Gymnastics at the 1904 Summer Olympics – Men's artistic individual all-around
Men's artistic individual all-around at the Games of the III Olympiad | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unknown athlete competing on the parallel bars | ||||||||||
Venue | Francis Field | |||||||||
Dates | July 1–2 | |||||||||
Competitors | 119 from 3 nations | |||||||||
Winning score | 69.80 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
- v
- t
- e
The men's artistic individual all-around was an artistic gymnastics event held as part of the gymnastics programme at the 1904 Summer Olympics. It was the second time an all-around event was held at the Olympics. The competition was held on Friday, July 1, 1904 and on Saturday, July 2, 1904. One hundred and nineteen gymnasts from three nations competed.[1] The event was won by Julius Lenhart, an Austrian gymnast living in the United States and competing under the auspices of his Philadelphia-based club.[2] Silver went to Wilhelm Weber of Germany, with bronze to Adolf Spinnler of Switzerland. They were the first medals in the event for each of those nations, as France had swept the medals in 1900.
The scores from this event, with some adjustments, were also used for the men's team event.
Background
This was the second appearance of the men's individual all-around. The first individual all-around competition had been held in 1900, after the 1896 competitions featured only individual apparatus events. A men's individual all-around has been held every Games since 1900. At the time, it was common to include athletics events along with gymnastics competitions in a combined event such as this.[3]
Another combined event was held in 1904, during the later October gymnastics events.
The United States made its debut in the event. Germany and Switzerland each made their second appearance, the only two nations to have competed at both editions of the event to that point.
Competition format
The scores in the all-around were the sum of the results of the athletic triathlon and gymnastics triathlon events. They thus included competition in the 100 yard dash, long jump, shot put, horizontal bar, parallel bars, and horse (both vaulting horse and pommel horse).[3]
For the gymnastics triathlon, each competitor performed a total of 9 routines—3 on each of the three apparatus. Each set of three routines included two compulsory exercises and one optional exercise. For the horse apparatus, there was one compulsory exercise in each of the vaulting horse and pommel horse, with the optional exercise being on the pommel horse. There was a maximum score of 5 points for each exercise, for a total of 15 points in each apparatus and 45 points for the triathlon.[3]
In the athletics triathlon, the three events were the 100 yards, the long jump, and the shot put. There was no maximum score for each event, but rather a "standard" score of 10 and competitors would receive a score above or below 10 based on whether they performed better or worse than the "standard" result. In the 100 yards, the standard was 11.0 seconds, with a .1 point addition or subtraction for every .2 seconds faster or slower. In the long jump, the standard was 18 feet, with a .1 point addition or subtraction for each .1 feet longer or shorter. In the shot put, the standard was 30 feet, with a .1 point addition or subtraction for each .2 feet longer or shorter.[3]
Schedule
Date | Time | Round |
---|---|---|
Friday, 1 July 1904 | Final | |
Saturday, 2 July 1904 | Final, continued |
Results
Rank | Gymnast | Nation | Total |
---|---|---|---|
Julius Lenhart | Austria | 69.80 | |
Wilhelm Weber | Germany | 69.10 | |
Adolf Spinnler | Switzerland | 67.99 | |
4 | Ernst Mohr | Germany | 67.90 |
5 | Otto Wiegand | Germany | 67.82 |
6 | Otto Steffen | United States | 67.03 |
7 | Hugo Peitsch | Germany | 66.66 |
8 | John Bissinger | United States | 66.57 |
9 | Christian Busch | Germany | 66.12 |
10 | William Merz | United States | 65.26 |
11 | Philip Kassel | United States | 64.56 |
12 | Theodore Gross | United States | 64.39 |
13 | Wilhelm Lemke | Germany | 64.15 |
14 | Otto Boehnke | United States | 64.10 |
15 | William Andelfinger | United States | 63.53 |
16 | George Stapf | United States | 63.47 |
17 | Charles Umbs | United States | 63.19 |
18 | Anton Heida | United States | 62.72 |
19 | Adolph Weber | Germany | 62.62 |
20 | Andreas Kempf | United States[4] | 62.57 |
21 | George Mayer | United States | 61.66 |
22 | Fred Schmind | United States | 61.40 |
23 | Andrew Neu | United States | 61.21 |
24 | John Duha | United States | 61.02 |
25 | Reinhard Wagner | United States | 60.73 |
26 | Lorenz Spann | United States | 60.32 |
27 | Emil Rothe | United States | 60.27 |
28 | Ragnvald Berg | United States | 60.24 |
