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Swimming at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's 100 metre freestyle

The men's 100 metre freestyle was a swimming event held as part of the swimming at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme.[1] It was the fourth appearance of the event, which had not been featured at the 1900 Games. The competition was held from Saturday July 6, 1912, to Wednesday July 10, 1912. Thirty-four swimmers from twelve nations competed. The event was won by Duke Kahanamoku of the United States, the nation's second consecutive victory in the event (tying Hungary for most all-time). Cecil Healy took silver, the only medal in the event for Australasia, the short-lived joint team of Australia and New Zealand. Another American, Ken Huszagh, took bronze.

Men's 100 metre freestyle
at the Games of the V Olympiad
100 metre freestyle at the 1912 Games
VenueDjurgårdsbrunnsviken
DatesJuly 6–10
Competitors34 from 12 nations
Winning time1:03.4
Medalists
← 1908
1920 →

Background edit

This was the fourth appearance of the men's 100 metre freestyle (including the 100 yard event in 1904 but excluding the Intercalated Games in 1906). The event has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1900 (when the shortest freestyle was the 200 metres), though the 1904 version was measured in yards rather than metres.[2]

One of the four finalists from 1908 returned: bronze medalist Harald Julin of Sweden. Charles Daniels, the defending gold medalist who had also won at the 1906 Intercalated Games and taken silver at the 1904 Olympics, had retired. The favorite was Kurt Bretting of Germany, who had broken Daniels' world record earlier in 1912. An intriguing entrant was the Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku, rumored to have posted phenomenal times which were unverified because of the distance from the American mainland.[2]

Germany, Norway, and Russia each made their debut in the event. Hungary and the United States each made their fourth appearance, having competed at each edition of the event to date.

Competition format edit

The rules for the swimming events provided that each event would consist of heats, a final, and "a sufficient number of intermediate heats in proportion to the number of competitors."[3] This led to confusion, as the organizers declared that there should be two intermediate rounds (for a total of four rounds) while the American team believed that there would only be one before the final and consequently did not appear for the semifinals. After some negotiation, a four-round competition was held, with a special heat in the third round for competitors who had missed races due to the confusion.

For each round, the top two swimmers in each heat advanced to the next round, along with the fastest third-place swimmer. In the case of a tie, all tied swimmers would advance (swim-offs would only be used in the final). Each race consisted of a single length of the 100-meter course, and any stroke could be used.

Records edit

These were the standing world and Olympic records (in minutes) prior to the 1912 Summer Olympics.

World Record 1:02.4   Kurt Bretting Brussels (BEL) April 6, 1912
Olympic Record 1:05.6   Charles Daniels London (GBR) July 20, 1908
1:02.8(*)   Zoltán Halmay St. Louis (USA) September 5, 1904

(*) 100 yards (= 91.44 m)

In the fourth heat Perry McGillivray set a new Olympic record with 1:04.8 minutes. In the fifth heat Duke Kahanamoku bettered the Olympic record of 1:02.6 minutes. Finally Duke Kahanamoku improved the Olympic record with a time of 1:02.4 minutes in the third semifinal heat.

Schedule edit

Date Time Round
Saturday, 6 July 1912 19:00 Heats
Sunday, 7 July 1912 13:30
20:00
Quarterfinals
Semifinals 1 and 2
Tuesday, 9 July 1912 Semifinal 3
Wednesday, 10 July 1912 Final

Results edit

Heats edit

The fastest two in each heat advanced. A tie for second in the seventh heat resulted in both swimmers advancing. In addition, the fastest third-place swimmer from across the heats also qualified for the quarterfinals.

Heat 1 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 László Beleznai   Hungary 1:08.0 Q
2 Robert Andersson   Sweden 1:09.4 Q
3 Andreas Asimakopoulos   Greece 1:15.4
4 Herbert von Kuhlberg   Russia Unknown

Heat 2 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Kurt Bretting   Germany 1:07.0 Q
2 Paul Radmilovic   Great Britain 1:10.4 Q
3 Theodore Tartakover   Australasia 1:12.2
4 Jules Wuyts   Belgium 1:13.6

Heat 3 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Leslie Boardman   Australasia 1:06.0 Q
2 Nicholas Nerich   United States 1:07.6 Q
3 John Derbyshire   Great Britain 1:09.2
4–6 Davide Baiardo   Italy Unknown
Walther Binner   Germany Unknown
Alajos Kenyery   Hungary Unknown

