Olympic Oath


The Olympic Oath is a solemn promise made by one athlete, judge or official, and one coach at the Opening Ceremony of each Olympic Games. Each oath taker is from the host nation and takes the oath on behalf of all athletes, officials, or coaches at the Games. The athletes' oath was first introduced for the 1920 Summer Olympic Games, with oaths for the officials and coaches added in 1972 and 2010. The oath is usually said in the language of the nation which is hosting the games; however, in 1994 both the athletes' and officials' oaths were said in English. Until the 1984 games the oath takers swore upon their nation's flag; since then all have taken the oath whilst holding the Olympic Flag. All three of the oaths were combined into one beginning at the 2018 Winter Games.
The inspiration for an oath came from the Ancient Olympic Games where competitors swore on a statue of Zeus. An oath for the athletes was first thought of in 1906, following unsportsmanlike incidents. An athletes' oath was introduced for the 1920 games and Victor Boin was the first person to take the oath on behalf of all athletes. Giuliana Minuzzo was the first woman to take the athletes' oath at the winter games in 1956, while Heidi Schuller did likewise at the Summer Olympics in 1972. The first Olympic Champion to take the oath was Rudolf Ismayr, who took it at the 1936 Games. The only occasion where more than one person has said an oath occurred at the 1988 Summer Olympics when Hur Jae and Shon Mi-Na took the athletes' oath together. The oath has changed over the years to remove nationalism and to reflect drugs in sport.
An oath for the officials was first discussed in the 1950s. It was not, however, until 1970 that the International Olympic Committee voted to include an oath of the officials as well as athletes at the Olympic Games. The first oath for the officials was taken by Fumio Asaki at the 1972 Winter Olympic Games. When the Youth Olympics were created the IOC decided to have an oath for coaches as they realised that young athletes look to them particularly. This was introduced into the adult games for the 2012 edition.

History

An oath was an idea taken from the Ancient Olympic Games where competitors swore an oath beside a statue of Zeus. A call for an oath was announced as early as 1906 by International Olympic Committee president and founder Pierre de Coubertin in the Revue Olympique. This was done in an effort to ensure fairness and impartiality.
The Olympic Oath was first taken at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp by the fencer Victor Boin.
Boin's oath in 1920 was:
At a winter sports week in Chamonix in 1924, which were retrospectively call the Olympic Games in 1926, all the competitors took an Olympic style oath and were led by Camille Mandrillon. Rudolf Ismayr was the first Olympic Champion to take the oath, doing so at the 1936 Games in Berlin. In 1956 Giuliana Chenal-Minuzzo became the first woman to recite the oath.
In 1961, "swear" was replaced by "promise" and "the honour of our countries" by "the honour of our teams" in an effort to eliminate nationalism at the Olympic Games. Therefore the oath was as follows:
An oath for the officials had been discussed since the 1950s when the International Amateur Boxing Association asked all its officials to undertake an oath. In 1970 the IOC amended rule 57 of the charter and decreed that a judge from the host nation would also take an oath. The first judges' oath was taken at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo by Fumio Asaki and Heinz Pollay performed the task at that year's summer games in Munich.
The Munich games saw Heidi Schüller become the first female athlete to take the oath at the Summer Games; women had been competing at the games since 1900. At the 1988 Games the athletes' oath for the first time was undertaken by more than one person, when Hur Jae and Shon Mi-Na took the oath in unison.
All persons up until the 1980 Games swore the oath on their country's flag. In an attempt to eliminate nationalism from the oath ceremony all have sworn on the Olympic Flag since the 1984 games. The oaths are usually spoken in the language of the host nation, but in 1994 both of the oaths were conducted in English rather than Norwegian.
In 1999, the IOC created the World Anti-Doping Agency in an effort to form a more organized battle against doping. Thus, the Athletes Oath was amended to include references to doping and drugs. In 2010 the IOC recognised that younger athletes, in particular, are influenced by their coaches. At the first Youth Olympic Games, coaches were also required to undertake an oath for this reason. With effect from the 2018 Winter Olympics, the three oaths were combined into one, led by an athlete, although representatives of judges and coaches are still involved in the taking of the oath.

