Equestrian events at the 1936 Summer Olympics

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Equestrian
at the Games of the XI Olympiad
Show jumping at the Olympiastadion
VenueDöberitz
Mayfield, Berlin [de]
Olympiastadion
Dates12–16 August 1936
No. of events6
Competitors127 from 21 nations
← 1932
1948 →

The equestrian events at the 1936 Berlin Summer Olympics included dressage, eventing, and show jumping. All three disciplines had both individual and team competitions. The host country, Germany, had a stellar year, winning both individual and team gold in every equestrian event, as well as individual silver in dressage. The competitions were held from 12 to 16 August 1936. Moderately priced tickets meant huge crowds at all equestrian events, with 15,000–20,000 spectators at any time during the dressage competition, 60,000 on the endurance day of eventing, and 120,000 for the Nations Cup in jumping.[1]

There were 127 riders total (133 entries) from 21 nations (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, and the United States). Seven countries (Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the USA) fielded 3-person teams for all three disciplines. Of those 127 riders, only two were civilians: a Dutch eventer and a jumper rider from Norway. The majority of horses were German (24/133) or French-bred (23/133), with 25 coming that were either British or Irish-bred (it is thought 17 from Ireland and 8 Britain), 8/133 US-bred (all on the US team, in addition to one French-bred horse), and the Japanese riders using 2 Japanese, 2 Australian, 1 British and 1 French-bred horse.

Disciplines

Jumping

54 riders from 18 nations competed in the jumping competition, with only 38 riders finishing the first round. Course designer August Andreae built a 1050 meter long course of 13 fences/20 jumping efforts at 1.30–1.60 meters in height. It included one double and three triple combinations and a 5-meter water jump. The jump-off course raised many fences, widened the water to 5.50 meters, and altered some of the distances between fences. Germany won its fifth equestrian gold medal in the Nations Cup. The individual medal placements required two jump-offs: the first to decide gold and silver between 2 riders who had only 1 knockdown up to that point. The second to determine bronze between 3 riders with 2 knock downs each.

Dressage

The dressage competition had 29 riders from 11 nations, with the youngest rider, Heinz Pollay (age 28) winning individual gold. The 17-minute test had 22 movements, and was fought out between the Germans and the French, each with their own views of correct training. Both the individual gold and individual silver medal horses, Kronos and Absinth respectively, were originally trained by Otto Lörke. The youngest horse was 7-year-old Revue, and 5 of the horses competing, including the gold-medal winner Kronos, were only 8 years of age. There were also older horses competing, including 18-year-old Csintalan.

Eventing

50 riders from 19 nations contested the eventing competition, but only 4 of the 14 nations fielding a team would finish, most with incredibly high scores. Germany won both individual and team gold medals, and there is some speculation as to whether, as the home nation, they knew some of the pitfalls of the cross-country course that the other teams did not. Three obstacles on the August Andreae-designed course would have been removed under today's standards of competition, especially after the heavy rain that fell the day before Endurance. Germany won with 676 points, Poland finishing second with 991 points. Britain finished third with 9,195 points, after one of their riders fell on cross-country and his horse had to be caught (the penalty clock continued to run, and with no time limit, the team just continued to rack up penalty points). Czechoslovakia finished fourth with 18,952 points, after Capt Kawecki fell (breaking 2 ribs) and loose his horse that had to be caught, while Otomar Bureš took nearly 3 hours to complete the course, resulting in him accruing 18130.70 penalty points.[2]

The dressage test was 13 minutes in length. The 36 km endurance course included a 7 km Roads and Tracks (Phase A) to be completed in 29 min 10 sec, followed by a 12-obstacle, 4 km steeplechase (6 min 40 sec optimum time), then Phase C (15 km Roads and Tracks in 62 min, 30 sec). The cross-country (Phase D) was an 8 km, 35-obstacle course with an optimum time of 17 min and 46 seconds. Phase E was a 2 km gallop in 6 minutes. The jumping phase had obstacles with a maximum height of 1.15 meters, width of 1.50 meters, and a water jump 3.5 meters wide.