Heat 4 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Perry McGillivray   United States 1:04.8 Q, OR
2 Cecil Healy   Australasia 1:05.2 Q
3 Ken Huszagh   United States 1:06.2 q
4 Erik Andersson   Sweden 1:13.0
5 Georg Kunisch   Germany Unknown

Heat 5 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Duke Kahanamoku   United States 1:02.6 Q, OR
2 William Longworth   Australasia 1:05.2 Q
3 Harry Hebner   United States 1:10.4
4 Gérard Meister   France 1:16.6

Heat 6 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Harold Hardwick   Australasia 1:05.8 Q
2 Max Ritter   Germany 1:08.0 Q
3 Herman Meyboom   Belgium 1:15.4
4 James Reilly   United States Unknown

Heat 7 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Walter Ramme   Germany 1:10.2 Q
2 Harald Julin   Sweden 1:11.8 Q
Mario Massa   Italy 1:11.8 Q
4 John Johnsen   Norway 1:19.2

Heat 8 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Erik Bergqvist   Sweden 1:13.4 Q
2 Georges Rigal   France 1:17.8 Q
3 László Szentgróthy   Hungary Unknown

Quarterfinals edit

Again, the top two in each heat advanced along with the fastest loser overall. Four of the qualified swimmers did not take part in their quarterfinal heats, and a fifth (Massa) did not appear due to a misunderstanding. Massa was later allowed to take part in the semifinals.

Quarterfinal 1 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Kurt Bretting   Germany 1:04.2 Q
2 William Longworth   Australasia 1:05.2 Q
3 Harold Hardwick   Australasia 1:06.0
4 Robert Andersson   Sweden 1:10.0
László Beleznai   Hungary DNS
Georges Rigal   France DNS

Quarterfinal 2 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Duke Kahanamoku   United States 1:03.8 Q
2 Walter Ramme   Germany 1:07.8 Q
3 Nicholas Nerich   United States 1:08.8
Max Ritter   Germany 1:08.8
Erik Bergqvist   Sweden DNS
Harald Julin   Sweden DNS

Quarterfinal 3 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Ken Huszagh   United States 1:04.2 Q
2 Perry McGillivray   United States 1:04.4 Q
3 Cecil Healy   Australasia 1:04.8 q
4 Leslie Boardman   Australasia 1:05.4
5 Paul Radmilovic   Great Britain 1:19.0
Mario Massa   Italy DNS q*

Semifinals edit

Further confusion struck the semifinals. Under the belief that the second round of the competition had been the semifinals, the American swimmers did not appear for the third round. This led to both semifinals being essentially walkovers, as the first had three swimmers and the second only one. Since the top two swimmers of each and the fastest third-place swimmer would advance, all four competitors had secured a place in the final before entering the water. Longworth swam in the first heat, despite suffering from what the official report referred to as "suppuration in the head".

The jury for the swimming events met and determined that a third heat should be held under special rules. If the winner of the extra heat were to beat the time set by the third-place swimmer of the first heat (1:06.2, a stiff pace but one which all three Americans had beat during the quarterfinals), he and the second-place finisher would advance. If the mark were not bettered, none of the swimmers from the third heat would advance. Massa, who had missed the quarterfinals due to a misunderstanding, was also allowed to start in the extra semifinal.

In the third heat, Kahanamoku not only beat Longworth's time, thus qualifying himself and Huszagh for the final, but bettered his own Olympic record which he had set in the first round. Huszagh out-touched McGillivray by a "hand's breadth" to take second place and the final qualification spot, though both finished well behind Kahanamoku and their own previous times. Massa did not finish the race.

Semifinal 1 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Cecil Healy   Australasia 1:05.6 Q
2 Walter Ramme   Germany 1:05.8 Q
3 William Longworth   Australasia 1:06.2 q

Semifinal 2 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Kurt Bretting   Germany 1:04.6 Q

Semifinal 3 edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
1 Duke Kahanamoku   United States 1:02.4 Q, =WR
2 Ken Huszagh   United States 1:06.2 Q
3 Perry McGillivray   United States 1:06.2
Mario Massa   Italy DNF

Final edit

Longworth was unable to continue competing due to illness and did not start in the final.

