•
Emperor Hirohito became the third dignitary to open the Olympic Games twice (first time in
summer 1964), after
Adolf Hitler had done in
winter and
summer 1936, and
Giovanni Gronchi in
winter 1956 and
summer 1960. • Prior to these games, Japan had never won a gold medal, and had won only one medal (silver by
Chiharu Igaya in 1956) overall, in the Winter Olympics. The host country's fans in Sapporo were boosted when three Japanese athletes, led by
Yukio Kasaya, swept the
ski jumping 70 m (current K-90 normal hill) event for gold (Kasaya), silver (
Akitsugu Konno), and bronze (
Seiji Aochi); those would also be the only medals Japan would earn in these Olympics. •
Galina Kulakova of the USSR won all three cross-country skiing events for women. • Dutch skater
Ard Schenk won three gold medals in speed skating. • In Women's Alpine skiing, American
Barbara Cochran, one of three siblings on the U.S. Ski Team, became the first U.S. woman since
Andrea Mead Lawrence to win a gold medal in skiing when she took first place in the
slalom. • In Alpine skiing, virtual unknown Swiss
Marie-Thérès Nadig won both the
downhill and the
giant slalom events. •
Magnar Solberg from Norway was the first repeat winner in the individual 20 km biathlon event, having first won in
Grenoble. • Spain scored its first Winter gold medal courtesy of
slalom skier
Francisco Fernández Ochoa. Poland did the same with
Wojciech Fortuna winning the large hill
ski jumping competition. • American female speedskaters
Anne Henning (16-year-old) and
Dianne Holum made the United States' best showing in the Winter Games, winning two gold, a silver, and a bronze. • On an historical note, these Games were the last where a skier won a gold medal using all-wooden skis. Since this time, top-level cross-country skiers have used skis made mostly of fibreglass synthetics. • In female
Figure skating event, American skater
Janet Lynn won not only a bronze medal, but also tremendous popularity among Japanese audiences because of her artistic free program, as to make appearance on the cover of "Olympic Winter Games, Sapporo 1972" photo books published in Japan, and even on Japanese TV commercials later. • Luge had its only tie in the history of the Winter Olympics in the men's doubles event. == Venues ==