Search results
Official list of medal winners and results by sport at the Berlin 1936 Olympic Games. Celebrate medal-winning moments by the world's top athletes.
- Berlin 1936 Athletics - Olympic Results by Discipline
triple jump men. Official Athletics results from the Berlin...
- Berlin 1936 Summer Olympics - Athletes, Medals & Results
NOCs: 49 Athletes: 3,963 (331 women, 3,632 men) Events: 129...
- Berlin 1936 Athletics - Olympic Results by Discipline
NOCs: 49 Athletes: 3,963 (331 women, 3,632 men) Events: 129 Volunteers: N/A Media: N/A The Symbol of Fire. These Games saw the introduction of the torch relay based on an idea by Dr Carl Diem. A lit torch was carried from Olympia to the site of the Games through seven countries—Greece, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Austria and Germany: a total journey of more than 3,000 km.
triple jump men. Official Athletics results from the Berlin 1936 Olympics. Full list of gold, silver and bronze medallists as well as photos and videos of medal-winning moments.
42 from 25 countries. Archie Williams had won the 1936 NCAA Championships in 46.1 for a new world record. The final in Berlin was contested by two Americans, two Canadians, and two Britons. Williams led in the final over 200 metres ahead of American Jimmy LuValle.
The 1936 Olympics were a showcase for Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals, the 100, 200, long jump, and on the 4x100 relay. Further, in front the Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime, he shattered their myths of Aryan supremacy.
15 mar 2021 · Berlin 1936 Summer Olympics Results – Medal Stats & Table. Germany won the most medals at the 1936 Olympics with 33 gold medals, 26 silver medals and 30 bronze medals. The United States was in the 2nd position ranked with 24 gold medals, 20 silver medals and 12 bronze medals.
Jesse Owens of the United States won four gold medals in the sprint and long jump events, and became the most successful athlete to compete in Berlin, while Germany was the most successful country overall with 101 medals (38 of them gold); the United States placed a distant second with 57 medals. [9] .