Kahanamoku was clearly in control by the halfway point, with a tight race between Huszagh, Ramme, and Bretting for the next three spots with Healy close behind them. It was Healy who took the silver medal, though, as he swam by the other three near the finish. Ramme fell back to fifth while Huszagh and Bretting finished separated by "[o]nly a decimetre".

Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes
  Duke Kahanamoku   United States 1:03.4
  Cecil Healy   Australasia 1:04.6
  Ken Huszagh   United States 1:05.6
4 Kurt Bretting   Germany 1:05.8
5 Walter Ramme   Germany 1:06.4
6 William Longworth   Australasia DNS

Results summary edit

Rank Swimmer Nation Heats Quarterfinals Semifinals Final Notes
  Duke Kahanamoku   United States 1:02.6 1:03.8 1:02.4 1:03.4
  Cecil Healy   Australasia 1:05.2 1:04.8 1:05.6 1:04.6
  Ken Huszagh   United States 1:06.2 1:04.2 1:06.2 1:05.6
4 Kurt Bretting   Germany 1:07.0 1:04.2 1:04.6 1:05.8
5 Walter Ramme   Germany 1:10.2 1:07.8 1:05.8 1:06.4
6 William Longworth   Australasia 1:05.2 1:05.2 1:06.2 DNS
7 Perry McGillivray   United States 1:04.8 1:04.4 1:06.2 Did not advance
8 Mario Massa   Italy 1:11.8 DNS DNF Did not advance To semifinals by dispensation
9 Leslie Boardman   Australasia 1:06.0 1:05.4 did not advance
10 Harold Hardwick   Australasia 1:05.8 1:06.0 did not advance
11 Nicholas Nerich   United States 1:07.6 1:08.8 did not advance
Max Ritter   Germany 1:08.0 1:08.8 did not advance
13 Robert Andersson   Sweden 1:09.4 1:10.0 did not advance
14 Paul Radmilovic   Great Britain 1:10.4 1:19.0 did not advance
15 László Beleznai   Hungary 1:08.0 DNS did not advance
Erik Bergqvist   Sweden 1:13.4 DNS did not advance
Harald Julin   Sweden 1:11.8 DNS did not advance
Georges Rigal   France 1:17.8 DNS did not advance
19 John Derbyshire   Great Britain 1:09.2 did not advance
20 Harry Hebner   United States 1:10.4 did not advance
21 Theodore Tartakover   Australasia 1:12.2 did not advance
22 Erik Andersson   Sweden 1:13.0 did not advance
23 Jules Wuyts   Belgium 1:13.6 did not advance
24 Andreas Asimakopoulos   Greece 1:15.4 did not advance
Herman Meyboom   Belgium 1:15.4 did not advance
26 Gérard Meister   France 1:16.6 did not advance
27 John Johnsen   Norway 1:19.2 did not advance
28 László Szentgróthy   Hungary Unknown did not advance 3rd in heat
29 James Reilly   United States Unknown did not advance 4th in heat
Herbert von Kuhlberg   Russia Unknown did not advance 4th in heat
31 Davide Baiardo   Italy Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heat
Walther Binner   Germany Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heat
Alajos Kenyery   Hungary Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heat
34 Georg Kunisch   Germany Unknown did not advance 5th in heat

References edit

  1. ^ . Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  2. ^ a b "100 metres Freestyle, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  3. ^ Official Report, p. 1069.

Notes edit

  • Bergvall, Erik (ed.) (1913). Adams-Ray, Edward (trans.). (ed.). The Official Report of the Olympic Games of Stockholm 1912. Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  • Wudarski, Pawel (1999). "Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich" (in Polish). Retrieved 28 January 2007.

