1996 SUMMER OLYMPICS


The '1996 Summer Olympics', formally known as the 'Games of the XXVI Olympiad' and informally known as the 'Centennial Olympics', were held in 1996 in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Atlanta was selected in September 1990 in Tokyo, Japan, above Athens, Belgrade, Manchester, Melbourne and Toronto.

Contents
Selection
Incidents
Effect on the city
Songs and themes
Mascot
Highlights
Venues
Medals awarded
Participating nations
Medal count
Leading medal winners
Diving
See also
Olympics with significant criminal incidents
Notes (Sources)
External links

Selection


Some felt Athens should have had the right to host the games because it marked the 100th anniversary of the modern Olympic games. The IOC instead voted for Atlanta, predicting that Athens' infrastructure could not be improved enough in time to successfully host the Games. Athens would eventually win the right to host the 2004 Summer Olympics in 1997. There were claims that executives in Atlanta had bribed the IOC officials.[1] These claims were never substantiated, but they prompted other winning bids from Nagano in 1998, Sydney in 2000, and Salt Lake City in 2002 to be more carefully scrutinized.

Incidents


Though the Games made a financial profit, it was not without problems. Numerous observers considered the Games "over commercialized".[2] Problems of traffic congestion sometimes made travel between venues difficult. More seriously, the Centennial Olympic Park bombing of July 27 1996, killed spectator Alice Hawthorne and wounded 111 others, and elicited the death of Melih Uzunyol by heart attack. Even with the problems, IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch said, in his closing speech, "Well done, Atlanta", although did not say they had been the best Olympics yet, as he did at every other Olympic closing ceremony while he was IOC president.

Effect on the city


The games had a profound impact on the city of Atlanta and many in the Atlanta metro area consider the games to be instrumental in transforming Atlanta into the more modern city it has become since. Examples of this are the mid-rise dormitories built for the Olympic village. One of these complexes became the first residential housing for Georgia State University, and has recently been transferred for use by the Georgia Institute of Technology. Other examples include Turner Field, which was a modification of the original Centennial Olympic Stadium, and where the Atlanta Braves baseball team now makes its home. Centennial Olympic Park was also built for the events and is still in use. Atlanta used no public money to finance the games, which cost US$1.8 billion to host. It was the first city in Olympic history to use ticket sales, commercial endorsements, advertising, and private money alone to fund the hosting of the Olympics. The consequence of this, however, was that many felt that the games in Atlanta were over-commercialized and were less exciting than previous games.

Songs and themes


The Olympiad's official theme, ''Summon the Heroes'', was written by John Williams, making it the third Olympiad for which he has composed. The song "The Power of the Dream", composed by Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds and David Foster, with words by Linda Thompson was performed in the opening ceremony by Céline Dion accompanied by Foster and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Centennial Choir. Gladys Knight sang "Georgia on My Mind", Georgia's official state song, at the opening ceremony. The closing ceremony featured Gloria Estefan singing "Reach", the official theme song of the 1996 Olympics.

Mascot


Main articles: Izzy (Mascot)

The mascot for the Olympiad was an abstract, animated character named 'Izzy'. In contrast to the standing tradition of mascots of national or regional significance in the city hosting the Olympiad, Izzy was an amorphous, computer-designed fantasy figure. The mascot was popularly ridiculed by the public and press as commercialized, unappealing, and ungrounded in any connection to the region.

Highlights


Women's 100 m hurdles at the Olympic stadium


Muhammad Ali lit the Olympic torch during the opening ceremonies of the games and received his gold medal from the 1960 Summer Olympics (he had thrown his previous one into a river in disgust).

Slovene gymnast Leon Å tukelj arises at the opening ceremony as one of the oldest living sportsmen in the world (age 97)

Naim Süleymanoğlu becomes the first weightlifter to win three gold medals.

★ USA Dream Team III cruise to another gold medal win.

Michael Johnson wins gold in both the 200 m and 400 m, setting a new world record of 19.32 seconds in the 200 m.

Donovan Bailey of Canada wins the men's 100 m, setting a new world record of 9.84 seconds at that time.

Marie-José Perec equals Johnson's performance, although without a world record, by winning the rare 200 m/400 m double.

★ At the age of 35 Carl Lewis takes his 4th long jump gold medal, his 9th in all.

Softball, beach volleyball and mountainbiking debut on the Olympic program, together with women's soccer/football and lightweight rowing.

Palestine was allowed to compete in the Olympics for the first time.

Cycling professionals were admitted to the Olympics, with five-time Tour de France winner Miguel Indurain winning the inaugural individual time trial event.

Michelle Smith of Ireland wins three gold medals and a bronze in swimming, but her victories are overshadowed by doping allegations, which are later reinforced as she is banned after failing a test in 1998.

Amy Van Dyken wins four gold medals in the Olympic swimming pool, the first American woman to win four titles in a single Olympics.

★ A record 197 nations, all current IOC member nations, take part, with a record 79 of them winning at least one medal.

★ Five athletes were disqualified for using banned drugs. A few more were reinstated since the drug they took had been declared illegal only a week before the Olympics.

Kerri Strug becomes an American heroine after bringing victory to the American female gymnastics team in spite of having to perform with an injury in the final event. Her gymnastics team, popularly known as the "Magnificent Seven", also includes Shannon Miller, Amy Chow, Jaycie Phelps, Amanda Borden, Dominique Dawes and Dominique Moceanu.

