Canada at the 1928 Winter Olympics explained

Noc:CAN
Nocname:Canadian Olympic Committee
Games:Winter Olympics
Year:1928
Website: 
Location:St. Moritz
Competitors:23 (20 men, 3 women)
Sports:6
Flagbearer:John Porter
Rank:5
Gold:1
Silver:0
Bronze:0
Appearances:auto
See also:1906 Intercalated Games

Canada competed at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Canada has competed at every Winter Olympic Games.

The Canadian Olympic Committee appointed W. A. Hewitt as head of mission for Canada at the 1928 Winter Olympics. He oversaw travel arrangements for the delegation which included figure skating, speed skating, skiing, and ice hockey.[1] Hewitt and the Canadian delegation totalled 47 people, and sailed from Halifax aboard SS Arabic to Cherbourg, then travelled to St. Moritz.[2] Hewitt and the delegation then returned to Canada aboard SS Celtic.[3]

Cross-country skiing

See main article: Cross-country skiing at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

Men
EventAthleteRace
TimeRank
18 kmMerritt Putman2'22:4041
William Thompson2'12:2438

Figure skating

See main article: Figure skating at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

Men
AthleteEventCFFSPlacesPointsFinal rank
Jack EastwoodMen's singles17151061136.2516
Montgomery Wilson1116921345.0013
Women
AthleteEventCFFSPlacesPointsFinal rank
Constance Wilson-SamuelWomen's singles55352173.006
Cecil Smith28322213.755
Pairs

Ice hockey

See main article: Ice hockey at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

The University of Toronto Graduates as the 1927 Allan Cup champions were chosen to represent Canada in ice hockey, and Hewitt oversaw the team's finances at the Olympics. Conn Smythe coached the team during the OHA season, but refused to go to the Olympics due to disagreements on which players were added to the team by the Canadian Olympic Committee. The Graduates went without Smythe, led by team captain Red Porter.

Hewitt was opposed to the format of the hockey tournament at the Olympics, which saw the Canadian team receive a bye into the second round. He wanted the team to have more games, rather than be idle for a week.[4] Despite the wait to play, the Graduates won all three games by scoring 38 goals and conceding none, to win the gold medal.

Medal round

The top teams from each of the three groups, plus Canada, which had received a bye into the medal round, played a 3 game round-robin to determine the medal winners.

TeamGPWLGFGA
330380
321712
312417
303121
February 1711:0
(4:0,5:0,2:0)
February 1814:0
(6:0,4:0,4:0)
February 190:13
(0:4,0:4,0:3)

Top scorer

Nordic combined

See main article: Nordic combined at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

Events:

The cross-country skiing part of this event was combined with the main medal event of cross-country skiing. Those results can be found above in this article in the cross-country skiing section. Some athletes (but not all) entered in both the cross-country skiing and Nordic combined event, their time on the 18 km was used for both events. One would expect that athletes competing at the Nordic combined event, would participate in the cross-country skiing event as well, as they would have the opportunity to win more than one medal. This was not always the case due to the maximum number of athletes that could represent a country per event.

The ski jumping (normal hill) event was held separate from the main medal event of ski jumping, results can be found in the table below.

AthleteEventCross-countrySki JumpingTotal
TimePointsRankDistance 1Distance 2Total pointsRankPointsRank
William ThompsonIndividualDNF -  -  -  -  -  - DNF -
Merritt Putman2'22:400.0002635.037.59.708264.85427

Ski jumping

See main article: Ski jumping at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

Speed skating

See main article: Speed skating at the 1928 Winter Olympics.

Men
EventAthleteRace
TimeRank
500 mRoss Robinson45.914
Willy Logan45.211
Charles Gorman43.97
1500 mWilly Logan2:35.621
Ross Robinson2:32.317
Charles Gorman2:28.412
5000 mWilly Logan10:10.329
Ross Robinson9:38.922

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: W. A. Hewitt To Head Olympic. April 19, 1927. The Kingston Whig-Standard. Kingston, Ontario. 9. April 17, 2022. March 8, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220308212112/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/97187212/hewitt-1927/. live.
    News: Marathon Trial on September 17. April 21, 1927. Lethbridge Herald. Lethbridge, Alberta. 4. April 17, 2022. March 22, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220322172336/https://newspaperarchive.com/sports-clipping-apr-21-1927-3015808/. live.
  2. Podnieks, Andrew (1997), pp. 23–25
  3. Podnieks, Andrew (1997), pp. 28–29
  4. News: Want Canadians To Play Winners. February 8, 1928. The Kingston Whig-Standard. Kingston, Ontario. 9. April 17, 2022. May 13, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220513205428/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/97188779/hewitt-1928/. live.