24 days to Rio: Fencing turns to duelling in Paris

By The Roar / Editor

With 24 days until the Opening Ceremony in Rio, we’ll look back at the 1924 Games, when the fencing competition morphed into something much more sinister.

The Olympics aren’t exactly immune to controversy, but this little bit of infamy takes it to a whole new level.

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After four Italians were drawn against each other in the individual men’s sabre in Paris, their top fencer, Oreste Puliti, emerged after comfortably defeating his countrymen. However, the Jury of Appeal ruled the other three had tanked their matches to allow Puliti an easier path to the gold.

That hardly sat well with Puliti, who threatened to cane lead judge György Kovács. Kovács and the jury responded by having Puliti disqualified.

After the event had been decided – Sandor Posta of Hungary claimed gold – Puliti saw Kovács and unleashed another tongue-lashing at the judge. After Kovács tried to end the situation by claiming he couldn’t understand Italian, Puliti punched him in the face, saying perhaps he understood that.

A duel was the only natural way to settle the feud.

A couple of months later that duel ensued and, after an hour of combat, Puliti and Kovács were separated by spectators who were worried about the number of wounds both had suffered.

Finally coming to their senses – a series of potentially fatal cuts would have that effect – both men shook hands to put the matter to bed.

Puliti was subsequently barred from Olympic competition, although the ban was later overturned and the Italian won two team medals – a gold and a silver – at the following Games.

Be sure to follow The Roar as we look back on some of the most memorable moments in Olympic history – be they weird and wacky or brilliant and significant – and count down the days until the Rio Olympics opening ceremony.

The Roar’s countdown to the Rio Olympics

50 days to go: Australia’s first Olympian, Edwin Flack
49 days to go: Brazil capitulate at the 2012 Olympics
48 days to go: Blood in the water during the 1956 Melbourne Olympics
47 days to go: Daniel Carroll, the man who won rugby gold with Australia and America
46 days to go: Margaret Abbott – the golfer who didn’t know she had won gold
45 days to go: Where did all the amateurs go?
44 days to go: Australia’s oarsome foursome
43 days to go: When Korea stood as one
42 Days to go: Oscar Swahn, the oldest Olympian
41 days to go: Edith Bosch – the Olympian not known for her medals
40 days to go: Jane Saville’s heartbreaking Sydney Olympics
39 days to go: Herb Elliot dominates in Rome 1960
38 days to go: Teofilo Stevenson, the boxer who might have beaten Ali
37 days to go: Betty Cuthbert steals the show in Melbourne
36 days to go: Jesse Owens’ heroic performance in Berlin
35 days to go: Eric the Eel steals Sydney’s heart
34 days to go: What happened to Cassius Clay’s gold medal?
33 days to go: Australia’s equestrian brilliance at Barcelona
32 days to go: The Olympic sports which are no longer with us
31 days to go: Debbie Flintoff-King wins on the line
30 days to go: The dominance of basketball’s Dream Team
29 days to go: Nadia Comenaci scores gymnastics’ first-ever perfect score
28 days to go: The man who stopped for a duck
27 days to go: The upset of the Sydney Olympics
26 days to go: Murray Rose’s scintilating Melbourne performance
25 days to go: Greg Louganis’ heroic comeback win
24 days to go: Fencing turns to duelling in Paris
23 days to go: Dawn Fraser’s flag-stealing shenanigans
22 days to go: The most prolific Olympic competitor
21 days to go: Duncan Armstrong’s underdog win in Seoul
20 days to go: Johnny Weissmuller: A brilliant swimmer and Hollywood actor
19 days to go: Majorie Jackson – the Lithgow Flash
18 days to go: Larisa Latynina, the most successful female Olympian
17 days to go: Dimitrios Loundras, the child who won an Olympic medal
16 days to go: Roy Jones Jr is robbed of an Olympic gold
15 days to go: Shane Gould’s superstar performance in Munich
14 days to go: The Kookaburras finally fly to the top of the world
13 days to go: Matthew Mitcham’s historic dive
12 days to go: Even Olympians are prone to the odd fail
11 days to go: Abebe Bikila wins the Olympic marathon running in bare feet
10 days to go: Track cycling’s greatest rivalry
9 days to go: Kieran Perkins’ gold medal from lane eight
8 days to go: Sally Pearson’s awesome run in London
7 days to go: Mark Spitz’ perfect seven gold medals in ’72
6 days to go: Usain Bolt torches the field in Beijing
5 days to go: Michael Klim and Ian Thorpe help smash America’s 4x100m world record like a guitar
4 days to go: Tommie Smith and John Carlos’ defiant black power salute
3 days to go: Michael Phelps – the best to ever grace the Olympics
2 days to go: Cathy Freeman delivers with the weight of a country on her back
1 day to go: Ian Thorpe – Australia’s finest Olympian

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-23T22:21:13+00:00

George Masin

Guest


That was one of two duels that were the result of the 1924 fencing events. When the French and Italian teams met in the final pool of the Men's Foil Team competition at the 1924 Olympics, it was assumed that the winner would go on to take the gold medal. With France having a 3-1 lead, the score reached 4-4 in the fifth bout. The jury awarded the decisive and questionable touch to the Frenchman. The Italian was incensed and launched a verbal attack against the Hungarian judge, who asked the Italian-born Hungarian fencing master Italo Santelli what the fencer had said. When Italo gave an accurate translation, the judge demanded an apology. The Italian fencer denied everything and the Italian team withdrew in protest, forfeiting their remaining matches. Later the Italian team issued a statement that accused Santelli of testifying against them because he feared that the Italians would defeat the Hungarian team that he coached. Adolfo Contronei, an Italian sabre fencer, challenged Santelli, who was 58 years old, to a real duel. Santelli's 27-year-old son, Giorgio, invoked the code duello and demanded that he fight in his father's place. Government permission was obtained to fight the duel and on August 28, near the small town of Abbazia (now Opatija, Croatia), the younger Santelli and Contronei met and fought with heavy sabres. After two minutes, Santelli slashed Contronei deeply on the side of the head, drawing blood and halting the duel. Georgio Santelli moved to the United States later that year and was the coach of every U.S. Olympic fencing team from 1928 through 1952.

2016-07-13T05:55:31+00:00

OJP

Guest


I demand satisfaction!

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