Figure skating at the 1952 Winter Olympics – Men's singles

The men's figure skating competition at the 1952 Winter Olympics took place on 19 and 21 February at Jordal Amfi and Bislett stadion.[1] The compulsory figures were held at Jordal Amfi, while the Free skating was contested at Bislett stadion. The ice surface at Bislett was set inside the oval created by the speed skating track. It was also an outdoor arena, which was used for the opening and closing ceremonies.[2] There were no issues with the weather and the skating surface at Bislett was immaculate.[3] Computers were used for the first time during the figure skating competitions to help tabulate the judges' marks and relay the results instantaneously.[4]

Men's singles
at the VI Olympic Winter Games
VenuesJordal Amfi (compulsory figures)
Bislett Stadion (free skate)
Dates19-21 February
Competitors14 from 11 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Dick Button
 United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Hellmut Seibt
 Austria
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)James Grogan
 United States
← 1948
1956 →

17-year-old American Dick Button was the dominant force in men's international skating, having won the Olympic title in 1948, and the World Championships in 1948, 1949, 1950 and 1951.[5] Only three men had come close to challenging him in the years since his first Olympic victory, teammates Hayes Jenkins and James Grogan, and Austrian Helmut Seibt, who had won the European Championships in 1951 and 1952.[5] Button took a strong lead after the compulsory figures and just needed to skate safely in the free skating to earn his second gold medal.[4][6] Instead he chose to perform the triple loop, which was the first triple jump ever performed in international competition.[4] He executed the jump without error and finished his skate cleanly, he was awarded perfect marks by the judges and won his second Olympic gold medal.[4][5]

The battle for second place was much closer and hotly contested between Hellmut Seibt and James Grogan. Seibt did well in the compulsories but faltered in the free skating. Grogan was third after the compulsories but could not overtake Seibt in the free skating. The final marks placed Seibt in second place by one-tenth of a point, the closest possible margin.[5] Hayes Jenkins placed fourth and went on to win the gold medal at the 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.[7] One week later Button, Grogan and Jenkins swept the World Championships.[5] For Dick Button it was his fifth consecutive world title, and it also marked the end of his competitive skating career.[8]

Results

Here are the results of the men's figure skating competition.[5]

RankNameNationCFFSPointsPlaces
1Dick Button  United States11192.2569
2Hellmut Seibt  Austria25180.14423
3James Grogan  United States32180.82224
4Hayes Alan Jenkins  United States53174.58940
5Peter Firstbrook  Canada44173.12243
6Carlo Fassi  Italy67169.82250
7Alain Giletti  France76163.23363
8Freimut Stein  Germany88155.95672
9François Pache  Switzerland911139.92292
10Adrian Swan  Australia129138.68995
11Kurt Oppelt  Austria1110137.03398
12György Czakó  Hungary1412132.233112
13Kalle Tuulos  Finland1313131.211112
14Per Cock-Clausen  Denmark1011133.722112

Referee:

Assistant Referee:

  • Georges Torchon

Judges:

  • Alex Krupy
  • Theo Klemm
  • Bruno Bonfiglio
  • Franz Wojtanowskyj
  • Sven P. Sørensen
  • Norman V.S. Gregory
  • Martti Gyldén
  • Gérard Rodrigues Henriques
  • László Szollás

References

External links