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 OLYMPICS HISTORY
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Owens - took Berlin by storm (Allsport).

OLYMPIC GREATS - JESSE OWENS

By Richard Gibson, PA Sport

One man, five days of competition, four gold medals won.

That equation should have been enough to make any athlete stand out in a crowd of his contemporaries. Yet Jesse Owens' performances in the Berlin Olympics of 1936 were tainted and are remembered for so much more than his endeavours in track and field.

Admittedly Owens was different to most of his rivals - he was black. A 23-year-old American negro had marched into Adolf Hitler's den, a place prepared to showcase Aryan supremacy, and stolen the gold.

Owens was never to take part in an Olympics again. By the end of the Games he was one of the most celebrated men in the world and professionalism had engulfed him, denying his further participation.

Retirement at such a tender age ensured his place in the annals of legend and his snub to Hitler's ideas of German superiority and Nazi organisation proved a political rallying cry ahead of its time.

The German leader attended the Berlin stadium daily, fervently celebrating home winners - and in a blatant show of nationalism inviting them up to his private box to celebrate - but refusing to acknowledge the achievements of those he considered 'animals'.

Owens, of course, among that group, managed to transcend the boundaries maniacally being imposed by Hitler's regime to win over the German people. His performances, not his skin colour, affected the crowd. Huge cheers, much to Hitler's dismay, bellowed forth each time he entered the arena.

Ten other black American athletes won golds to undermine Hitler's views on superiority, but it was the 'Alabama antelope' who left the strongest imprint.

On day one he equalled the 100 metres world record of 10.3 seconds in his heat and charged his way through the quarter and semi-finals.

The winning podium was waiting the following day and Owens obliged, again matching the record.

Day three was a more flurried affair, with the 200m Olympic and world record shattered in the heats prior to the long jump qualification.

Two faults left Owens with one jump to qualify and helped write a fable that would have read like a horror story to Hitler.

Lutz Long, a blond German jumper and the archetypal Aryan, helped his overstepping opponent by placing a handkerchief six inches behind the take-off board.

Owens took off a foot behind the board but landed two feet beyond the qualification mark.

Having qualified for the 200m semi-final in between, Owens returned to the pit and won by producing the first 26-foot jump in Olympic history.

He broke the record again with his final leap - and his mark of 26ft 5ins would not be broken until 1960.

In one day Owens had broken or equalled Olympic records four times and world records twice, a feat which was not unique to this meeting, having set three and equalled one world record in one hour in Michigan a year earlier.

Two events won, two victories and Owens was foiling the Fuhrer. The next day he tore into the lead in the 200m and cruised to gold in 20.7 seconds, yet another world best.

Nobody since the 1900 Olympiad had won three gold medals in track and field. Owens gained a fourth - and another world record - in the 4x100m relay.

Like few others in the sporting sphere - Bradman, Pele, Ali - Owens had a majesty about him.

He was later to write: "The road to the Olympics leads to no city, no country. The road to the Olympics leads, in the end, to the best within us."

Hitler may have regarded Owens as scarcely human. His performances in the 1936 Games suggested he may have been right, but for far different reasons.

History
1996 - Atlanta
1992 - Barcelona
1988 - Seoul
1984 - Los Angeles
1980 - Moscow
1976 - Montreal
1972 - Munich
1968 - Mexico City
1964 - Tokyo
1960 - Rome
1956 - Melbourne
1952 - Helsinki
1948 - London
1936 - Berlin
1932 - Los Angeles
1928 - Amsterdam
1924 - Paris
1920 - Antwerp
1912 - Stockholm
1908 - London
1904 - St Louis
1900 - Paris
1896 - Athens
Olympic Greats
Teofilo Stevenson
Nadia Comaneci
Emil Zatopek
Jesse Owens
Fanny Blankers-Koen
Coe And Ovett
Bob Beamon
Carl Lewis