Australia at the 1900 Summer Olympics explained

Noc:AUS
Nocname:Australian Olympic Committee
Games:Summer Olympics
Year:1900
Location:Paris, France
Date:14 May, 1900 – 28 October, 1900
Competitors:2
Sports:2
Events:5
Rank:9
Gold:2
Silver:0
Bronze:3
Appearances:auto
See also:1906 Intercalated Games
(1908–1912)

Australia competed at the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, France. Most Olympic historians keep Australian records at early Olympics separate from those of the United Kingdom, despite Australia not being an independent nation at the time.

Australia was represented by two athletes, both of whom won a medal in each event in which they competed. Frederick Lane won two gold medals in swimming and Stan Rowley won a gold medal (as part of a mixed team with Great Britain) and three bronze medals in athletics.[1]

Medalists

The following competitors won medals at the games. In the discipline sections below, the medalists' names are bolded.Medals awarded to participants of mixed-NOC teams are represented in italics. These medals are not counted towards the individual NOC medal tally.

MedalNameSportEventDate
Athletics5000 m team race
Swimming200 m freestyle
Swimming200 m obstacle event
Athletics60 m
Athletics100 m
Athletics200 m
Medals by sport
SportTotal
Athletics0033
Swimming2002
Totalstyle=background:gold2style=background:silver0style=background:#c9635

Multiple medalists

The following competitors won multiple medals at the 1900 Olympic Games.

NameMedalSportEvent

Swimming200 metre freestyle
200 metre obstacle event


Athletics60 metres
100 metres
200 metres

Competitors

The following is the list of number of competitors in the Games.

width=180Sportwidth=55Menwidth=55Womenwidth=55Total
Athletics1 0 1
Swimming1 0 1
Total 2 0 2

Swimming

See main article: Swimming at the 1900 Summer Olympics.

One swimmer, (Frederick Lane) represented Australia in 1900. It was the nation's debut appearance in the sport. Lane won the 200 metre freestyle and obstacle races, both on the same day. He did not receive gold medals, but instead received bronze sculptures of a horse and peasant girl respectively. He was also the favourite for the 100 metre freestyle, but this event was cancelled.

AthleteEventSemi-finalFinal
TimeRankTimeRank
Frederick Lane200 m freestyle2:59.01 Q2:25.2
200 m obstacle event3:04.01 Q2:38.4

Athletics

See main article: Athletics at the 1900 Summer Olympics.

Rowley was Australia's only competitor in athletics. It was Australia's second appearance in the sport. He entered the three sprint events, taking the bronze medal in each of the three. Rowley also joined the Great Britain team in the 5-man team race, as the British squad had only 4 members. The 5 kilometres of the race was much further than Rowley was used to racing. After the first lap of the track, he injured his foot and began to walk. When the last of the other nine competitors (the United Kingdom and France were the only nations to send teams) finished, Rowley was still 1500 metres from the finish; officials allowed him to retire and claim 10th place at that point.

Rowley's three individual medals put him, and Australia, in ninth place on the athletics leaderboard.

AthleteEventHeat SemifinalRepechageFinal
ResultRankResultRankResultRankResultRank
Stan Rowley60 m7.32 Q7.2
Stan Rowley100 m10.92 Q11.22 R11.0211.2
Stan Rowley200 m25.01 Q22.9
Stan Rowley400 mDid not advance





5000 m team race26 points

Non-Olympic events

Shooting

See main article: Shooting at the 1900 Summer Olympics. Donald Mackintosh was a professional shooter from Melbourne. He was travelling through Europe competing in a series of traditional competitions. He won the live game shooting (Prix Centenaire de Paris) with 22 consecutive kills of live pigeons, one more than Marquis de Villancosa of Spain. He finished in the joint third position alongside Crittenden Robinson of the United States in the live pigeon shooting (Grand Prix d'Exposition) with 18, behind the winner Leon de Lunden, who scored 21. Mackintosh' status has often been confused, as some historians were under the impression that game-shooting was an archery contest. The International Olympic Committee does not consider either event Olympic.

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: A Thoroughly Unhelpful History of Australian Sport. Titus O'Reily. 20 August 2018. Penguin Books. 9780143793519. 261.