Andre Agassi wins the gold medal in the tennis event. This helps him become the first male player to ever win the career Golden Slam. (completes his Career Grand Slam in 1999 when he wins the French Open singles title).

Kurt Angle of the United States won the gold medal in 100 kg (220 lb) freestyle wrestling while suffering a fractured neck. Angle would later go on to fame in Vince McMahon's World Wrestling Entertainment. He is widely regarded as one of the best athletes to ever participate in professional wrestling and the only Olympic gold medalist in the sport.

Deng Yaping of China wins two gold medals in Women singles and doubles of table tennis. She is also the winner of these two titles in 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

★ For the first time Olympic medals were won by the athletes from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Burundi, Ecuador, Georgia, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Mozambique, Slovakia, Tonga, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

Lee Lai Shan won a gold medal in sailing, the first and only gold medal that Hong Kong has ever won.

★ It was the first time that The United States 4X100 meters men relay was beaten in the finals . They were cleanly beaten by Canada . The team had won each final they were in at all the other games.

★ The US Women's Soccer team won the Gold Medal in the first ever Women's Soccer Event.

Venues



Centennial Olympic Stadium (now Turner Field)

Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium (demolished 1997)

The Omni (Demolished 1997 and replaced by Philips Arena in 1999)

Georgia Dome

Georgia International Horse Park (Conyers, Georgia)

Lake Lanier (Near Gainesville, Georgia)

Georgia World Congress Center

Georgia State University

Georgia Tech Aquatic Center

Forbes Arena (Morehouse College)

Ocoee River (Copperhill, Tennessee)

Sanford Stadium (Athens, Georgia)

Savannah River (at Savannah, Georgia)

Stone Mountain Tennis Center (at Stone Mountain, Georgia)

Legion Field (Birmingham, Alabama) - Soccer

Golden Park (Columbus, Georgia) - Softball

Alexander Memorial Coliseum - Boxing

Medals awarded


See the medal winners, ordered by sport:

Archery
Athletics
Baseball
Basketball
Badminton
Boxing
Canoeing
Cycling
Diving
Equestrian

Fencing
Football
Gymnastics
Handball
Hockey
Judo
Modern pentathlon
Rowing
Sailing
Shooting

Softball
Swimming
Synchronized swimming
Table tennis
Tennis
Volleyball
Water polo
Weightlifting
Wrestling

Participating nations


Participants at Summer olympics 1996
'Blue' = Participating for the first time.
'Green' = Have previously participated.
Yellow square is host city (Atlanta)

A total of 197 nations were represented at the 1996 Games, and the combined total of athletes was about 10,318.[3] Twenty-four countries made their Olympic debut this year, including eleven of the ex-Soviet countries that competed as part of the Unified Team in 1992. Russia competed independently for the first time since 1912, when it was the Russian Empire. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia competed as ''Yugoslavia''.
The 14 countries making their Olympic debut were: Azerbaijan, Burundi, Cape Verde, Comoros, Dominica, Guinea-Bissau, FYR Macedonia, Nauru, Palestine, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, São Tomé and Príncipe, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.
The 10 countries making their Summer Olympic debut (after competing at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer) were: Armenia, Belarus, Czech Republic, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Slovakia, Ukraine and Uzbekistan.








































































































































































































Medal count


Main articles: 1996 Summer Olympics medal count

These are the top ten nations that won medals at these Games:
1 (host nation) 44 32 25 101
2 26 21 16 63
3 20 18 27 65
4 16 22 12 50
5 15 7 15 37
6 13 10 12 35
7 9 9 23 41
8 9 8 8 25
9 9 2 12 23
10 7 15 5 27

Leading medal winners


Men's leading medal winners at the Atlanta games
'Pos' 'Athlete's name' 'Sport / discipline ''Gold''Silver''Bronze' 'Total'
1Gymnastics2136
2Swimming2204
Swimming2204
4Swimming3003
5Swimming2103
6Swimming0123
7Gymnastics0033



Women's leading medal winners at the Atlanta games
'Pos' 'Athlete's name' 'Sport / discipline ''Gold''Silver''Bronze' 'Total'
1Swimming4004
2Swimming3014
3Swimming2024
4Gymnastics1124
5Swimming0314
6Gymnastics0134
7Swimming3003
8Gymnastics2103
9Swimming1203
Swimming1203
Swimming1203
12Swimming1113
13Athletics0213
Swimming0213
15Swimming0123

Diving

Diving Names
1 (Lucas Chorlton)
2 (John Schumacher)
3 (Didier Tueset)
4 (Alvaro Bonera)
5 (Sergio Pinto)
6 (Frankie Livingstone)
7 (Paul Livingstone)
8 (Sergio Nakashima)
9 (Tom Flintstone)
10 (Lee Chung)

See also



1996 Summer Paralympics

International Olympic Committee

IOC country codes
Olympics with significant criminal incidents


1972 Summer OlympicsMunich, Bavaria, West GermanyMunich massacre

★ 1996 Summer Olympics – Atlanta, Georgia, USACentennial Olympic Park bombing

Notes (Sources)


1. Salt Lake City bribery scandal: the buying of the Olympic games
2. Olympic bid smacks into M hurdle - fact mentioned in the 5th paragraph
3. Olympics OFFICIAL Recap

External links



IOC Site on 1996 Summer Olympics

Official Report Vol. 1 Digital Archive from the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles

Official Report Vol. 2 Digital Archive from the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles

Official Report Vol. 3 Digital Archive from the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles

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