The first official announcements regarding the sporting events to be held featured sports like football and cricket, but these plans were not finalised, and these sports did not make the final program for the Games.
Rowing and
sailing events were also scheduled but were cancelled on the planned days of competition: sailing due to a lack of special boats in Greece and no foreign entries, and rowing due to poor weather. As a result, the 1896 Summer Olympics programme featured 9 sports encompassing 10 disciplines and 43 events. The number of events in each discipline is noted in parentheses.
Athletics The athletics events had the most international field of any of the sports. The major highlight was the
marathon, held for the first time in international competition.
Spyridon Louis, a previously unrecognised water carrier, won the event to become the only Greek athletics champion and a national hero. Although Greece had been favoured to win the
discus and the
shot put, the best Greek athletes finished just behind the American
Robert Garrett in both events. No
world records were set, as few top international competitors had elected to compete. In addition, the curves of the track were very tight, making fast times in the running events virtually impossible. Despite this,
Thomas Burke, of the United States, won the
100-meter race in 12.0 seconds and the
400-meter race in 54.2 seconds. Burke was the only one who used the "
crouch start" (putting his knee on soil), confusing the jury. Eventually, he was allowed to start from this "uncomfortable position".
(left) and
Paul Masson won four cycling events became the first Greek modern Olympic champion by winning the masters foil competition , and
Weingärtner Chile claims one athlete,
Luis Subercaseaux, who competed for the nation at the 1896 Summer Olympics. This makes Chile one of the 14 nations to appear at the inaugural Summer Olympic Games. Subercaseaux's results are not listed in the official report, though that report typically includes only winners and Subercaseaux won no medals. He was entered to compete in the 100m, 400m and 800m events but is usually listed as a no show. An appraisal of a famous photo of series 2 of the 100 meters sprint, performed by facial recognition experts of the
Chilean forensic police, concluded that Subercaseaux was one of the participants. The day after the official marathon,
Stamata Revithi ran the 40-kilometer course in 5 hours 30 minutes, finishing outside
Panathinaiko Stadium. However, some of the authors, who believe that "Melpomene" and Revithi are the same person, attribute to the latter the more favorable time of hours. She was denied entry into the official race as the 1896 Olympics
excluded women from competition.
Cycling The rules of the
International Cycling Association were used for the cycling competitions. The
track cycling events were held at the newly built
Neo Phaliron Velodrome. Only one road event was held, a race from Athens to Marathon and back (87 kilometres). In the track events, the best cyclist was Frenchman
Paul Masson, who won the one lap
time trial, the sprint event, and the 10,000 meters. In the 100 kilometres event, Masson entered as a pacemaker for his compatriot
Léon Flameng. Flameng won the event, after a fall, and after stopping to wait for his Greek opponent
Georgios Kolettis to fix a mechanical problem. The Austrian fencer
Adolf Schmal won the 12-hour race, which was completed by only two cyclists, while the road race event was won by
Aristidis Konstantinidis.
Fencing The fencing events were held in the
Zappeion, which, built with money
Evangelis Zappas had given to revive the ancient Olympic Games, had never seen any athletic contests before. Unlike other sports (in which only amateurs were allowed to take part at the Olympics), professionals were authorised to compete in fencing, though in a separate event. These masters professionals were considered gentlemen athletes, just like the amateurs. Four events were scheduled, but the
épée event was cancelled for unknown reasons. The
foil event was won by a Frenchman,
Eugène-Henri Gravelotte, who beat his countryman,
Henri Callot, in the final. The other two events were won by Greek fencers:
Ioannis Georgiadis won the
sabre event, and
Leonidas Pyrgos won the
masters foil, becoming the first Greek Olympic champion in the modern era.
Gymnastics The gymnastics competition was carried out on the infield of the Panathinaiko Stadium. Germany sent an 11-man team, which won five of the eight events, including both team events: in the team event on the
horizontal bar, the German team was the only entry. Three Germans added individual titles:
Hermann Weingärtner won the
horizontal bar event,
Alfred Flatow won the
parallel bars, and
Carl Schuhmann, who also won the wrestling event, won the
vault.
Louis Zutter, a Swiss gymnast, won the
pommel horse, while Greeks
Ioannis Mitropoulos and
Nikolaos Andriakopoulos were victorious in the
rings and
rope climbing events, respectively.
Sailing and rowing A regatta of sailing boats was on the program of the Games of the First Olympiad for 31 March 1896 (Julian calendar). However this event had to be given up. The official English report states: The German version states: Rowing races were scheduled for the next day, 1 April 1896 (Julian); however, poor weather forced their cancellation. The official English report states: The German rower, Berthold Küttner, wrote several articles about the 1896 Games that were published in his Berlin rowing club's magazine in 1936 and reprinted in the
Journal of Olympic History in 2012. He stated that he and Adolf Jäger had lined up for the start of the
double sculls event. He further wrote that "The double scull would be the first to start because the wind had become much stronger. On a fishing boat we took our double scull to the starting line. We already had problems getting into the double scull because of the swells. From our opponents no one had appeared – although both Greeks and Italians had applied. Because a longer wait for them seemed pointless, the starter told us to sail without competition.
