The Paris Olympics will be the 33rd summer edition since the first modern Games in Athens in 1896. The Games have never failed to produce acts of bravery and brilliance, as athletes push themselves in the bid for gold.

Spyridon Louis: Greek marathon man

Spyridon Louis, a Greek shepherd who had served in the army, became a national icon when he won the marathon during the first modern Olympics, held in Athens in 1896.

Louis, who was just 24, completed the 40-kilometer race – today’s distance of 42.2 km was not standarized until 1908 – in 2hr 58min 50sec, despite stopping to down a glass of wine halfway through.

Wearing shoes given to him by residents of his village, he finished seven minutes ahead of the field.

Greece’s Crown Prince Constantine and his brother Prince George joined Louis on his ecstatic final lap in the stadium.

Four decades later, Spyros was the flagbearer for the Greek delegation at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.

Charlotte Cooper: deaf tennis champ

British tennis pioneer Charlotte Cooper made history when she became the first woman to win an Olympic event at the Paris Games in 1900.

With her attacking flair and deft touch at the net, Cooper, who took to the court in an ankle-length dress, beat home favorite Helene Prevost to win the singles title.

Her feat was all the more remarkable given she could not hear a racquet hitting a ball, having been diagnosed as deaf four years earlier.

She triumphed at Wimbledon too, winning the singles title five times. With the last of those coming in 1908 when she was 37, Cooper remains the oldest women’s singles Wimbledon champion.

Suzanne Lenglen photographed in the 1930s. AFP/Archives

Paavo Nurmi: ‘the flying Finn’ 

For almost 60 years, the Flying Finns were a force in middle-distance and long-distance running.

The man who symbolized their determination and discipline was Paavo Nurmi, who collected nine golds and three silvers over the three Olympics in the 1920s. Between 1921 and 1931, he set 20 individual world records at distances from 1500 m to 20 km.

Orphaned at 12, Nurmi discovered his love of running during military service.

Nurmi ran all his races to a strict pace, which he monitored with a stopwatch.

He made history at the sweltering 1924 Paris games, becoming the first (and only) track and field athlete to win five golds in one Olympics, including individual titles in the 1500 m and 5 km within two hours of each other. Compatriot Ville Ritola won four golds and two silvers in Paris.

Johnny Weissmuller: from gold to silver screen

Johnny Weissmuller found fame at the 1924 and 1928 Olympics, dominating swimming to win five golds, long before he swung on to the silver screen playing Tarzan.

The Hungarian-born son of German-speaking immigrants to the United Sates, Weissmuller won three of the men’s six golds at Paris in 1924 in the 100 m and 400 m freestyle and 4×200 m freestyle relay, adding bronze in water polo.

Weissmuller, who revolutionized swimming with his head-turning breathing and flutter kick, successfully defended the 100 m and relay titles four years later in Amsterdam.

He went on to make even more of a splash in Hollywood, and starred in a dozen Tarzan films.

American Johnny Weissmuller in Normandy. AFP/Archives

Betty Robinson: back from the dead

The first woman to win the 100 m race at the Olympics and still the youngest champion of the event, Robinson was 16 when she won gold in Amsterdam in 1928.

Her science teacher spotted Robinson’s talent watching her chase after a commuter train.

Robinson turned up to the final with two left shoes, only getting hold of a right shoe with moments to spare.

In 1931, she was pronounced dead after being involved in a plane crash, but was discovered to be alive when she reached the morgue.

The accident left her unable to fully bend her knee, but she made an extraordinary comeback at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, winning the 4×100 m relay, the only race that did not require her to kneel at the start.

With AFP

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