Gymnastics at the 1904 Summer Olympics – Men's pommel horse

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Men's pommel horse
at the Games of the III Olympiad
Gymnastics (artistic) pictogram.svg
Artistic gymnastics pictogram
Venue Francis Olympic Field
DateOctober 28
Competitors? from ? nations
Winning score42
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Anton Heida
US flag 45 stars.svg  United States
Silver medal icon.svg George Eyser
US flag 45 stars.svg  United States
Bronze medal icon.svg William Merz
US flag 45 stars.svg  United States
  1896
1924  

The men's pommel horse was an artistic gymnastics event held as part of the Gymnastics at the 1904 Summer Olympics programme. It was the second time the event was held at the Olympics. An unknown number of gymnasts competed, only five are known. The competition was held on Friday, October 28, 1904. [1] All known competitors were American. The event was won by Anton Heida, with George Eyser second and William Merz third.

Contents

Background

This was the second appearance of the event, which is one of the five apparatus events held every time there were apparatus events at the Summer Olympics (no apparatus events were held in 1900, 1908, 1912, or 1920). [2]

Competition format

Each gymnast performed three exercises on the horse, all voluntary in design. Three judges each gave scores from 0 to 5 for each exercise; thus, the maximum for an exercise was 15 and the maximum total was 45. [2]

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Friday, 28 October 1904Final

Results

RankGymnastNationScore
Gold medal icon.svg Anton Heida US flag 45 stars.svg  United States 42
Silver medal icon.svg George Eyser US flag 45 stars.svg  United States 33
Bronze medal icon.svg William Merz US flag 45 stars.svg  United States 29
4–5 John Duha US flag 45 stars.svg  United States
Edward Hennig US flag 45 stars.svg  United States

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References

  1. "Gymnastics at the 1904 St. Louis Summer Games: Men's Side Horse". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  2. 1 2 "Side Horse, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 30 November 2020.

Sources