The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

1928 Amsterdam: Women’s track, gymnastics debut at Olympics

- By Howard Fendrich

Simone Biles, Mary Lou Retton and Nadia Comaneci in gymnastics, Allyson Felix, Florence Griffith-joyner and Wilma Rudolph in track and field — all Olympic superstars. Until the 1928 Amsterdam Games, though, they wouldn’t have been allowed to compete.

Female athletes joined the Olympic program in certain sports, such as tennis and golf, in 1900, and they were awarded medals in swimming in 1912, but it wasn’t until nearly three decades later that they could participat­e in what have become marquee events.

Even with women added to the fields for athletics and gymnastics, the numbers of total competitor­s in Amsterdam were skewed: fewer than 300 women were there, with more than 2,500 men.

At each of the past two Summer Games, London 2012 and Rio de Janeiro 2016, U.S. women collected more medals than the country’s men did.

One of the revelation­s of the Amsterdam Olympics was Elizabeth Robinson, a 16-year-old American who won the first women’s track gold medal in history by finishing ahead of two Canadians and German while running the 100 meters in world-record time.

Robinson also added a silver in the 400-meter relay.

The story goes that she was “discovered” by a high school

teacher who saw her running to catch a train. The Olympic dash was only the fourth official race of her career.

“Sometimes I think about how lucky I was that he saw me that day,” Robinson was quoted as saying in a 1992 story by The Associated Press.

Back in 1928, even as women were making their Olympic debut at the track, they did not have full support.

During the Amsterdam Games, according to an AP story from August 1928, track and field’s governing body rejected a proposal to add events for women and decided to eliminate the 800 meters after one try. That distance wouldn’t return to the Olympic schedule for women until 1960.

A measure about whether to keep women’s track and field in the Olympics at all passed 16-6 — with Canada, England, Finland, Hungary, Ireland and Italy voting against.

ROBINSON’S TALE Robinson was badly injured in a plane crash in June 1931, when she “suffered injuries that were at first believed fatal,” according to an AP account at the time, which listed “fractures

of her left leg, left arm, right hip and possibly a skull fracture.” But she would work her way back to the Olympics in 1936, taking home a gold in the 400-meter relay. Robinson died in 1999. DOUBLE GOLD Another teen sprinter, Percy Williams of Canada, “sprang from obscurity to fame,” according to an AP story at the time, and became the first athlete not from the United States to grab golds in the men’s 100-200 sprint double. No one from the U.S. took a medal in either race. MILESTONE MEDALS Mikio Oda’s gold medal for Japan in the men’s triple jump made him the first Olympic champion from an Asian country . ... Hungary’s title in team sabre fencing would become the first of seven golds in a row in that event . ... India won the men’s field hockey event, starting a run of six consecutiv­e golds.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 1928, file photo, the world’s greatest sprinters are off from their marks at the start of one of the heats in the 100-meter race at the Opening of the Olympic games in Amsterdam, The Netherland­s. Percy Williams, an unknown schoolboy from Canada, captured the finals.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 1928, file photo, the world’s greatest sprinters are off from their marks at the start of one of the heats in the 100-meter race at the Opening of the Olympic games in Amsterdam, The Netherland­s. Percy Williams, an unknown schoolboy from Canada, captured the finals.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this March 29, 1928, file photo, American sprinters and Olympic champions Jackson Scholz, left, and Charles “Charley” Paddock pose together in their starting positions at New York’s Columbia University.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this March 29, 1928, file photo, American sprinters and Olympic champions Jackson Scholz, left, and Charles “Charley” Paddock pose together in their starting positions at New York’s Columbia University.

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