1976 Summer Olympics

Games of the XXI Olympiad
Montreal 1976 Summer Olympics logo.svg
Host city Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Nations participating 92
Athletes participating 6,028 (4,781 men, 1,247 women)
Events 198 in 21 sports
Opening ceremony July 17
Closing ceremony August 1
Officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II of Canada
Athlete's Oath Pierre St.-Jean
Judge's Oath Maurice Fauget
Olympic Torch Stéphane Préfontaine
Sandra Henderson
Stadium Olympic Stadium

The 1976 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XXI Olympiad, were an international multi-sport event celebrated in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, in 1976. Montreal was awarded the rights to the 1976 Games on May 12, 1970, at the 69th IOC Session in Amsterdam, over the bids of Moscow and Los Angeles, which later hosted the 1980 and 1984 Summer Olympic Games respectively. These Games have been the only Summer Olympics held in Canada.

Contents

Bidding

The vote count results here are compliments of the International Olympic Committee Vote History web page. One blank vote was cast in the second and final round. One factor favoring Montreal was that the IOC did not want the Summer games hosted in a superpower for fears of political backlash, which would be proven later on in the Olympic boycotts of 1980 and 1984.

1976 Summer Olympics Bidding Results
City NOC Name Round 1 Round 2
Montreal  Canada 25 41
Moscow  Soviet Union 28 28
Los Angeles  United States 17 -

Highlights

Venues

The Olympic Village in January 2008.

Montreal Olympic Park

Venues in Greater Montreal

Venues outside Montreal

Medals awarded

Velodrome (foreground) and Olympic Stadium (its tower completed after the Games), Montreal

See the medal winners, ordered by sport:

  • Archery
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Canoeing
  • Cycling
  • Diving
  • Equestrian
  • Fencing
  • Football
  • Gymnastics
  • Handball
  • Hockey
  • Judo
  • Modern pentathlon
  • Rowing
  • Sailing
  • Shooting
  • Swimming
  • Volleyball
  • Water polo
  • Weightlifting
  • Wrestling

Medal count

These are the top ten nations that won medals at these Games. Host country of Canada placed 27th with 11 medals total.

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Soviet Union 49 41 35 125
2 East Germany 40 25 25 90
3 United States 34 35 25 94
4 West Germany 10 12 17 39
5 Japan 9 6 10 25
6 Poland 7 6 13 26
7 Bulgaria 6 9 7 22
8 Cuba 6 4 3 13
9 Romania 4 9 14 27
10 Hungary 4 5 13 22

Participating nations

Participating nations
Number of athletes

Numbers in parentheses indicate the number of athletes from each nation that competed at the Games.

  • Andorra (3)
  • Antigua (9)
  • Argentina (70)
  • Australia (182)
  • Austria (60)
  • Bahamas (10)
  • Barbados (10)
  • Belgium (106)
  • Belize (4)
  • Bermuda (22)
  • Bolivia (4)
  • Brazil (81)
  • Bulgaria (160)
  • Cameroon (4)WD[›]
  • Canada (391)
  • Cayman Islands (4)
  • Chile (7)
  • Colombia (34)
  • Costa Rica (5)
  • Côte d'Ivoire (8)
  • Cuba (150)
  • Czechoslovakia (150)
  • Denmark (69)
  • Dominican Republic (11)
  • Ecuador (5)
  • Egypt (29)WD[›]
  • Fiji (2)
  • Finland (89)
  • France (213)
  • East Germany (274)
  • West Germany (289)
  • Great Britain (249)
  • Greece (37)
  • Guatemala (29)
  • Haiti (12)
  • Honduras (3)
  • Hong Kong (25)
  • Hungary (183)
  • Iceland (14)
  • India (26)
  • Indonesia (7)
  • Iran (84)
  • Ireland (46)
  • Israel (26)
  • Italy (221)
  • Jamaica (20)
  • Japan (215)
  • North Korea (41)
  • South Korea (50)
  • Kuwait (14)
  • Lebanon (4)
  • Liechtenstein (6)
  • Luxembourg (8)
  • Malaysia (23)
  • Mexico (99)
  • Monaco (10)
  • Mongolia (33)
  • Morocco (9)WD[›]
  • Nepal (1)
  • Netherlands (103)
  • Netherlands Antilles (4)
  • New Zealand (84)
  • Nicaragua (14)
  • Norway (68)
  • Pakistan (24)
  • Panama (8)
  • Papua New Guinea (5)
  • Paraguay (6)
  • Peru (13)
  • Philippines (13)
  • Poland (224)
  • Portugal (19)
  • Puerto Rico (81)
  • Romania (157)
  • San Marino (10)
  • Saudi Arabia (19)
  • Senegal (23)
  • Singapore (4)
  • Soviet Union (412)
  • Spain (115)
  • Suriname (3)
  • Sweden (122)
  • Switzerland (54)
  • Thailand (43)
  • Trinidad and Tobago (12)
  • Tunisia (17)WD[›]
  • Turkey (27)
  • United States (403)
  • Uruguay (9)
  • Venezuela (31)
  • Virgin Islands (18)
  • Yugoslavia (90)

