2021 An odd year for an Olympics

In a ground-breaking decision late last year, the International Olympic Committee has announced that break dancing will be an Olympic sport
at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.
A strange choice? Maybe. But any stranger than equestrian sports which were re-introduced as an Olympic sport at the 2nd modern Olympics also held in Paris in 1900.
Equestrian sports such as chariot and ridden races had been part of the ancient Greco Olympics, but disappeared until they were re-introduced in 1900. Initially, only commissioned military officers were allowed to compete and the disciplines were Polo, Grand Prix Jumping, High Jump and Long Jump.
There were no equestrian sports held at the next two Olympics.
Equestrian sports reappeared at the 1912 games in Stockholm under the modern disciplines of dressage, eventing (which was originally a 5-day event and included a 55km endurance race) and showjumping. Showjumping (15 jumps) was also included as part of the pentathlon.
Count Clarence von Rosen, Master of the Horse to the King of Sweden, is credited with introducing the modern format. Civilians were first allowed to compete at the 1952 Games.
Equestrian sports have been part of the Summer Olympics since the 1912 Games. They are the only Olympic sport where men and women compete together on equal footing.

Australia's Wendy Schaeffer is the youngest ever equestrian gold medalist . She was only 21 when she finished as leading rider and won gold as part of the team eventing at the 1996 Atlanta Games. Here seen clearing the water jump on her horse Sunburst.
- Riders used to receive bonus points if they rode with one hand.
- It was once illegal to "cluck" at your horse during a competition. Clucking resulted in instant disqualification.
- At the 1936 Berlin Olympics, a rider fell off his horse during the cross country. It took nearly three hours to catch the horse, with the rider receiving 18000 penalty time points!
- Australia's quarantine laws were so strict that the 1956 Melbourne Olympic equestrian events were held in Stockholm.
- The 1956 Melbourne Olympics held in Stockholm were also the first time Australia competed in equestrian.
- Women were first allowed to compete in equestrian sports at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics but only in dressage as jumping and eventing were considered too dangerous.
- Lis Hartel from Denmark was the first woman to win an Olympic medal for equestrian (silver for dressage) at the 1952 Helsinki Games. All the more remarkable as she was paralysed from the knee down. She won a second silver Olympic dressage medal at the 1956 Games.
- Following a judging scandal at the previous Olympics, it took three days for the Judges to announce the placings in the dressage at the 1960 Rome Games.
- Stroller is the only pony (14.1hh) to compete at the Olympics (Mexico City 1968). He won the individual silver medal in jumping for his British rider. He went on to live until he was 36 years old.
- Australia's Wendy Schaeffer is the youngest ever equestrian gold medalist . She was only 21 when she finished as leading rider and won gold as part of the team eventing at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
- Germany has won the most equestrian gold medals of the modern Olympics with 25, followed by Sweden (17), France (14), The United States (11) and Great Britain (11). Australia is currently running tenth on the table with 6 Golds.
- Randlab is one of the sponsors of Australia's leading Olympic paraquestrian, Ms Emma Booth. Click here to read about Emma and her amazing achievements.







