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Some Olympic Moments
1936: Jesse Owens became a hero in Berlin
In the 1936 Berlin Olympics, American athlete Jesse Owens achieved something unthinkable: winning gold medals in the home of the Third Reich.
Owens won a total of four gold medals, breaking three world records in the process.
Amidst the political tension in Europe, this milestone accomplished by Owens catapulted him to become one of the greatest sporting heroes in the United States.
1976: Nadia Comaneci and the Perfect Ten
It was always said that no one, absolutely no one, is perfect. However, in Montreal, Canada, a 14-year-old girl reached such a level.
Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci achieved, after a superb display of skill, athleticism, and harmony, the first perfect score in the history of the Olympic Games.
More perfect scores followed, but the world will always remember the first, and the first perfect ten will forever belong to Nadia Comaneci.
1992: The Original Dream Team
In 1988, the United States, with a team of college players, missed the opportunity to defend the gold won by Michael Jordan in 1984. This annoyed David Stern, the commissioner of the NBA at the time. He spoke with FIBA to allow their stars to participate in the Olympic Games. He succeeded.
By 1992, a team consisting of eleven Hall of Famers and the top college star traveled to Barcelona to reclaim what was rightfully theirs: the gold.
Beyond competing, the real Dream Team showed that the eternal rivalry between now-best friends Larry Bird and Magic Johnson. Combined with the era’s greatest player Michael Jordan and other legendary basketball players. All of this resulted in the pinnacle of popularity and superstar status that the NBA gained. And as accurately stated by Marv Albert during the gold medal ceremony, “The Greatest Team ever assembled in the history of team sports.”
2008-2016: Usain Bolt is the modern Hermes
Hermes was known for being the fastest among the gods of Olympus. There was no one who could compete with him. If we bring this to reality, there was a person who resembled him in the current sport Olympus.
That man was Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt. A sprinter like no other, who managed to surpass the barrier of 9.7 seconds, something that, at least in the Olympic Games, was practically impossible.
As impossible as the record that Canadian Donovan Bailey broke in 1996, being the first to run under 9.9 seconds. But Bolt went much further.
In 2008, Bolt broke the world record with a time of 9.69 seconds. And in 2012, he surpassed himself, leaving an almost impossible Olympic record of 9.63 seconds (5 hundredths less than his own world record of 9.58 seconds set in 2009).
Bolt won eight Olympic medals in his career, all gold, and earned the nickname of the “Modern Hermes” or, in other words, the fastest man on the planet.
2004-2016: Michael Phelps. The King of water… and the metal
Michael Phelps is a man who, through a lot of effort, wrote his story in the Olympic Games in the best possible way.
He dominated the water like no other athlete and, in the process, he dominated the metal, regardless of its color.
This was reflected in Athens 2004, where he won 8 medals, 6 gold, and 2 bronze. But his peak came in 2008 when he competed in eight events and won gold in all eight, breaking Mark Spitz’s record of 7 gold medals set in 1972.
By 2012, Phelps surpassed Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina, who had won a total of 17 medals in gymnastics, after winning 4 gold and 2 silver medals, bringing his medal tally to 22.
To top it off, Phelps had his own “Last Dance” where he won six more medals, 5 gold and one silver, to finish his Olympic career with 28 medals, 23 gold, 3 silver, and 2 bronze.
Phelps, in sporting terms, did whatever he wanted, to the point that there is no doubt in placing him as the absolute King of the water… and the metal.