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The men s 100 metre freestyle was a swimming event held as part of the swimming at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme 1 It was the fourth appearance of the event which had not been featured at the 1900 Games The competition was held from Saturday July 6 1912 to Wednesday July 10 1912 Thirty four swimmers from twelve nations competed The event was won by Duke Kahanamoku of the United States the nation s second consecutive victory in the event tying Hungary for most all time Cecil Healy took silver the only medal in the event for Australasia the short lived joint team of Australia and New Zealand Another American Ken Huszagh took bronze Men s 100 metre freestyleat the Games of the V Olympiad100 metre freestyle at the 1912 GamesVenueDjurgardsbrunnsvikenDatesJuly 6 10Competitors34 from 12 nationsWinning time1 03 4MedalistsDuke Kahanamoku United StatesCecil Healy AustralasiaKen Huszagh United States 19081920 Contents 1 Background 2 Competition format 3 Records 4 Schedule 5 Results 5 1 Heats 5 1 1 Heat 1 5 1 2 Heat 2 5 1 3 Heat 3 5 1 4 Heat 4 5 1 5 Heat 5 5 1 6 Heat 6 5 1 7 Heat 7 5 1 8 Heat 8 5 2 Quarterfinals 5 2 1 Quarterfinal 1 5 2 2 Quarterfinal 2 5 2 3 Quarterfinal 3 5 3 Semifinals 5 3 1 Semifinal 1 5 3 2 Semifinal 2 5 3 3 Semifinal 3 5 4 Final 6 Results summary 7 References 8 NotesBackground editThis was the fourth appearance of the men s 100 metre freestyle including the 100 yard event in 1904 but excluding the Intercalated Games in 1906 The event has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1900 when the shortest freestyle was the 200 metres though the 1904 version was measured in yards rather than metres 2 One of the four finalists from 1908 returned bronze medalist Harald Julin of Sweden Charles Daniels the defending gold medalist who had also won at the 1906 Intercalated Games and taken silver at the 1904 Olympics had retired The favorite was Kurt Bretting of Germany who had broken Daniels world record earlier in 1912 An intriguing entrant was the Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku rumored to have posted phenomenal times which were unverified because of the distance from the American mainland 2 Germany Norway and Russia each made their debut in the event Hungary and the United States each made their fourth appearance having competed at each edition of the event to date Competition format editThe rules for the swimming events provided that each event would consist of heats a final and a sufficient number of intermediate heats in proportion to the number of competitors 3 This led to confusion as the organizers declared that there should be two intermediate rounds for a total of four rounds while the American team believed that there would only be one before the final and consequently did not appear for the semifinals After some negotiation a four round competition was held with a special heat in the third round for competitors who had missed races due to the confusion For each round the top two swimmers in each heat advanced to the next round along with the fastest third place swimmer In the case of a tie all tied swimmers would advance swim offs would only be used in the final Each race consisted of a single length of the 100 meter course and any stroke could be used Records editThese were the standing world and Olympic records in minutes prior to the 1912 Summer Olympics World Record 1 02 4 nbsp Kurt Bretting Brussels BEL April 6 1912Olympic Record 1 05 6 nbsp Charles Daniels London GBR July 20 19081 02 8 nbsp Zoltan Halmay St Louis USA September 5 1904 100 yards 91 44 m In the fourth heat Perry McGillivray set a new Olympic record with 1 04 8 minutes In the fifth heat Duke Kahanamoku bettered the Olympic record of 1 02 6 minutes Finally Duke Kahanamoku improved the Olympic record with a time of 1 02 4 minutes in the third semifinal heat Schedule editDate Time RoundSaturday 6 July 1912 19 00 HeatsSunday 7 July 1912 13 3020 00 QuarterfinalsSemifinals 1 and 2Tuesday 9 July 1912 Semifinal 3Wednesday 10 July 1912 FinalResults editHeats edit The fastest two in each heat advanced A tie for second in the seventh heat resulted in both swimmers advancing In addition the fastest third place swimmer from across the heats also qualified for the quarterfinals Heat 1 