List of people who have lit the Olympic Cauldron

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File:Li Ling during 2008 Summer Olympics opening ceremony.jpg
Li Ning, a former Chinese gymnast, lit the Olympic Cauldron during the opening ceremony of the 2008 Summer Olympics.

The tradition of carrying the Olympic Flame from Olympia, Greece, the birthplace of the Ancient Olympic Games, to the host city of the modern Olympic Games via a torch relay was first introduced in 1936, ahead of the Berlin Games. Since then, famous athletes (active or retired) with significant sporting achievements while representing the host country were allowed to be the last runner in the Olympic torch relay and consequently have the honor of lighting the Olympic cauldron at the opening ceremony.

History

The first well-known athlete to light the cauldron was nine-time Olympic champion Paavo Nurmi at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. Other famous final torch bearers include French football star Michel Platini (1992), heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali (1996), Australian runner Cathy Freeman (2000), and Canadian ice hockey player Wayne Gretzky (2010).

On other occasions, the people who lit the cauldron were not famous but nevertheless symbolized the Olympic ideals. Japanese runner Yoshinori Sakai was born in Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, the day the city was destroyed by an atomic bomb. He symbolized the rebirth of Japan after the Second World War when he lit the Olympic cauldron of the 1964 Summer Olympics. At the 1976 Games in Montreal, two teenagers – representing the French- and the English-speaking parts of the country – symbolized the unity of Canada. Norway's Crown Prince Haakon lit the cauldron of the 1994 Winter Olympics, in honor of his father and grandfather, both Olympians. For the 2012 Games in London, seven aspiring young athletes – each nominated by a former British Olympic champion – had the honor of lighting the cauldron.

List

Games Location Lighter Sport Note Ref
1936 Summer Berlin Fritz Schilgen Track and field athletics Schilgen was not a competitor at the Olympics, but was chosen for his graceful running style. [1]
1948 Summer London John Mark Track and field athletics Little-known former medical student from Cambridge University. [2]
1952 Winter Oslo Eigil Nansen The grandson of polar explorer Fridtjof Nansen. He is the first non-athlete to light the flame. [3]
1952 Summer Helsinki Paavo Nurmi and Hannes Kolehmainen Track and field athletics Nurmi was a winner of nine Olympic gold medals in the 1920s; Kolehmainen won four Olympic gold medals. Nurmi lit a cauldron on field level before handing the torch to four soccer players who relayed the torch to the top of the tower. Kolehmainen then lit the final, higher-placed cauldron. [4]
1956 Winter Cortina d'Ampezzo Guido Caroli Speed skating A participant in the 1948, 1952 and 1956 Olympics. Skating with the torch, he tripped over a television cable but kept the flame burning. [5]
1956 Summer Melbourne Ron Clarke (Melbourne) and Hans Wikne (Stockholm) Track and field athletics (Clarke)

Equestrianism (Wikne)
Clarke would later win an Olympic bronze medal in 1964; Wikne participated in the 1964 Olympics. After Wikne lit the brazier on the infield, the flame was passed on to Karin Lindberg and Henry Ericksson, who separately ran up the two towers of the Stockholm Olympic Stadium. [6]
1960 Winter Squaw Valley Ken Henry Speed skating Olympic champion in 500 m speed skating at the 1952 Games. [7]
1960 Summer Rome Giancarlo Peris Track and field athletics A track athlete of Greek descent. The Italian National Olympic Committee decided that last torchbearer of the Olympic Games would be the winner of a junior cross country running race. Peris won and was chosen to be the last torchbearer. [8]
1964 Winter Innsbruck Josef Rieder Alpine skiing A participant in the 1956 Olympics. [9]
1964 Summer Tokyo Yoshinori Sakai Track and field athletics Sakai was born on the same day the atom bomb exploded over his native Hiroshima. [10]
1968 Winter Grenoble Alain Calmat Figure skating Winner of the silver medal in the 1964 Olympics. [11]
1968 Summer Mexico City Norma Enriqueta Basilio de Sotelo Track and field athletics A sprinter who participated in these Olympics; the first woman to light the main Olympic cauldron. [12]
1972 Winter Sapporo Hideki Takada Speed skating [13]
1972 Summer Munich Günther Zahn Track and field athletics A middle distance runner. Winner at the German junior athletics championships. [14]
1976 Winter Innsbruck Christl Haas and Josef Feistmantl Alpine skiing (Haas)

Luge (Feistmantl)
Haas won the Olympic downhill title in 1964; Feistmantl won luge doubles in the same year. [15]
1976 Summer Montreal Stéphane Préfontaine and Sandra Henderson Track and field athletics Two teenagers representing English and French Canada. [16]
1980 Winter Lake Placid Charles Gugino A doctor from Arizona who had been elected from all 52 bearers to run the final leg. He is not an Athlete. [17]
1980 Summer Moscow Sergey Belov Basketball A member of the Soviet Basketball team who won four Olympic medals, including a gold in 1972. [18]
1984 Winter Sarajevo Sanda Dubravčić Figure skating A participant in the 1980 and 1984 Olympics. [19]
1984 Summer Los Angeles Rafer Johnson Track and field athletics Winner of the decathlon at the 1960 Olympics. [20]
1988 Winter Calgary Robyn Perry Figure skating A 12-year-old schoolgirl. [21]
1988 Summer Seoul Chung Sun-man, Sohn Mi-chung and Kim Won-tak Track and field athletics Chung Sun-Man was a schoolteacher. Sohn was a young Korean dancer. Kim Won-tak was a young track athlete who took part in that year's marathon. [22]
1992 Winter Albertville Michel Platini and François-Cyrille Grange Association football (Platini)