Athletes' Oath

The chosen athlete, a representative of all the participating Olympic competitors, recited the following from 2000 until 2016:

The Officials' Oath

The judge/official, also from the host nation, likewise held a corner of the flag and said the following:

The Coaches' Oath

At the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, an additional oath was taken by a coach; this was added to the protocol for the 2012 Games:

Unified Oath

Beginning in PyeongChang at the 2018 Winter Olympics, there was only one oath.
A representative for the athletes, judges, and coaches each recites the following lines respectively:
The athletes' representative then completes the oath:

Speakers

The athletes, judges and coaches that have delivered the Olympic Oath are listed below.
OlympicsAthleteJudge CoachReference
1920 Summer OlympicsVictor Boin--
1924 Winter OlympicsCamille Mandrillon--
1924 Summer OlympicsGéo André--
1928 Winter OlympicsHans Eidenbenz--
1928 Summer OlympicsHarry Dénis--
1932 Winter OlympicsJack Shea--
1932 Summer OlympicsGeorge Calnan--
1936 Winter OlympicsWilly Bogner, Sr.--
1936 Summer OlympicsRudolf Ismayr--
1948 Winter OlympicsBibi Torriani--
1948 Summer OlympicsDonald Finlay--
1952 Winter OlympicsTorbjørn Falkanger--
1952 Summer OlympicsHeikki Savolainen--
1956 Winter OlympicsGiuliana Minuzzo--
1956 Summer OlympicsJohn Landy
Henri Saint Cyr
--
1960 Winter OlympicsCarol Heiss--
1960 Summer OlympicsAdolfo Consolini--
1964 Winter OlympicsPaul Aste--
1964 Summer OlympicsTakashi Ono--
1968 Winter OlympicsLéo Lacroix--
1968 Summer OlympicsPablo Garrido--
1972 Winter OlympicsKeiichi SuzukiFumio Asaki-
1972 Summer OlympicsHeidi SchüllerHeinz Pollay-
1976 Winter OlympicsWerner Delle KarthWilly Köstinger-
1976 Summer OlympicsPierre St.-JeanMaurice Fauget-
1980 Winter OlympicsEric HeidenTerry McDermott-
1980 Summer OlympicsNikolai AndrianovAlexander Medved-
1984 Winter OlympicsBojan KrižajDragan Perović-
1984 Summer OlympicsEdwin MosesSharon Weber-
1988 Winter OlympicsPierre HarveySuzanna Morrow-Francis-
1988 Summer OlympicsHur Jae
Shon Mi-Na
Lee Hak-Rae-
1992 Winter OlympicsSurya BonalyPierre Bornat-
1992 Summer OlympicsLuis Doreste BlancoEugeni Asensio-
1994 Winter OlympicsVegard UlvangKari Kåring-
1996 Summer OlympicsTeresa EdwardsHobie Billingsley-
1998 Winter OlympicsKenji OgiwaraJunko Hiramatsu-
2000 Summer OlympicsRechelle HawkesPeter Kerr-
2002 Winter OlympicsJimmy SheaAllen Church-
2004 Summer OlympicsZoi DimoschakiLazaros Voreadis-
2006 Winter OlympicsGiorgio RoccaFabio Bianchetti-
2008 Summer OlympicsZhang YiningHuang Liping-
2010 Winter OlympicsHayley WickenheiserMichel Verrault-
2010 Summer Youth OlympicsCaroline Pei Jia ChewSyed Abdul KadirDavid Lim
2012 Winter Youth OlympicsChristina AgerPeter ZenzAngelika Neuner
2012 Summer OlympicsSarah StevensonMik BasiEric Farrell
2014 Winter OlympicsRuslan ZakharovAnastasia Popkova
2014 Summer Youth OlympicsFan ZhendongZhou QiuruiLi Rongxiang
2016 Winter Youth OlympicsMaria Ramsfjell StabekkThomas PettersenSandra Alise Lyngstand
2016 Summer OlympicsRobert ScheidtMartinho NobreAdriana Santos
2018 Winter OlympicsMo Tae-bumKim Woo-sikPark Ki-ho
2018 Summer Youth OlympicsTeresa RomaironeLorena McCollCarlos Retegui
2020 Winter Youth OlympicsNoah BodensteinEric CatanioStefan Meienberg
2020 Summer Olympics
2022 Winter Olympics
2024 Summer Olympics
2026 Winter Olympics
2026 Summer Youth Olympics
2028 Summer Olympics