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Laszlo Beleznai nbsp Hungary 1 08 0 Q2 Robert Andersson nbsp Sweden 1 09 4 Q3 Andreas Asimakopoulos nbsp Greece 1 15 44 Herbert von Kuhlberg nbsp Russia UnknownHeat 2 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Kurt Bretting nbsp Germany 1 07 0 Q2 Paul Radmilovic nbsp Great Britain 1 10 4 Q3 Theodore Tartakover nbsp Australasia 1 12 24 Jules Wuyts nbsp Belgium 1 13 6Heat 3 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Leslie Boardman nbsp Australasia 1 06 0 Q2 Nicholas Nerich nbsp United States 1 07 6 Q3 John Derbyshire nbsp Great Britain 1 09 24 6 Davide Baiardo nbsp Italy UnknownWalther Binner nbsp Germany UnknownAlajos Kenyery nbsp Hungary UnknownHeat 4 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Perry McGillivray nbsp United States 1 04 8 Q OR2 Cecil Healy nbsp Australasia 1 05 2 Q3 Ken Huszagh nbsp United States 1 06 2 q4 Erik Andersson nbsp Sweden 1 13 05 Georg Kunisch nbsp Germany UnknownHeat 5 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Duke Kahanamoku nbsp United States 1 02 6 Q OR2 William Longworth nbsp Australasia 1 05 2 Q3 Harry Hebner nbsp United States 1 10 44 Gerard Meister nbsp France 1 16 6Heat 6 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Harold Hardwick nbsp Australasia 1 05 8 Q2 Max Ritter nbsp Germany 1 08 0 Q3 Herman Meyboom nbsp Belgium 1 15 44 James Reilly nbsp United States UnknownHeat 7 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Walter Ramme nbsp Germany 1 10 2 Q2 Harald Julin nbsp Sweden 1 11 8 QMario Massa nbsp Italy 1 11 8 Q4 John Johnsen nbsp Norway 1 19 2Heat 8 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Erik Bergqvist nbsp Sweden 1 13 4 Q2 Georges Rigal nbsp France 1 17 8 Q3 Laszlo Szentgrothy nbsp Hungary UnknownQuarterfinals edit Again the top two in each heat advanced along with the fastest loser overall Four of the qualified swimmers did not take part in their quarterfinal heats and a fifth Massa did not appear due to a misunderstanding Massa was later allowed to take part in the semifinals Quarterfinal 1 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Kurt Bretting nbsp Germany 1 04 2 Q2 William Longworth nbsp Australasia 1 05 2 Q3 Harold Hardwick nbsp Australasia 1 06 04 Robert Andersson nbsp Sweden 1 10 0 Laszlo Beleznai nbsp Hungary DNSGeorges Rigal nbsp France DNSQuarterfinal 2 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Duke Kahanamoku nbsp United States 1 03 8 Q2 Walter Ramme nbsp Germany 1 07 8 Q3 Nicholas Nerich nbsp United States 1 08 8Max Ritter nbsp Germany 1 08 8 Erik Bergqvist nbsp Sweden DNSHarald Julin nbsp Sweden DNSQuarterfinal 3 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Ken Huszagh nbsp United States 1 04 2 Q2 Perry McGillivray nbsp United States 1 04 4 Q3 Cecil Healy nbsp Australasia 1 04 8 q4 Leslie Boardman nbsp Australasia 1 05 45 Paul Radmilovic nbsp Great Britain 1 19 0 Mario Massa nbsp Italy DNS q Semifinals edit Further confusion struck the semifinals Under the belief that the second round of the competition had been the semifinals the American swimmers did not appear for the third round This led to both semifinals being essentially walkovers as the first had three swimmers and the second only one Since the top two swimmers of each and the fastest third place swimmer would advance all four competitors had secured a place in the final before entering the water Longworth swam in the first heat despite suffering from what the official report referred to as suppuration in the head The jury for the swimming events met and determined that a third heat should be held under special rules If the winner of the extra heat were to beat the time set by the third place swimmer of the first heat 1 06 2 a stiff pace but one which all three Americans had beat during the quarterfinals he and the second place finisher would advance If the mark were not bettered none of the swimmers from the third heat would advance Massa who had missed the quarterfinals due to a misunderstanding was also allowed to start in the extra semifinal In the third heat Kahanamoku not only beat Longworth s time thus qualifying himself and Huszagh for the final but bettered his own Olympic record which he had set in the first round Huszagh out touched McGillivray by a hand s breadth to take second place and the final qualification spot