Alpine skiing (Grange)
Platini took part with the French Football team in the 1976 Summer Olympics. Grange was nine years old at the time, becoming the youngest final lighter in history. [23]
1992 Summer Barcelona Antonio Rebollo Archery A Paralympian who competed in the 1984, 1988 and 1992 Summer Paralympic Games, winning two silvers and a bronze. The only Paralympian ever to light the Olympic Cauldron, Rebollo shot a flaming arrow over an open natural gas cauldron to ignite it. [24]
1994 Winter Lillehammer Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway The heir apparent to the throne of Norway. Though he was not an Olympian, both his father and grandfather took part in the Olympics and he lit the cauldron on their behalf. His father declared the games open. [25]
1996 Summer Atlanta Muhammad Ali Boxing Winner of Olympic gold in 1960 and considered to be the greatest boxer of all time. [26]
1998 Winter Nagano Midori Ito Figure skating Winner of Olympic silver in 1992. [27]
2000 Summer Sydney Cathy Freeman Track and field athletics Winner of Olympic silver in 1996 and Olympic gold in these Olympics, both in the 400 m. She is the only person ever to light a cauldron and win a gold medal in the same games. [28]
2002 Winter Salt Lake City The 1980 U.S. Olympic ice hockey team Ice hockey Famous for the "Miracle on Ice"; an upset of the Soviet Union team en route to the gold medal. [29]
2004 Summer Athens Nikolaos Kaklamanakis Sailing Winner of Olympic gold in 1996 and silver in these Olympics. [30]
2006 Winter Turin Stefania Belmondo Cross-country skiing Winner of ten Olympic medals, two of them gold. One of Italy's most decorated Olympians. [31]
2008 Summer Beijing Li Ning Artistic gymnastics Winner of six Olympic medals including three gold, in 1984. He was China's most successful athlete at their first Olympic appearance since 1952. [32]
2010 Winter Vancouver Catriona Le May Doan (closing ceremony),
Steve Nash,
Nancy Greene and
Wayne Gretzky
(indoor cauldron)

Wayne Gretzky
(outdoor cauldron)
Speed skating (Le May Doan)

Basketball (Nash)

Alpine skiing (Greene)

Ice hockey (Gretzky)
Le May Doan was a winner of two gold medals in the 500 m in 1998 and 2002 and a bronze in the 1000 m in 1998. Nash is a two-time NBA MVP with the Phoenix Suns and a former member of the Canadian Olympic Basketball team. Greene won gold in the giant slalom and a silver in the slalom in 1968. Gretzky was a member of the Canadian ice hockey team and won four Stanley Cup titles as captain of the Edmonton Oilers (1984, 1985, 1987, 1988). He was the Executive Director of the Canadian men's hockey team in 2002, who won gold at those games.

During the opening ceremony, Nash, Greene and Gretzky lit a cauldron inside the BC Place indoor stadium. Gretzky then lit a second, outdoor cauldron near the Vancouver Convention Centre. Only the outdoor cauldron remained lit throughout the Games.

Le May Doan was supposed to participate in the lighting of the indoor cauldron, but was left out when one of the four arms failed to raise due to mechanical problems. This was corrected at the beginning of the closing ceremony, when a joke was made about the mechanical error, and she was able to light the newly emerged fourth arm and relight the indoor cauldron to begin the closing ceremony.

[33][34][35]
2010 Summer Youth Singapore Darren Choy Sailing Darren Choy in 2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore was a sailor of Singapore in 2010 he lights vortex flame
2012 Winter Youth Innsbruck Egon Zimmermann
and Franz Klammer
Alpine skiing Egon Zimmermann and Franz Klammer in 2012 Winter Youth Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria were alpine skier of Austria in 2012 they light three cauldrons
2012 Summer London Callum Airlie,
Jordan Duckitt,
Desiree Henry,
Katie Kirk,
Cameron MacRitchie,
Aidan Reynolds
and Adelle Tracey
Track and field athletics (Henry, Kirk, Reynolds, Tracey)

Rowing (MacRitchie)

Sailing (Airlie)
The cauldron was lit by seven aspiring young athletes, each nominated by a veteran British olympian: Airlie was nominated by Shirley Robertson, Duckitt by Duncan Goodhew, Henry by Daley Thompson, Kirk by Dame Mary Peters, MacRitchie by Sir Steve Redgrave, Reynolds by Lynn Davies and Tracey by Dame Kelly Holmes. Austin Playfoot later relit the cauldron in its new spot in the Olympic Stadium. The seven youngsters are commonly referred to as the "Secret Seven" as their identity and role was a closely guarded secret until the lighting of the Olympic Cauldron. [36][37]
2014 Winter Sochi Irina Rodnina and Vladislav Tretiak Figure skating (Rodnina)

Ice hockey (Tretiak)
Rodnina won 3 three successive Olympic gold medals in Figure Skating pairs in 1972, 1976 and 1980. Tretiak was a former goaltender for the Soviet Union's national ice hockey team and contributed to the team winning 3 gold medals in 1972, 1976 and 1984, as well as a silver in 1980. [38]
2014 Summer Youth Nanjing Chen Ruolin Diving Chen won back-to-back gold medals in diving in 2008 and 2012, in the 10 m and the 10 m synchronized.

See also

References