Peru_at_the_1936_Summer_Olympics

Peru at the 1936 Summer Olympics

Peru at the 1936 Summer Olympics

Sporting event delegation


Peru competed in the Summer Olympic Games for the first time at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin,[2] Germany. 40 competitors, all men, took part in 16 events in 8 sports.[3] Peru's participation in the Olympic Games forced the authorities to suspend the Peruvian football league for 1936.

Quick Facts Peru at the 1936 Summer Olympics, IOC code ...

Football controversy

1936 Berlin Summer Olympics team. Front: Adelfo Magallanes, Jorge Alcalde, Teodoro Fernández, José Morales, and Alejandro Villanueva. Back: Carlos Tovar, Víctor Guarderas Lavalle, Juan Valdivieso, Arturo Fernández, Segundo Castillo, and Orestes Jordán.

Austria played Peru in an astonishing game leading to a huge political row.

Time Magazine reported: In Lima President Oscar Benavides of Peru last week addressed an angry crowd: "I have just received cables from Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Mexico supporting the Peruvian attitude against the crafty Berlin decision." The crowd, which had already torn an Olympic flag, gathered to listen to more speeches at the Plaza San Martin. Later it threw stones to the German Consulate's windows until police arrived in trucks. At Callao, Lima's seaport, workmen on the docks refused to load two German vessels.

The "crafty Berlin decision" concerned a soccer game on the fortnight in which the Peruvians overturned a 2-goal deficit against Austria to take the tie into extra-time and win the match 4-2, with a goal scored in the last minute of extra-time. After the game, Austria argued that Peruvian players had manhandled them, and that spectators, one of them brandishing a revolver, had swarmed down on the field. FIFA ordered the game replayed behind closed doors, so Peru's whole Olympic team of 40 promptly withdrew from the Games in protest; the game was awarded to Austria by default.[4] Said Miguel Dasso of the Peruvian Olympic Committee: "We've no faith in European athletics. We have come here and found a bunch of merchants."

Athletics

More information Athlete, Events ...

Basketball

Roster:

Miguel Godoy, Luis Jacob, Roberto Rospigliosi, Koko Cárdenas, Fernando Ruiz, "Canon" Ore, Jose Carlos Godoy, Armando Rossi, Rolando Bacigalupo, Manuel Fiestas, Willy Dasso, Antuco Flecha (Coach: Pedro Vera)

First Round

August 7
5:00 pm
Peru Peru 3522 Egypt Egypt
Tennis Stadium, Berlin
Referees: T. Suvoong (China)

Second Round

August 9
5:00 pm
Peru Peru 2921 Taiwan China
Tennis Stadium, Berlin
Referees: V. Ugolini (Italy)

Third Round

Peru was awarded a bye to the next round.


Fourth Round

Poland won by walkover and was awarded 2 points.


Fifth Place Match

Uruguay won by walkover and was awarded 2 points.

Cycling

Road

Team

Peru finished without a time during the team road race.

Men
More information Rider, Event ...

Times were not recorded for any of the four competing athletes because they finished after the 16th place.

Track

Sprints
More information Athlete, Event ...

Diving

Men'
More information Athlete, Events ...

Football

First Round
More information 7–3, Finland ...
Attendance: 2.500
Referee: Rinaldo Barlassina (ITA)

Quarter finals
More information 4–2 (a.e.t.), Austria ...
Attendance: 5.000
Referee: Thoralf Kristiansen (NOR)

Due to a pitch invasion, the match was declared null and void, and ordered to be replayed on August 10. Peru objected to the replay decision and withdrew from the tournament.


Replay

More information Walkover, Austria ...
Attendance: 0
Referee: Rinaldo Barlassina (ITA)

Modern pentathlon

One male pentathlete represented Peru in 1936.

Men
More information Athlete, Shooting (10 m air pistol) ...

Shooting

Men

Rifle[5]

More information Athlete, Event ...

Swimming

More information Athlete, Event ...

References

  1. "Víctor Flores". olympedia.org. Retrieved 5 January 2024.
  2. "1936 Berlin Summer Games Report" (PDF). la84foundation.org. Retrieved 2012-07-24.
  3. "Peru at the 1936 Berlin Summer Games". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 2020-04-17. Retrieved 2012-07-12.
  4. "Berlin, 1936". FIFA. Archived from the original on October 1, 2007. Retrieved 2012-07-12.
  5. "1936 Official Report" (PDF). IOC. 1937. Retrieved July 31, 2012.

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