Medals were awarded in 22 events contested in four sports (eight disciplines). • • •
Skating • • •
Skiing • • • • •
Demonstration sport •
Bandy (1) (
details)
Opening ceremonies The
opening ceremonies were held in Bislett Stadium on 15 February. As a result, all national flags were flown at half-mast, and
Princess Ragnhild opened the Games in place of her grandfather, King
Haakon VII, who was in London attending the state funeral. This was the first time an
Olympic Games had been declared open by a female official. The
British,
Australian,
Canadian and
New Zealand teams all wore black arm bands at the opening ceremonies in memory of their monarch. Following the parade of nations, the Olympic flame was lit. The bobsleigh and alpine skiing events were held the day before the opening ceremonies. Competitors in these events were unable to attend the festivities in Oslo; consequently simple opening ceremonies were held at
Frognerseteren, site of the bobsleigh events, and
Norefjell, site of the alpine skiing events.
Bobsleigh After a 16-year hiatus from the Olympics, Germany made a triumphant return to the
bobsleigh competition, winning the two- and four-man events. The results for both bobsleigh events were the same, with the
United States and
Switzerland taking silver and bronze respectively. There were no weight restrictions on the bobsleigh athletes, and the average weight for each member of the winning German four-man team was , which was more than the Olympic heavyweight boxing champion in
1952.
Speed skating All of the
speed skating events were held at Bislett Stadium. Americans
Ken Henry and
Don McDermott placed first and second in the 500-meter race, but Norwegian truck driver
Hjalmar Andersen electrified the partisan crowd by winning the 1,500, 5,000 and 10,000-meter events; his margins of victory were the largest in Olympic history. The giant slalom made its Olympic debut at the 1952 Games. Austrian skiers dominated the competition, winning seven out of a possible 18 medals, including
Othmar Schneider who won gold and silver in the men's slalom and downhill. Norwegian
Stein Eriksen won gold in the men's giant slalom and silver in the slalom. American skier
Andrea Mead Lawrence was the only double gold medalist, winning the giant slalom and the slalom. She was the first skier from the United States to win two alpine skiing gold medals.
Cross-country skiing All the
cross-country events were held next to the ski jump hill at
Holmenkollbakken. As had been the case in 1948 there were three men's events: 18 kilometers, 50 kilometers, and a relay. Added to the Olympic program for the first time was a ten-kilometer race for women. All the cross-country medals were won by Nordic countries, and
Finnish skiers won eight of the twelve possible.
Nordic combined The
nordic combined event was held at the cross-country and ski jump venues. For the first time, the ski jump part took place first with competitors taking three jumps from the Holmenkollbakken. The 18-km cross country skiing event took place the next day. Results were tallied by the best two marks were scored, along with the results of the cross-country race, to determine a winner. Norwegians
Simon Slåttvik and
Sverre Stenersen won the gold and bronze respectively. Stenersen went on to win the gold at the 1956 Games in the same event.
Heikki Hasu from Finland won the silver, preventing a Norwegian sweep of the medals. In 1952 there was only one event, the men's normal hill, which was held on 24 February. The King, Prince
Harald, and Princess Ragnhild were in attendance. Norwegian athletes won the ski jumping gold medal in every Winter Olympics from 1924 to 1952.
Figure skating There were three events in the Olympic
figure skating competition: men's singles, women's singles and mixed pairs. The events were held at Bislett Stadium on a rink constructed inside the speed skating track.
Dick Button of the United States won the men's singles event.
Helmut Seibt of
Austria took silver and
James Grogan of the United States won bronze. Button became the first figure-skater to land a triple jump in competition when he performed the
triple loop in the men's free skate. British skater
Jeannette Altwegg won the gold medal in the women's singles, the silver was won by American
Tenley Albright, who went on to win gold at the 1956 Winter Games in Cortina d'Ampezzo, and
Jacqueline du Bief of
France won the bronze. The German husband and wife pair of
Ria and
Paul Falk won the mixed pairs competition. They defeated Americans
Karol and
Peter Kennedy, who placed second, and
Hungarian siblings
Marianna and
László Nagy, who won the bronze medal.
Ice hockey , the ice hockey gold medal winners A majority of the
ice hockey matches took place at
Jordal Amfi, a new hockey stadium built for the Olympics. Nine teams played in the tournament and Canada again won the gold medal. Canada had won all but one Olympic hockey tournament thus far, but in 1956 the Soviet team began to compete and ended Canadian dominance. Canada played the United States to a three all tie on the final day to clinch the gold, and the Americans won silver. The official report of the USOC for the 1952 Olympics covers the game in great detail. According to the report, by the end of the game against Canada, the Americans were mentally and physically exhausted and after scoring the third goal and tying the game they decided to focus on defense in order not to lose silver. Canadians at the time were considered unbeatable.
Sweden and
Czechoslovakia ended up tied for third (Czechoslovakia defeated the Swedes in the head-to-head game, but according to the rules at the time they had to play a tiebreaker game because they were tied in points). Sweden won that game and avenged the loss in the round-robin. The committee instead selected
bandy, which had never been included in the Winter Games. Popular in Nordic countries, bandy is played by teams of eleven on an outdoor soccer field-sized ice rink, using a small ball and sticks about long. As it was a demonstration sport, the players were ineligible for medals. Three nations participated:
Finland,
Norway and
Sweden. Each of the three teams won one game and lost one game; with Sweden winning the competition based on number of goals scored, followed by Norway in second place, and Finland in third place. Two of the games were played at Dæhlenenga Stadium and one at Bislett Stadium.
Closing ceremonies At the 1952 Winter Games, the closing ceremonies were a distinct program listing, unlike previous Winter Games when the closing ceremonies were held directly after the final event. The closing ceremonies were held in Bislett Stadium, on Monday evening, 25 February. The flag bearers entered the stadium in the same order they followed for the opening ceremonies. That evening four medal ceremonies were also held for the women's cross-country race, the men's cross-country relay, the ski jumping competition, and the ice hockey tournament. The city of Oslo gave an Olympic flag to establish the same tradition for the Winter Games. Brynjulf Bull, Oslo's mayor, passed the flag to the president of the IOC,
Sigfrid Edström, who declared the flag was to pass from host city to host city for future Winter Games. The flag, which came to be known as the "Oslo Flag", has since been preserved in a display case, with the name of every Winter Olympics host city engraved on brass plaques, and is brought to each Winter Games to be displayed. A replica is used during the closing ceremonies. After the flag ceremony the Olympic flame was extinguished, a special speed skating race was held, and the figure skating competitors gave an exhibition, followed by 40 children dressed in national costumes performing an ice dance. For a finale, to the close the Games, the lights were extinguished and a 20-minute fireworks display lit up the night sky. ==Venues==