Fencing at the 1920 Summer Olympics – Men's sabre

The men's sabre was a fencing event held as part of the Fencing at the 1920 Summer Olympics programme. It was the sixth appearance of the event. A total of 43 fencers from 9 nations competed in the event, which was held on August 25 and August 26, 1920. Nations were limited to eight fencers each.[1] The event was won by Nedo Nadi of Italy, one of his five gold medals in 1920. His brother Aldo Nadi took silver. Adrianus de Jong of the Netherlands finished third. They were the first medals in the individual men's sabre for both countries. This was the only time from 1908 to 1964 that Hungary did not win the men's sabre—with no Hungarian fencers competing after the nation was disinvited after World War I.

Men's sabre
at the Games of the VII Olympiad
Nedo Nadi (1919)
VenueGardens de la Palace d'Egmont
DatesAugust 25–26
Competitors43 from 9 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Nedo Nadi  Italy
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Aldo Nadi  Italy
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Adrianus de Jong  Netherlands
← 1912
1924 →

Background edit

This was the sixth appearance of the event, which is the only fencing event to have been held at every Summer Olympics. Seven of the eight finalists from 1912 had been Hungarian; with Hungary not invited to the 1920 Games in the aftermath of World War I, none of those seven could return. The other finalist, however, was Nedo Nadi of Italy—the heavy favorite with no Hungarians competing (and with 1919 Inter-Allied champion Vincent Gillens of Belgium not attending either).[1]

Czechoslovakia made its debut in the men's sabre. Italy and Denmark each made their fourth appearance in the event, tying Austria (also not invited to the Games following the war) for most of any nation.

Competition format edit

The event used a three-round format. In each round, the fencers were divided into pools to play a round-robin within the pool. Bouts were to three touches (an unpopular change from the more typical five). Standard sabre rules were used, including that the target area was the now-standard target above the waist (in contrast to the larger target in 1912 and the whole body in 1896, 1900, and 1908).[1]

  • Quarterfinals: There were 5 pools of between 7 and 9 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each quarterfinal advanced to the semifinals, except that the top 5 in quarterfinal C advanced (with two men tied for fourth, the tie was not broken and both advanced).
  • Semifinals: There were 3 pools of 7 fencers each. The top 4 fencers in each semifinal advanced to the final.
  • Final: The final pool had 12 fencers.

Schedule edit

Date Time Round
Wednesday, 25 August 1920 9:00
14:00
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Thursday, 26 August 1920 Final

Results edit

Quarterfinals edit

Quarterfinal A edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Oreste Puliti   Italy 6 1 Q
2 Federico Cesarano   Italy 5 2 Q
3 Adrianus de Jong   Netherlands 5 2 Q
4 Aage Berntsen   Denmark 5 2 Q
5 Marc Perrodon   France 3 4
6 Edwin Fullinwider   United States 2 5
7 Alexis Simonson   Belgium 1 6
Eric Startin   Great Britain 1 6

Quarterfinal B edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Aldo Nadi   Italy 6 1 Q
2 Robin Dalglish   Great Britain 5 2 Q
3 Félix Goblet   Belgium 4 3 Q
4 Henri Wijnoldij-Daniëls   Netherlands 4 3 Q
5 Wouter Brouwer   Netherlands 3 4
Ronald Campbell   Great Britain 3 4
7 Viliam Tvrský   Czechoslovakia 2 5
8 John Dimond   United States 1 6
Georges Trombert   France DNF

Quarterfinal C edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Nedo Nadi   Italy 5 1 Q
2 Robert Feyerick   Belgium 3 3 Q
3 Cecil Kershaw   Great Britain 3 3 Q
4 Baldo Baldi   Italy 3 3 Q
Josef Javůrek   Czechoslovakia 3 3 Q
6 Henri de Saint-Germain   France 2 4
Clariborne Walker   United States 2 4

Quarterfinal D edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Léon Tom   Belgium 6 1 Q
2 Francesco Gargano   Italy 5 2 Q
3 Giulio Rusconi   Italy 4 3 Q
4 Joseph Parker   United States 4 3 Q
5 Evangelos Skotidas   Greece 3 4
Zdeněk Vávra   Czechoslovakia 3 4
7 Félix Vigeveno   Netherlands 2 5
8 Arthur Lyon   United States 1 6
Jean Margraff   France DNF
Alfred Martin   Great Britain DNF

Quarterfinal E edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Jan van der Wiel   Netherlands 6 2 Q
2 Robert Hennet   Belgium 5 3 Q
3 Giorgio Santelli   Italy 5 3 Q
4 Herbert Huntington   Great Britain 5 3 Q
5 Jean Servent   France 4 4
Vasilios Zarkadis   Greece 4 4
7 Roscoe Bowman   United States 3 5
Jaroslav Šourek   Czechoslovakia 3 5
9 Frederick Cunningham   United States 1 7

Semifinals edit

Semifinal A edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Henri Wijnoldij-Daniëls   Netherlands 4 2 Q
2 Léon Tom   Belgium 4 2 Q
3 Francesco Gargano   Italy 3 3 Q
4 Aldo Nadi   Italy 3 3 Q
5 Josef Javůrek   Czechoslovakia 3 3
6 Cecil Kershaw   Great Britain 2 4
Giorgio Santelli   Italy 2 4

Semifinal B edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Nedo Nadi   Italy 6 0 Q
2 Baldo Baldi   Italy 5 1 Q
3 Jan van der Wiel   Netherlands 3 3 Q
4 Robin Dalglish   Great Britain 3 3 Q
5 Robert Feyerick   Belgium 3 3
6 Joseph Parker   United States 1 5
7 Félix Goblet   Belgium 0 6

Semifinal C edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Federico Cesarano   Italy 5 1 Q
2 Adrianus de Jong   Netherlands 5 1 Q
3 Oreste Puliti   Italy 4 2 Q
4 Robert Hennet   Belgium 3 3 Q
5 Giulio Rusconi   Italy 3 3
6 Herbert Huntington   Great Britain 1 5
7 Aage Berntsen   Denmark 0 6

Final edit

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses
  Nedo Nadi   Italy 11 0
  Aldo Nadi   Italy 9 2
  Adrianus de Jong   Netherlands 6 5
4 Oreste Puliti   Italy 6 5
5 Jan van der Wiel   Netherlands 6 5
6 Léon Tom   Belgium 5 6
7 Robert Hennet   Belgium 5 6
8 Robin Dalglish   Great Britain 5 6
9 Henri Wijnoldij-Daniëls   Netherlands 4 7
10 Federico Cesarano   Italy 3 8
11 Francesco Gargano   Italy 3 8
12 Baldo Baldi   Italy 3 8

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Sabre, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  • Belgium Olympic Committee (1957). Olympic Games Antwerp 1920: Official Report (in French).
  • Wudarski, Pawel (1999). "Wyniki Igrzysk Olimpijskich" (in Polish). Archived from the original on 16 February 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2007.