1988 Summer Olympics
{{Olympics infobox |
Name = Games of the XXIV Olympiad |
Logo = 1988 Summer Olympics logo.png |
Size = 200 |
Optional caption = |
Host city =
Seoul,
South Korea |
Nations participating = 159 |
Athletes participating = 8,465 (6,279 men, 2,186 women) |
Events = 263 in 27
sports | Opening ceremony =
September 17,
1988 | Closing ceremony =
October 2,
1988 | Officially opened by =
Roh Taewoo | Athlete's Oath =
Hur Jae | Judge's Oath =
Lee Hakrae | Olympic Torch =
Sohn Kee-chung,
Chung Sunman,
Kim Wontak and
Sohn Mi-Chung | Stadium =
Jamsil Olympic Stadium |The
1988 Summer Olympics, officially known as the
Games of the XXIV Olympiad, were held in
1988 in
Seoul,
South Korea. The host was chosen in the September
1981 vote, ahead of the
Japanese city of
Nagoya.
After boycotts of the Olympics in 1976, 1980 and 1984, the Seoul Games were again boycotted, led by
North Korea and followed by
Cuba; the basis of the boycott was South Korea's refusal to co-host the Olympics with
North Korea, which rejected all compromise. However it was an early, visible triumph of
nordpolitik that no other communist nations boycotted the Games despite being allies of North Korea.
Ethiopia,
Seychelles and
Nicaragua could not afford to send their athletes for economic reasons.
 |
Johnson winning the 100m final |
*
Ben Johnson wins the 100 m in a new world record, but is disqualified after tests positive for
stanozolol.
*
American boxer Roy Jones Jr. loses the gold medal to
South Korean fighter
Park Si Hun in a controversial 3-2 judge's decision, despite clearly dominating the fight. Allegations swirled that Korean officials had fixed the judging.
*
Swimmer Kristin Otto of
East Germany wins six gold medals. Other multi-medalists in the pool are
Matt Biondi (five) and
Janet Evans (three).
*
Anthony Nesty of
Suriname wins his country's first Olympic medal by winning the 100 m butterfly, scoring an upset victory; he is also the first black person to win a swimming title.
*
Soviet Vladimir Artemov wins four gold medals in
gymnastics,
Daniela Silivaş of
Romania wins three.
* US Sprinter
Florence Griffith Joyner wins three gold medals and a silver on the track.
*
Christa Rothenburger becomes the first (and last) athlete to win Olympic medals at the Winter Olympics and Summer Olympics in the same year. She adds a cycling silver to the
speed skating gold she won earlier in the year in
Calgary.
* US diver
Greg Louganis wins back-to-back titles on both diving events, but only after hitting the springboard with his head in the 3-m event final. This became a minor controversy years later when Louganis revealed he knew he was
HIV-positive at the time, and did not tell anybody. Since it is now known that HIV cannot survive in open water, no other divers were ever in danger.
*
Mark Todd wins his second consecutive individual gold medal in the three-day event in equestrian on
Charisma, only the second time in eventing history that a gold medal has been won consecutively.
*
Tennis returns to the Olympics after a 64-year absence, and
Steffi Graf adds to her four
Grand Slam victories in the year by also winning the Olympic title.
*
Table tennis is introduced at the Olympics, with
China and the host nation both winning two titles.
* Two
Bulgarian weightlifters are stripped of their gold medals after failing doping tests, and the team withdraws after this event.
*
Lawrence Lemieux, a Canadian sailor in the
Finn class was in second place and poised to win a silver medal when he abandoned the race to save an injured competitor. Lemieux finished in 22nd place, but received the
Pierre de Coubertin Medal for Sportsmanship.
*
Baseball and
Taekwondo are demonstration sports.
* Women's
Judo was held for the first time.
* The last amateur US men's basketball team fails to win the gold for only the third time in Olympic history.
|
View toward Seoul Olympic Stadium |
*Seoul Sports Park venues
**
Olympic Stadium² - opening/closing ceremonies, athletics, equestrian events, football/soccer finals
**Jamsil Indoor Swimming Pool² - swimming, diving
**Jamsil Gymnasium² - basketball
**Jamsil Students' Gymnasium² - boxing
**
Jamsil Baseball Stadium² - baseball
*
Olympic Park venues
**Olympic Velodrome¹ - cycling
**Olympic Weightlifting Gymnasium¹ - weightlifting
**Olympic Fencing Gymnasium¹ - fencing
**
Olympic Gymnastics Hall¹ - gymnastics
**Olympic Tennis Courts¹ - tennis
**Mongchon Tosong¹ - modern pentathlon
*Other venues in metropolitan Seoul
**Seoul Equestrian Park - equestrian events
**Han River Regatta Course¹ - rowing, canoeing
**Saemaul Sports Hall¹ - volleyball preliminaries
**Hanyang University Gymnasium¹ - volleyball
**Changchung Gymnasium² - judo, taekwondo
**Seoul National University Gymnasium - table tennis, badminton
**Royal Bowling Center² - bowling
**
Dongdaemun Stadium² - football/soccer preliminaries
**Hwarang Archery Field², Nowon-gu - archery
**Taenung International Shooting Range², Taenung - shooting
*Venues outside metropolitan Seoul
**Sangmu Gymnasium¹,
Seongnam - wrestling
**Daejeon Stadium²,
Daejeon - football/soccer preliminaries
**Daegu Stadium²,
Daegu - football/soccer preliminaries
**Busan Stadium²,
Busan - football/soccer preliminaries
**Gwangju Stadium²,
Gwangju - football/soccer preliminaries
**Suwon Gymnasium¹,
Suwon - handball
**Seongnam Stadium²,
Seongnam - hockey
**Busan Yachting Center¹,
Busan - yachting
¹ New facilities constructed in preparation for the Olympic Games. ² Existing facilities modified or refurbished in preparation for the Olympic Games.
See the medal winners, ordered by sport:{
*
Archery*
Athletics*
Basketball*
Boxing*
Canoeing*
Cycling*
Diving*
Equestrianism*
Fencingvalign=top| * Football * Gymnastics * Handball * Hockey * Judo * Modern Pentathlon * Rowing * Shooting * Swimming | valign=top| * Synchronized Swimming * Table tennis * Tennis * Volleyball * Water Polo * Weightlifting * Wrestling * Yachting |