Men's heavyweight Greco-Roman wrestling at the Games of the V Olympiad | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Stockholm Olympic Stadium | ||||||||||||
Dates | July 7–14 | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 17 from 9 nations | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Wrestling at the 1912 Summer Olympics | |
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Greco-Roman | |
Featherweight | men |
Lightweight | men |
Middleweight | men |
Light heavy | men |
Heavyweight | men |
The Greco-Roman heavyweight competition at the 1912 Summer Olympics was part of the wrestling programme.
The competition used a form of double-elimination tournament. Rather than using the brackets that are now standard for double-elimination contests (and which assure that each match is between two competitors with the same number of losses), each wrestler drew a number. Each man would face off against the wrestler with the next number, provided he had not already faced that wrestler and that the wrestler was not from the same nation as him (unless this was necessary to avoid byes).
When only three wrestlers remain (the medalists), the double-elimination halts and a special final round is used to determine the order of the medals.
Heavyweight was the heaviest category, including wrestlers weighing over 82.5 kilograms (181.9 lb). [1]
17 wrestlers began the competition.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
0 | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | David Karlsson (SWE) | 1 |
0 | Kalle Viljamaa (FIN) | Jean Hauptmanns (GER) | 1 |
0 | Johan Olin (FIN) | Raoul Paoli (FRA) | 1 |
0 | Gustaf Lindstrand (SWE) | Laurent Gerstmans (BEL) | 1 |
0 | Barend Bonneveld (NED) | Emil Backenius (FIN) | 1 |
0 | Jakob Neser (GER) | Nikolajs Fārnasts (RUS) | 1 |
0 | Søren Jensen (DEN) | Edward Barrett (GBR) | 1 |
0 | Adolf Lindfors (FIN) | Alrik Sandberg (SWE) | 1 |
0 | Gustaf Pelander (FIN) | Bye | — |
17 wrestlers started the second round, 9 with no losses and 8 with one. Pelander, who had had a bye in the first round, wrestled twice in the second.
6 wrestlers were eliminated, the most possible given that 3 of the 9 matches were between two undefeated wrestlers. 2 survived potential elimination by eliminating another wrestler. 3 received their first loss, while 6 remained undefeated.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
0 | Gustaf Pelander (FIN) | David Karlsson (SWE) | 2 |
0 | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Jean Hauptmanns (GER) | 2 |
0 | Kalle Viljaama (FIN) | Raoul Paoli (FRA) | 2 |
0 | Johan Olin (FIN) | Gustaf Lindstrand (SWE) | 1 |
1 | Emil Backenius (FIN) | Laurent Gerstmans (BEL) | 2 |
0 | Jakob Neser (GER) | Barend Bonneveld (NED) | 1 |
1 | Edward Barrett (GBR) | Nikolajs Farnest (RUS) | 2 |
0 | Søren Jensen (DEN) | Adolf Lindfors (FIN) | 1 |
0 | Gustaf Pelander (FIN) | Alrik Sandberg (SWE) | 2 |
11 wrestlers started the third round, 6 with no losses and 5 with one.
3 wrestlers were eliminated, the most possible given that 2 of the 5 matches were between two undefeated wrestlers. 2 survived potential elimination, 1 by eliminating another wrestler and 1 via a bye. 2 received their first loss, while 4 remained undefeated.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
0 | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Gustaf Lindstrand (SWE) | 2 |
0 | Kalle Viljaama (FIN) | Barend Bonneveld (NED) | 2 |
0 | Johan Olin (FIN) | Jakob Neser (GER) | 1 |
1 | Emil Backenius (FIN) | Edward Barrett (GBR) | 2 |
0 | Søren Jensen (DEN) | Gustaf Pelander (FIN) | 1 |
1 | Adolf Lindfors (FIN) | Bye | — |
8 wrestlers started the fourth round, 4 with no losses and 4 with one.
The matches in this round were all symmetrical in terms of number of losses by the wrestlers involved. Two involved a pair of wrestlers with one loss each, with the other two being contested by the four undefeated wrestlers. This led to two men being eliminated, two surviving potential elimination, two receiving their first loss, and two remaining undefeated.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jakob Neser (GER) | Adolf Lindfors (FIN) | 2 |
0 | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Søren Jensen (DEN) | 1 |
0 | Kalle Viljaama (FIN) | Johan Olin (FIN) | 1 |
1 | Emil Backenius (FIN) | Gustaf Pelander (FIN) | 2 |
6 wrestlers started the fifth round, 2 with no losses and 4 with one.
In what could have been the last elimination round, the two undefeated wrestlers each faced off against a man with one loss. Olin's survival of his potential elimination by defeating Saarela was the first instance of a man with one loss defeating an undefeated wrestler in the event; it was followed closely by Neser's defeat of Viljaama. Each of those four men advanced to the sixth round along with Jensen, who had won the only certain loser-out match of the round against Backenius.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Johan Olin (FIN) | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | 1 |
1 | Jakob Neser (GER) | Kalle Viljaama (FIN) | 1 |
1 | Søren Jensen (DEN) | Emil Backenius (FIN) | 2 |
5 wrestlers started the fourth round, all with one loss.