29 | Robert Herrmann | United States | 59.99 |
30 | Emil Beyer | United States | 59.70 |
31 | Max Hess | United States | 59.29 |
32 | Edward Siegler | United States | 59.03 |
33 | Harry Hansen | United States | 59.00 |
34 | Max Wolf | United States | 57.85 |
35 | Frank Ihrcke | United States | 57.47 |
36 | John Dellert | United States | 57.41 |
37 | Charles Sorum | United States | 57.40 |
38 | William Horschke | United States | 57.33 |
39 | Oliver Olsen | United States | 57.27 |
40 | Rudolf Krupitzer | United States | 57.18 |
41 | Gustav Mueller | United States | 57.12 |
42 | Emil Schwegler | United States | 56.87 |
43 | Henry Koeder | United States | 56.58 |
44 | Louis Kniep | United States | 56.57 |
45 | William Traband | United States | 56.26 |
46 | Leander Keim | United States | 56.16 |
47 | Ernst Reckeweg | United States | 56.15 |
48 | Charles Krause | United States | 56.11 |
49 | Jacob Hergenhahn | United States | 55.77 |
50 | Edward Hennig | United States | 55.63 |
51 | Philip Schuster | United States | 55.44 |
52 | John Grieb | United States | 55.21 |
53 | P. Gussmann | United States | 54.92 |
54 | Gustav Hämmerlin | United States | 54.87 |
55 | William Tritschler | United States | 54.73 |
56 | Christian Deubler | United States | 54.63 |
57 | Julian Schmitz | United States | 54.58 |
58 | Otto Niemand | United States | 54.54 |
59 | Robert Maysack | United States | 54.53 |
60 | Emil Voigt | United States | 54.33 |
61 | Anthony Jahnke | United States | 53.94 |
62 | Phillip Sontag | United States | 53.83 |
63 | Oluf Landnes | United States | 53.64 |
64 | George Aschenbrenner | United States | 53.47 |
65 | John Wolf | United States | 53.43 |
66 | Edward Tritschler | United States | 53.16 |
67 | Max Emmerich | United States | 52.85 |
68 | Harry Prinzler | United States | 52.81 |
69 | Frank Raab | United States | 52.39 |
70 | Leo Hunger | United States | 52.22 |
71 | George Eyser | United States | 52.20 |
72 | William Berewald | United States | 51.87 |
73 | George Mastrovich | United States | 51.83 |
Martin Ludwig | United States | 51.83 | |
75 | Max Rascher | United States | 51.53 |
76 | Henry Kraft | United States | 51.40 |
77 | Willard Schrader | United States | 51.22 |
78 | James Dwyer | United States | 51.00 |
79 | George Schroeder | United States | 50.90 |
80 | Bob Reynolds | United States | 50.74 |
81 | Harry Warnken | United States | 50.53 |
82 | Birger Nilsen | United States | 50.45 |
83 | John Laichinger | United States | 50.00 |
84 | Rudolf Schrader | United States | 49.64 |
85 | Michael Lang | United States | 49.44 |
86 | Charles Dellert | United States | 49.35 |
87 | Alvin Kritschmann | United States | 48.97 |
88 | Richard Tritschler | United States | 48.80 |
89 | Arthur Rosenkampff | United States | 48.34 |
90 | Clarence Lidington | United States | 48.30 |
91 | Henry Weyland | United States | 47.94 |
92 | Ben Chimberoff | United States | 47.93 |
93 | K. Woerner | United States | 47.67 |
94 | Curt Roedel | United States | 47.63 |
95 | Maurice Barry | United States | 47.43 |
96 | P. Ritter | United States | 47.09 |
97 | Otto Feyder | United States | 47.05 |
98 | Bernard Berg | United States | 46.73 |
99 | Max Thomas | United States | 45.85 |
100 | Martin Fischer | United States | 45.35 |
101 | Charles Schwartz | United States | 45.34 |
102 | Wilhelm Zabel | United States | 45.13 |
103 | Louis Rathke | United States | 44.93 |
104 | L. Guerner | United States | 44.90 |
105 | William Herzog | United States | 44.60 |
106 | August Placke | United States | 44.41 |
Otto Roesner | United States | 44.41 | |
108 | Paul Stendel | United States | 43.38 |
109 | Arthur Sundbye | United States | 43.21 |
110 | Christian Sperl | United States | 42.66 |
111 | William Kruppinger | United States | 42.50 |
112 | John Wussow | United States | 42.46 |
113 | Walter Real | United States | 42.44 |
114 | John Miesel | United States | 41.97 |
115 | Otto Thomsen | United States | 41.67 |
116 | Edmund Pueschel | United States | 40.36 |
117 | Otto Knerr | United States | 39.87 |
118 | William Friedrich | United States | 39.57 |
119 | Ted Studier | United States | 13.14 |
References
- ^ "Gymnastics at the 1904 St. Louis Summer Games: Men's Individual All-Around". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
- ^ "Julius Lenhart". Olympic.org. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
- ^ a b c d "Individual All-Around, Apparatus Work and Field Sports, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 31 March 2021.
- ^ Kempf was a Swiss citizen living in the United States. The IOC lists his competition as being for the United States. [1]
Sources
- Wudarski, Pawel (1999). "Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich" (in Polish). Retrieved 18 December 2006.