On Feb. 28, 1960, the eighth
winter Olympic games close at Squaw Valley in Tahoe, Calif.
The Olympic Rings are still proudly on display at Squaw Valley ski resort in Tahoe, Calif. |
Over 660 athletes from 30 nations participated
at the Olympic Games in Squaw Valley, in 27 events in four sports.
The Soviet Union took home the most medals with
21, and the most Gold medals with seven. They also earned five Silver medals
and nine Bronze medals.
The United States finished second in total
medal count with 10, with three Gold medals, three Silver medals and four
Bronze medals.
The Germans finished tied for the third most
medaling country with Finland, but had the second most Gold medals behind the
Soviet Union as the Germans took home four Gold medals. The Germans would also
earn three Silver medals and one Bronze medal.
Finland also earned eight medals, including two
Gold medals, three Silver medals and three Bronze medals.
The 1960 Winter Olympics were special because
for the first time women were allowed to compete in speed skating. The Soviet
Union had requested the inclusion of women's speed skating events in the
program for the 1956 Games, but the IOC rejected the request.
The issue was revisited for the 1960 Games, and
since women had been competing internationally since 1936 and there was a World
Championship for women's speed skating, the IOC agreed to four events; 500,
1,000, 1,500, and 3,000 meters.
The events were held on the Squaw Valley
Olympic Skating Rink, which was an outdoor skating oval, and featured
artificial ice, a first for the Olympic speed skating competition. Given the
altitude and the artificial ice, the rink was the fastest in the world, as
evidenced by Norwegian
Knut Johannesen’s
world record in the 10,000-meter event. At 15:46.6 he was the first skater ever
to break the 16-minute barrier, and eclipsed the previous world record by
46 seconds.
Despite Johannesen's victory, the Soviets
dominated the speed skating events, winning all but two of the races. Yevgeny Grishin
won both the 500 and 1,500-meter races, though he shared the 1,500 meter
gold medal with Norwegian Roald
Aas.
Lidiya Skoblikova
from the Soviet Union was the other double gold medalist, when she won the
1,500 and 3,000-meter events. Polish
skaters Helena
Pilejczyk and Elwira
Seroczyńska placed second and third in the 1,500-meter event, earning
Poland's only medals of the Games and becoming just the second and third Poles
ever to win Winter Olympic medals.
The ice hockey tournament took
place at Blyth Arena and the Squaw
Valley Olympic Skating Rink. Controversy over the amateur status
of some of the players overshadowed the event. Canadian
Olympic officials began to protest the use of "professional amateurs"
by Eastern Bloc
countries, and especially the Soviet
Union.
They alleged that the Soviets were giving their
elite hockey players phantom jobs in the military that allowed them to play
hockey full-time, which gave Soviet teams an advantage that they used to
dominate Olympic hockey tournaments for nearly 30 years.
This issue started coming to light during the
1960 Games and would culminate in a Canadian boycott of Olympic hockey
tournament at the 1972
Winter Olympics. The team from the United
States won an improbable gold medal, defeating the favored Canadian and
Soviet teams, who took silver and bronze respectively.
This was the first Olympic gold medal in ice
hockey for the United States and it would mark the last time a Soviet team
would not win the Olympic tournament until the United
States victory at
the 1980 Winter
Olympics.