With only five men left, and all having a loss, the sixth round would have consisted of two matches that were both sure to be loser-out. Viljaama, however, withdrew after having suffered his first loss. This left only one match in the sixth round, and Olin and Jensen had the byes. Neser faced Saarela; the German was unable to survive elimination a second time in a row and fell to the Finn.
Losses | Winner | Loser | Losses |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Jakob Neser (GER) | 2 |
1 | Johan Olin (FIN) | Bye | — |
1 | Søren Jensen (DEN) | Bye | — |
With three wrestlers remaining, all of the previous results were ignored for the final round.
Match | Winner | Loser | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
A | To C | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Søren Jensen (DEN) | To B |
B | To C | Johan Olin (FIN) | Søren Jensen (DEN) | |
C | Yrjö Saarela (FIN) | Johan Olin (FIN) |
Finland competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden. The Grand Duchy of Finland was ruled by the Russian Empire at the time, but Finland's results are kept separate from those of Russia due to Finland's special status. In the Opening Ceremony Finland's team paraded under the national insignia flag of a Swedish-speaking female gymnastics club in Helsinki. 164 competitors, 162 men and 2 women, took part in 49 events in 10 sports.
Denmark competed at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden. 152 competitors, 151 men and 1 woman, took part in 46 events in 13 sports.
Denmark competed at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, Netherlands. 91 competitors took part in 55 events in 14 sports.
Yrjö Erik Mikael Saarela was a Finnish wrestler, who won an Olympic gold and a world championship.
The Greco-Roman featherweight competition at the 1912 Summer Olympics was part of the wrestling programme.
The Greco-Roman lightweight competition at the 1912 Summer Olympics was part of the wrestling programme.
The Greco-Roman middleweight competition at the 1912 Summer Olympics was part of the wrestling programme.
The Greco-Roman light heavyweight competition at the 1912 Summer Olympics was part of the wrestling programme.
The men's Greco-Roman bantamweight was a Greco-Roman wrestling event held as part of the Wrestling at the 1924 Summer Olympics programme. It was the first appearance of the event. Bantamweight was the lightest category, including wrestlers weighing up to 58 kilograms.
The men's Greco-Roman heavyweight was a Greco-Roman wrestling event held as part of the Wrestling at the 1924 Summer Olympics programme. It was the third appearance of the event. Heavyweight was the heaviest category, including wrestlers weighing over 82.5 kilograms.
The men's Greco-Roman bantamweight was one of 13 wrestling events held as part of the wrestling at the 1928 Summer Olympics programme. It was the second appearance of the event. The competition was held from August 2 to 4, and featured 19 wrestlers from 19 nations. Bantamweight was the lightest category, including wrestlers weighing up to 58 kilograms (128 lb).
The men's Greco-Roman light heavyweight was one of thirteen wrestling events held as part of the wrestling at the 1928 Summer Olympics programme. The competition was held from August 2 to 5, and featured 17 wrestlers from 17 nations. Light heavyweight was the second heaviest category, including wrestlers weighing 75 to 82.5 kilograms.
The men's Greco-Roman heavyweight was one of thirteen wrestling events held as part of the wrestling at the 1928 Summer Olympics programme. The competition was held from August 2 to 5, and featured 15 wrestlers from 15 nations. Heavyweight was the heaviest category, including wrestlers weighing over 82.5 kilograms (181.9 lb).
The men's Greco-Roman featherweight competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin took place from 6 August to 9 August at the Deutschlandhalle. Nations were limited to one competitor. This weight class was limited to wrestlers weighing up to 61 kg.
The men's Greco-Roman light heavyweight competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin took place from 6 August to 9 August at the Deutschlandhalle. Nations were limited to one competitor. This weight class was limited to wrestlers weighing up to 87kg.
The men's freestyle lightweight competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin took place from 2 August to 4 August at the Deutschlandhalle. Nations were limited to one competitor. This weight class was limited to wrestlers weighing up to 66kg.
The men's freestyle welterweight competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin took place from 2 August to 4 August at the Deutschlandhalle. Nations were limited to one competitor. This weight class was limited to wrestlers weighing up to 72kg.
The men's freestyle heavyweight competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin took place from 3 August to 4 August at the Deutschlandhalle. Nations were limited to one competitor. This weight class allowed wrestlers over 87kg.
The men's freestyle light heavyweight competition at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London took place from 29 July to 31 July at the Empress Hall, Earls Court Exhibition Centre. Nations were limited to one competitor.
The men's Greco-Roman heavyweight competition at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo took place from 16 to 19 October at the Komazawa Gymnasium. Nations were limited to one competitor.
General