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1996 Summer Olympics |
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1996 Summer Olympics
The 1996 Summer Olympics, formally known as the Games of the XXVI Olympiad and informally known as the Centennial Olympics, were held in 1996 in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Atlanta was selected in 1990 above Athens, Belgrade, Manchester, Melbourne and Toronto. Athens had hoped to organise the 100th anniversary of the modern Olympic Games. The IOC's vote for Atlanta was therefore slightly surprising, however the reasoning was that Athens' infrastructure could not be improved enough in time to successfully host the Games. It was later claimed (but never substantiated) that several of the IOC's key voters were bribed by pro-Atlanta executives with considerable amounts of money, expensive luxury cars, and even prostitutes in order to quash the other candidates' chances for the hosting bid. The 1996 Summer Olympics are regarded as one of the least successful of the modern games. The problem of traffic congestion sometimes made travel between venues difficult. The major presence of advertisements, especially Atlanta-based Coca-Cola marketed on every available surface, made these games "overcommercialized". Also during the games, the Centennial Olympic Park bombing took place on July 27, 1996 killing Alice Hawthorne and wounding 111 others, and eliciting the death of Melih Uzunyol by heart attack. In his closing speech, Juan Antonio Samaranch, head of the IOC, for the first time did not describe the games as being the "best ever." The Olympiad's official theme, "Summon the Heroes", was written by John Williams, making it the third Olympiad for which he has composed. The official song was "Reach", written (with Diane Warren) and performed by Gloria Estefan. Highlights(to be expanded to a day-by-day article)
Medal countTop medal-collecting nations at the 1996 Summer Olympics: (for the full table, see 1996 Summer Olympics medal count)
See also: See alsoExternal links
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