No experience can compare to my first Olympics, the 1952 Helsinki Games. I had graduated from New Rochelle High School a month earlier and was hungry to see the world while following my favorite track and field athletes.       

My vivid memories of the events in Helsinki were aided by a journal I kept and by videos from the Olympic filmmaker Bud Greenspan. My friend Steve Goddard and I booked passage (12 days!) on a tramp steamer for $95. In Helsinki, Steve and I stayed with a local family that charged $2 each a night for a comfortable room, breakfast and any other meals we happened to show up for.       

At the opening ceremony, I found myself among the 70,000 spectators on a rainy, chilly day in July. I remember the parade of athletes, nation by nation, walking into the stadium, circling the track, and taking their places on the infield. This was followed by a 21-gun salute, and our breathless anticipation to see who would light the Olympic flame. When Paavo Nurmi, the Flying Finn, who dominated distance running in the 1920s, came striding into the stadium, holding the flame aloft, the crowd erupted in wild appreciation. The athletes on the infield crowded to the track’s edge to get a better look, with one exception: the Soviet Union’s contingent. Dressed in white suits with red ties and scarves, the Soviet athletes stood stiffly at attention. At the height of the cold war, they presented a stark image that served to highlight their differences with the rest of the world. 

Photo: Emil Zatopek, right, in 1979 with Bill Rodgers and the New York Road Runners Chariman Geroge Hirsch  

In high school, I ran the quarter-mile, 440 yards, so I was looking forward to seeing the sprints and middle distances. My attention shifted after the first day of track and field competition, as it became clear that a mesmerizing distance runner named Emil Zatopek was the one to watch.       

A Czech army major, Zatopek ran with a bobbing head, flailing shoulders and a contorted face. His style didn’t stop him from breaking his Olympic record in the 10,000 meters.       

Between days at the track, I walked the streets of Helsinki, eager to meet people and soak up the local culture. To my surprise, I was often stopped and asked for my autograph. Frankly, I didn’t mind being mistaken for an Olympic athlete, but I thought I should explain that I was just an American visitor. But many visitors understood little or no English. Soon I changed tactics, and began signing my name with crossed swords below to indicate that I was a fencer.       

One day I walked to the Olympic Village, where I was waved in by a smiling guard who was unconcerned about my lack of credentials. I chatted freely with athletes in their dining hall, and joined some of them on the official bus back to the stadium, three miles away. No questions asked. The massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Games lay 20 years ahead.  

Comments and Feedback
run Emil Zatopek won the 5,000, 10,000 and marathon at the 1952 Olympic Games. He was the first runner to run under 29 minutes for the 10k. He won 38 consecutive 10,000 meter races. George Hirsch wrote this article about Emil Zatopek and that Olympic Games for the New York Times recently. He wanted to share it with us. Thanks George. Really enjoyed reading this...
Bob Anderson 6/29/12 11:37 pm