascinating as the early episodes are, I suspect that most people buying this book will do so to be reminded of more recent events that they originally saw live on TV. Mexico in 1968 earned its place history because of the black power salutes, Bob Beamon's long jump and Dick Fosbury's new style of high jumping, which has since become the standard method of performing the high jump. Four episodes represent the 1972 Olympics, though they are remembered mainly for one of them - the terrorist outrage.

The eighties are famous for Budd versus Decker in 1984 and for a nasty accident to Greg Louganis in 1988, both of which are featured here, but most of all they are remembered for the cheating that occurred in 1988. If the dubious decisions in the boxing competition constituted a scandal, Ben Johnson's 100 metres sprint performance was an even bigger scandal that still reverberates around the sporting world over twenty years later. Six pages are devoted to this episode here, though that is miniscule compared to all the coverage that it has received elsewhere.

More recent episodes remind us of Derek Redmond limping up the track in Barcelona, Linford Christie's false start and disqualification in Atlanta and Eric the Eel's modest performances swimming in Sydney. He was swimming's answer to Eddie the Eagle.

This book is sometimes funny, occasionally tragic, but always entertaining. You don't have to be fanatical about the Olympics to enjoy this book.
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