though both finished well behind Kahanamoku and their own previous times Massa did not finish the race Semifinal 1 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Cecil Healy nbsp Australasia 1 05 6 Q2 Walter Ramme nbsp Germany 1 05 8 Q3 William Longworth nbsp Australasia 1 06 2 qSemifinal 2 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Kurt Bretting nbsp Germany 1 04 6 QSemifinal 3 edit Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes1 Duke Kahanamoku nbsp United States 1 02 4 Q WR2 Ken Huszagh nbsp United States 1 06 2 Q3 Perry McGillivray nbsp United States 1 06 2 Mario Massa nbsp Italy DNFFinal edit Longworth was unable to continue competing due to illness and did not start in the final Kahanamoku was clearly in control by the halfway point with a tight race between Huszagh Ramme and Bretting for the next three spots with Healy close behind them It was Healy who took the silver medal though as he swam by the other three near the finish Ramme fell back to fifth while Huszagh and Bretting finished separated by o nly a decimetre Rank Swimmer Nation Time Notes nbsp Duke Kahanamoku nbsp United States 1 03 4 nbsp Cecil Healy nbsp Australasia 1 04 6 nbsp Ken Huszagh nbsp United States 1 05 64 Kurt Bretting nbsp Germany 1 05 85 Walter Ramme nbsp Germany 1 06 46 William Longworth nbsp Australasia DNSResults summary editRank Swimmer Nation Heats Quarterfinals Semifinals Final Notes nbsp Duke Kahanamoku nbsp United States 1 02 6 1 03 8 1 02 4 1 03 4 nbsp Cecil Healy nbsp Australasia 1 05 2 1 04 8 1 05 6 1 04 6 nbsp Ken Huszagh nbsp United States 1 06 2 1 04 2 1 06 2 1 05 64 Kurt Bretting nbsp Germany 1 07 0 1 04 2 1 04 6 1 05 85 Walter Ramme nbsp Germany 1 10 2 1 07 8 1 05 8 1 06 46 William Longworth nbsp Australasia 1 05 2 1 05 2 1 06 2 DNS7 Perry McGillivray nbsp United States 1 04 8 1 04 4 1 06 2 Did not advance8 Mario Massa nbsp Italy 1 11 8 DNS DNF Did not advance To semifinals by dispensation9 Leslie Boardman nbsp Australasia 1 06 0 1 05 4 did not advance10 Harold Hardwick nbsp Australasia 1 05 8 1 06 0 did not advance11 Nicholas Nerich nbsp United States 1 07 6 1 08 8 did not advanceMax Ritter nbsp Germany 1 08 0 1 08 8 did not advance13 Robert Andersson nbsp Sweden 1 09 4 1 10 0 did not advance14 Paul Radmilovic nbsp Great Britain 1 10 4 1 19 0 did not advance15 Laszlo Beleznai nbsp Hungary 1 08 0 DNS did not advanceErik Bergqvist nbsp Sweden 1 13 4 DNS did not advanceHarald Julin nbsp Sweden 1 11 8 DNS did not advanceGeorges Rigal nbsp France 1 17 8 DNS did not advance19 John Derbyshire nbsp Great Britain 1 09 2 did not advance20 Harry Hebner nbsp United States 1 10 4 did not advance21 Theodore Tartakover nbsp Australasia 1 12 2 did not advance22 Erik Andersson nbsp Sweden 1 13 0 did not advance23 Jules Wuyts nbsp Belgium 1 13 6 did not advance24 Andreas Asimakopoulos nbsp Greece 1 15 4 did not advanceHerman Meyboom nbsp Belgium 1 15 4 did not advance26 Gerard Meister nbsp France 1 16 6 did not advance27 John Johnsen nbsp Norway 1 19 2 did not advance28 Laszlo Szentgrothy nbsp Hungary Unknown did not advance 3rd in heat29 James Reilly nbsp United States Unknown did not advance 4th in heatHerbert von Kuhlberg nbsp Russia Unknown did not advance 4th in heat31 Davide Baiardo nbsp Italy Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heatWalther Binner nbsp Germany Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heatAlajos Kenyery nbsp Hungary Unknown did not advance 4th to 6th in heat34 Georg Kunisch nbsp Germany Unknown did not advance 5th in heatReferences edit Swimming at the 1912 Stockholm Summer Games Men s 100 metres Freestyle Sports Reference Archived from the original on 17 April 2020 Retrieved 28 August 2016 a b 100 metres Freestyle Men Olympedia Retrieved 16 December 2020 Official Report p 1069 Notes editBergvall Erik ed 1913 Adams Ray Edward trans ed The Official Report of the Olympic Games of Stockholm 1912 Stockholm Wahlstrom amp Widstrand a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Wudarski Pawel 1999 Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich in Polish Retrieved 28 January 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swimming at the 1912 Summer Olympics Men 27s 100 metre freestyle amp oldid 1137543879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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