^ WD: Athletes from Cameroon, Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia competed on July 18–20 before these nations withdrew from the Games.

Boycotting countries

The following 28 countries boycotted the Games [2]. The boycott was due to the refusal of the IOC to ban New Zealand, after New Zealand's national rugby union team had toured South Africa earlier in 1976[3][4]. South Africa had been banned from the Olympics since 1964 due to its apartheid policies.

Boycotting countries shown in yellow (1976), blue (1980) and orange (1984)

Zaire did not compete, but claimed financial causes rather than political.

Both the Republic of China and the People's Republic of China boycotted the games over issues concerning the legitimacy of each other. In November 1976, the International Olympic Committee recognized the People's Republic of China as the sole legal representative. In 1979, the IOC began referring to the Republic of China as Chinese Taipei as a result of the Nagoya Resolution; this led to the Republic of China boycotting the 1980 Summer Olympics outside of the US-led boycott that year.

Legacy

The Olympics were a financial disaster for Montreal, as the city faced debts for 30 years after the Games had finished. The Quebec provincial government took over construction when it became evident in 1975 that work had fallen far behind schedule; work was still under way just weeks before the opening date, and the tower was not built. Mayor Jean Drapeau had confidently predicted in 1970 that "the Olympics can no more have a deficit than a man can have a baby", but the debt racked up to a billion dollars that the Quebec government mandated the city pay in full. This would prompt cartoonist Aislin to draw a pregnant Drapeau on the telephone saying, "Allo, Morgentaler?" in reference to a Montreal abortionist.

The Olympic Stadium was designed by French architect Roger Taillibert. It is often nicknamed The Big O as a reference to both its name and to the doughnut-shape of the permanent component of the stadium's roof, though The Big Owe has been used to reference the astronomical cost of the stadium and the 1976 Olympics as a whole. It has never had an effective retractable roof, and the tower was completed only after the Olympics. In December 2006 the stadium's costs were finally paid in full.[5] The total expenditure (including repairs, renovations, construction, interest, and inflation) amounted to C$1.61 billion. Today, despite its huge cost, the stadium is devoid of a major tenant, after the Montreal Expos moved in 2005.

The boycott by African nations over the inclusion of New Zealand, whose rugby team had played in South Africa that year, was a contributing factor in the massive protests and civil disobedience that occurred during the 1981 Springbok Tour of New Zealand. Official sporting contacts between South Africa and New Zealand did not occur again until after the fall of apartheid.

Australia's failure to win a gold medal led the country to create the Australian Institute of Sport.

See also

Notes

References

External links

Preceded by
Munich
Summer Olympic Games
Montreal

XXI Olympiad (1976)
Succeeded by
Moscow