| Marathon
on the Mats
The Olympics have given us many memorable
moments, where spectators and competitors wait with baited breath, and
each second stretches out until it seems like hours. But at the Stockholm
Olympics in 1912, not one, but two Greco-Roman matches would turn into
marathons.
The style of wrestling itself, originated
in the days of the first Olympics, and was resurrected in 1896 as part
of the modern Games. Freestyle, which allows the use of the legs, was added
in 1912, although it was dropped for the Stockholm Games. Whether that
would have affected the mind-numbing siege in the middleweight semi-final,
was a moot point.
Martin Klein for Russian, and Alfred Asikainen
of Finland, grappled for a record 11 hours and 40 minutes, before Klein
managed to pin his opponent. But he was so exhausted by the prolonged bout,
he could not even attempt the final, and the gold medal went by default,
to Claes Johanson of Sweden.
Running a close second for length, with
an even more bizarre outcome, was the heavyweight class. Anders Ahgren
of Sweden, wrestled Ivar Bohling of Finland for nine hours in the final,
before the judges called a halt, not because of concern for the athletes,
but because the panel considered neither one of them superior enough to
be declared the winner. The rules of the sport require that the winner
of a match be of superior skills, and since neither of them qualified,
both were awarded silver medals.
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