On the afternoon of July 26, the athletes attended a farewell reception at the
Manhattan Opera House presided over by Gustavus T. Kirby, chairman of the
American Olympic Committee (AOC), who read congratulatory
telegrams to the team from the governors of eleven states. At the end of the reception, the 230 civilian and U.S. Army-affiliated team members marched from the Opera House to the Hudson Pier and ferried to
Hoboken,
New Jersey, and the waiting
Matoika. (The 101 U.S. Navy-affiliated athletes and coaches were carried on cruiser ,) ter
Pat McDonald (seen here in the
1912 Summer Olympics) was one of the ringleaders of the "Mutiny of the
Matoika" When female team members, AOC members, and U.S. Army athletes and officials accompanying the team were assigned first-class cabins and the balance of the male athletes were relegated to troop quarters on lower decks, grumbling from team members quartered belowdecks began almost immediately. Before the
Matoika even sailed, runner
Joie Ray, a competitor in the
1500 meters in 1920, complained about the conditions declaring that "if those in charge had deliberately tried to create a psychology of depression and resentment among the members of the team, they couldn't have done anything more effective". Fencer
Joseph B. B. Parker—who, as an Army athlete, was bunked in a cabin—commented that the troop accommodations were all right for troops but "not conducive to bringing men to the games
in the pink of condition." Although the long distance runners were able to practice by making multiple circuits of the ship, the
sprinters and
hurdlers were provided only a cork track—two-thirds the length of the shortest track event at the games—on which to practice. The only facility for swimmers was a canvas saltwater tank set up on the lower deck; the tank split when filled for the first time. Conditions on the ship contributed to several injuries to athletes. During foggy weather, American
decathlete Everett Ellis fell on the slippery deck, suffering a bad sprain, and
shot putter
Pat McDonald sprained his thumb while tossing a
medicine ball on the pitching deck. Despite the problems encountered by some of the team, others were able to work out adequately.
Fencers,
wrestlers, and
boxers were all able to work out in close-to-usual routines. == The "mutiny" ==