Croquet at the 1900 Summer Olympics – Singles, two balls

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Two ball singles croquet
at the Games of the II Olympiad
Croquet1900.jpg
Croquet at the 1900 Summer Olympics
Venue Bois de Boulogne
DatesJuly 4 and 11
Competitors6 from 1 nation
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Chrétien Waydelich
Flag of France.svg  France
Silver medal icon.svg Maurice Vignerot
Flag of France.svg  France
Bronze medal icon.svg Jacques Sautereau
Flag of France.svg  France

The 1900 Olympic Croquet two-ball singles tournament was held on 4 and 11 July 1900. Eight athletes from France competed. The event was won by Chrétien Waydelich, the only person to earn two singles medals in Olympic croquet (with a bronze in the one-ball competition as well). Silver went to Maurice Vignerot and bronze to Jacques Sautereau.

Background

This was the only appearance of the event at the Olympics; it was one of three croquet competitions in 1900. Croquet was one of the first Olympic sports open to women (with only sailing having female competitors before croquet, due to that sport taking place earlier in 1900), with two of the six players in this event being women. [1]

Competition format

The competition format is unclear. There were two rounds. The first round appears to have been a head-to-head, best-of-three competition. The winners advanced to the second round, as did one of the losers. The second round appears to have been a round-robin with each match being best-of-three.

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Wednesday, 4 July 1900First round
Wednesday, 11 July 1900Final

Results

Round 1

WinnerScoreLoser
Flag of France.svg  Maurice Vignerot  (FRA)2-0
(42-40)
Flag of France.svg  Louise Anne Marie Després  (FRA)
Flag of France.svg  Jacques Sautereau  (FRA)2-0
(41-19)
Flag of France.svg  Al. Blachère  (FRA)
Flag of France.svg  Chrétien Waydelich  (FRA)w/oFlag of France.svg  Jeanne Filleul-Brohy  (FRA)

Final

The second round was conducted as a round-robin.

PosPlayerNationWLCWMVJSAB
Gold medal icon.svg Chrétien Waydelich Flag of France.svg  France 302–1 [lower-alpha 1] 1–0 [lower-alpha 2] 1–0 [lower-alpha 3]
Silver medal icon.svg Maurice Vignerot Flag of France.svg  France 211–2 [lower-alpha 4] 2–1 [lower-alpha 5] 2–0 [lower-alpha 6]
Bronze medal icon.svg Jacques Sautereau Flag of France.svg  France 120–1 [lower-alpha 7] 1–2 [lower-alpha 8] 1–0 [lower-alpha 9]
4 Al. Blachère Flag of France.svg  France 030–1 [lower-alpha 10] 0–2 [lower-alpha 11] 0–1 [lower-alpha 12]
Source: Olympedia
Notes:
  1. 42–41
  2. Games and scores unknown
  3. Games and scores unknown
  4. 41–42
  5. 42–41
  6. Walkover
  7. Games and scores unknown
  8. 41–42
  9. Games and scores unknown
  10. Games and scores unknown
  11. Walkover
  12. Games and scores unknown

Results summary

RankPlayerNation
Gold medal icon.svg Chrétien Waydelich Flag of France.svg  France
Silver medal icon.svg Maurice Vignerot Flag of France.svg  France
Bronze medal icon.svg Jacques Sautereau Flag of France.svg  France
4 Al. Blachère Flag of France.svg  France
5 Louise Anne Marie Després Flag of France.svg  France
Jeanne Filleul-Brohy Flag of France.svg  France

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References

  1. "Singles, Two Balls, Open". Olympedia. Retrieved 29 January 2021.