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Australia Creates Olympic Sportsmanship Award in Honor of Cecil Healy

The Australian Olympic Committee has today announced a move to create a Sportsmanship Award in honor of legendary 1912 Stockholm Olympic swimming gold medalist Cecil Healy – and it coincides with the 100th anniversary of his death.

Cecil Healy

On August 29, 1918 Healy became the only Australian Olympic gold medalist to die in combat at the Somme in France –he was 36.

The Executive of the AOC will meet tomorrow to determine the details and criteria for a memorial award to be bestowed on Olympians who display exceptional sportsmanship at a Games and who uphold Olympic values.

This week, the French Municipality of Assevillers will honor 2nd Lt. Cecil Healy and the other Australian soldiers who came to liberate the villages of that area, with a special ceremony.

His death was keenly felt in the Olympic movement, not only because of his exceptional qualities as a freestyle swimmer, but particularly for the extraordinary act of sportsmanship he displayed at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics Games.

Cecil Healy denied himself a certain gold medal by insisting the race favourite, the Hawaiian surfer and waterman, Duke Kahanamoku be allowed to compete in the 100 metres freestyle final despite the American champion missing his semi-final over a “misunderstanding over the starting time.”

Healy’s stance eventually led to officials holding a special semi-final, which included Duke Kahanamoku, who went on to win the final with Cecil Healy taking the silver.

Healy felt that without the American in the race, any gold medal would be tarnished.

The young Australian also won Olympic gold for Australasia in the 4x 200m freestyle relay in Stockholm, with Malcolm Champion (NZ), Harold Hardwick and Les Boardman, comfortably beating the USA team that also included Duke Kahanamoku.

AOC President John Coates AC said the example of Cecil Healy defines the Olympic spirit.

“It’s appropriate that 100 years since Cecil was killed that we perpetuate the great example he set. His family is gathering in France this weekend for the special homage to Cecil at the war cemetery at Assevillers,” Mr. Coates said.

“That’s a wonderful gesture from the French and we believe as Australians there’s a great benefit in understanding and celebrating the values that Cecil held that led to that incredible gesture in 1912. What an example he set for us all.”

While the Award will be considered after each Olympic Games it will only be presented if an athlete has shown exceptional sportsmanship.

The move coincides with the recent book CECIL HEALY: A BIOGRAPHY, co-written by 1956 and 1960 Olympic gold medalist, former Swimming Australia president John Devitt with Larry Writer.

Healy was at the forefront of Australia’s first great era of swimming, Australia’s early Olympic experiences and the rise of the surf lifesaving movement.

He was also an evocative journalist and hard working administrator who helped organize the famous visit of The Duke to Australia in 1915, an adventure that inspired a generations of Australian watermen.

But it was Healy’s gesture on the pool deck in Stockholm in 1912, that cost him individual Olympic gold, but earned him a place in sport’s pantheon of true champions – the ultimate act of sportsmanship that has led to an  Award that will provide an everlasting legacy to one of swimming’s Olympic greats.

In researching the book, Devitt and co-author Writer visited Healy’s grave in France last year.

Devitt himself an elite young swimmer and Manly resident on Sydney’s northern beaches where Healy once lived, and as a noted swimming historian, Devitt became engrossed in the Healy legend.

The book became a labour of love with Devitt saying: “Our quest was exhaustive,” he said of the research and writing process. “Cecil Healy derserves no less…..”

CECIL HEALY: A BIOGRAPHY is published by Stoke Hill Press. For more information visit www.stokehillpress.com

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anonymous
6 years ago

I was reading about the period after this in the 3 year swim club. At first I thought it was an ax to grind book since it mention about Japanese American swimmers in Hawaii training first in a ditch but it was interesting. Cecil Healy had to compete against one of the most natural swimmers Duke K and I remember the 3-year swim club book mentions this.

Love to Swim
6 years ago

Wow. Such amazing story. Any other swimming-related stories like this one?

Torchbearer
6 years ago

Are those textile or super suits. 😄

straightblackline
6 years ago

Swimming is a much more professional sport today but I do wish the sportmanship of that era as exemplified by Cecil Healy was more evident.

pete kennedy
6 years ago

Perhaps the most outstanding example of sportsmanship in Olympic history.
Most unfortunately, I do not see a vision of an Olympic athlete today with
such character.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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