Shooting Held at a range at
Kallithea, the shooting competition consisted of five events—two using a rifle and three with the
pistol. The first event,
the military rifle, was won by
Pantelis Karasevdas, the only competitor to hit the target with all of his shots. The second event, for
military pistols, was dominated by two American brothers:
John and
Sumner Paine. They became the first siblings to finish first and second in the same event. To avoid embarrassing their hosts, the brothers decided that only one of them would compete in the next pistol event, the
free pistol. Sumner Paine won that event, thereby becoming the first relative of an Olympic champion to become Olympic champion himself. The Paine brothers did not compete in the
25-meter pistol event, as the event judges determined that their weapons were not of the required calibre. In their absence,
Ioannis Phrangoudis won. The final event, the
free rifle, began on the same day. However, the event could not be completed due to darkness and was finalised the next morning, when
Georgios Orphanidis was crowned the champion.
Swimming , the first Olympic champion in swimming, is one of only two Olympians to have won medals in both sport and art competitions The swimming competition was held in the open sea because the organizers had refused to spend the money necessary for a specially constructed stadium. Nearly 20,000 spectators lined the
Bay of Zea off the
Piraeus coast to watch the events. The water in the bay was cold, and the competitors suffered during their races. There were three open events (
men's 100-metre freestyle,
men's 500-metre freestyle, and
men's 1200 metre freestyle), in addition to a
special event open only to Greek sailors, all of which were held on the same day (11 April). For
Alfréd Hajós of Hungary, this meant he could only compete in two of the events, as they were held too close together, which made it impossible for him to adequately recuperate. Nevertheless, he won the two events in which he swam, the 100 and 1200 meter
freestyle. Hajós later became one of only two Olympians to win a medal in both the athletic and
artistic competitions, when he won a silver medal for architecture in 1924. The 500-meter freestyle was won by Austrian swimmer
Paul Neumann, who defeated his opponents by more than a minute and a half.
Tennis Although tennis was already a major sport by the end of the 19th century, none of the top players turned up for the tournament in Athens. The competition was held at the courts of the
Athens Lawn Tennis Club, and the infield of the velodrome used for the cycling events.
John Pius Boland, who won the event, had been entered in the competition by a fellow-student of his at Oxford; the Greek, Konstantinos Manos. As a member of the Athens Lawn Tennis sub-committee, Manos had been trying, with the assistance of Boland, to recruit competitors for the Athens Games from among the sporting circles of Oxford University. In the first round, Boland defeated
Friedrich Traun, a promising tennis player from
Hamburg, who had been eliminated in the 100-meter sprint competition. Boland and Traun decided to team up for the doubles event, in which they reached the final and defeated their Greek opponents after losing the first set.
Weightlifting , winner of the one-armed weightlifting event, was popular with the Greek audience, who found him very handsome The sport of weightlifting was still young in 1896, and the rules differed from those in use today. Competitions were held outdoors, in the infield of the
main stadium, and there were no weight limits. The first event was held in a style now known as the "
clean and jerk". Two competitors stood out: Briton
Launceston Elliot and
Viggo Jensen of Denmark. Both of them lifted the same weight, but the jury, with Prince George as the chairman, ruled that Jensen had done so in a better style. The British delegation, unfamiliar with this tie-breaking rule, lodged a protest. The lifters were eventually allowed to make further attempts, but neither lifter improved, and Jensen was declared the champion. Elliot got his revenge in the
one hand lift event, which was held immediately after the two-handed one. Jensen had been slightly injured during his last two-handed attempt and was no match for Elliot, who won the competition easily. The Greek audience was charmed by the British victor, whom they considered very attractive. A curious incident occurred during the weightlifting event: a servant was ordered to remove the weights, which appeared to be a difficult task for him. Prince George came to his assistance; he picked up the weight and threw it a considerable distance with ease, to the delight of the crowd.
Wrestling (left) and
Georgios Tsitas shake hands before the final match of the wrestling competition No weight classes existed for the wrestling competition, held in the Panathenaic Stadium, which meant that there would only be one winner among competitors of all sizes. The rules used were similar to modern
Greco-Roman wrestling, although there was no time limit, and not all leg holds were forbidden (in contrast to current rules). Apart from the two Greek contestants, all the competitors had previously been active in other sports. Weightlifting champion Launceston Elliot faced gymnastics champion
Carl Schuhmann. The latter won and advanced into the final, where he met
Georgios Tsitas, who had previously defeated
Stephanos Christopoulos. Darkness forced the final match to be suspended after 40 minutes; it was continued the following day, when Schuhmann needed only fifteen minutes to finish the bout. == Closing ceremony ==