Controversy

The 1936 Olympics produced controversial results, with the Germans winning all 6 gold medals, the only time in Olympic history where one team has made a clean sweep. One incident occurred on the cross-country course in the eventing competition, where the 4th fence, a 3 ft post-and-rail dropping into a pond, produced a great number of falls. The landing was much deeper than anticipated and the footing underneath did not hold up well.

It should also be of note that future Lieutenant colonel and 1932 Olympic gold medal holder Takeichi Nishi participated in this event as well but Nishi fell off his horse, Uranus, mid-course. There is speculation this was intentional and done for the benefit of host country Nazi Germany, with whom Japan would sign the 1940 Tripartite Pact, forming the Axis powers. Lt.Col. Nishi would go on to command a tank regiment in the Battle of Iwo Jima. Uranus remained alive throughout the war, but his fate is unknown.[3]

Medal summary

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Individual dressage
details
 Heinz Pollay
on Kronos (GER)
 Friedrich Gerhard
on Absinth (GER)
 Alois Podhajsky
on Nero (AUT)
Team dressage
details
 Germany (GER)
Heinz Pollay
on Kronos
Friedrich Gerhard
on Absinth
Hermann von Oppeln-Bronikowski
on Gimpel
 France (FRA)
André Jousseaume
on Favorite
Gérard de Ballorre
on Debaucheur
Daniel Gillois
on Nicolas
 Sweden (SWE)
Gregor Adlercreutz
on Teresina
Sven Colliander
on Kål XX
Folke Sandström
on Pergola
Individual eventing
details
 Ludwig Stubbendorf
on Nurmi (GER)
 Earl Foster Thomson
on Jenny Camp (USA)
 Hans Lunding
on Jason (DEN)
Team eventing
details
 Germany (GER)
Ludwig Stubbendorf
on Nurmi
Rudolf Lippert
on Fasan
Konrad Freiherr von Wangenheim
on Kurfürst
 Poland (POL)
Henryk Roycewicz
on Arlekin III
Zdzisław Kawecki
on Bambino
Seweryn Kulesza
on Tóska
 Great Britain (GBR)
Alec Scott
on Bob Clive
Edward Howard-Vyse
on Blue Steel
Richard Fanshawe
on Bowie Knife
Individual jumping
details
 Kurt Hasse
and Tora (GER)
 Henri Rang
and Delfis (ROU)
 József von Platthy
and Sellő (HUN)
Team jumping
details
 Germany (GER)
Kurt Hasse
and Tora
Marten von Barnekow
and Nordland
Heinz Brandt
and Alchimist
 Netherlands (NED)
Johan Greter
and Ernica
Jan de Bruine
and Trixie
Henri van Schaik
and Santa Bell
 Portugal (POR)
José Beltrão
and Biscuit
Domingos de Sousa
and Merle Blanc
Luís Mena e Silva
and Fossette

Participating nations

A total of 127 horse riders from 21 nations competed at the Berlin Games:

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany (GER)6107
2 France (FRA)0101
 Netherlands (NED)0101
 Poland (POL)0101
 Romania (ROU)0101
 United States (USA)0101
7 Austria (AUT)0011
 Denmark (DEN)0011
 Great Britain (GBR)0011
 Hungary (HUN)0011
 Portugal (POR)0011
 Sweden (SWE)0011
Totals (12 entries)66618

Officials

Appointment of officials was as follows:[4]

Dressage
Jumping
Eventing

References

  1. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Equestrianism at the 1936 Berlin Summer Games". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  2. ^ Wallechinsky, David (1984). The Complete Book of the Olympics. England: Penguin Books. p. 220. ISBN 0140066322.
  3. ^ Ōno Kaoru, オリンポスの使徒「バロン西伝説はなぜ生れたか」 (Disciple of Olympus: Why was the legend of Baron Nishi born?), Bungei Shunju, 1984, ASIN B000J74FDC
  4. ^ "Olympic Games 1936 | FEI.org".

Further reading