Sweden at the 1952 Summer Olympics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Sweden at the Olympic Games

Flag of Sweden
IOC code  SWE
NOC Swedish Olympic Committee
Website www.sok.se (Swedish) (English)
At the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki
Competitors 206 (183 men and 23 women) in 17 sports
Medals
Rank: 4
Gold
12
Silver
13
Bronze
10
Total
35
Olympic history (summary)
Summer Games
Winter Games
Intercalated Games
1906
Other related appearances
Youth Olympics Paralympics

Sweden competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland. 206 competitors, 183 men and 23 women, took part in 124 events in 17 sports.[1]

Medalists[edit]

Medal Name Sport Event
 Gold John Mikaelsson Athletics Men's 10 km Walk
 Gold Gert Fredriksson Canoeing Men's K1 1000 m
 Gold Hans von Blixen-Finecke Jr Equestrian Three-Day Event
 Gold Folke Frölén
Olof Stahre
Hans von Blixen-Finecke Jr
Equestrian Three-Day Team Event
 Gold Henri Saint Cyr Equestrian Dressage Individual
 Gold Gustaf Adolf Boltenstern
Gehnäll Persson
Henri Saint Cyr
Equestrian Dressage Team
 Gold William Thoresson Gymnastics Men's Floor
 Gold Gun Röring
Ingrid Sandahl
Hjördis Nordin
Ann-Sofi Pettersson
Göta Pettersson
Evy Berggren
Vanja Blomberg
Karin Lindberg
Gymnastics Women's Team Portable Apparatus
 Gold Lars Hall Modern pentathlon Men's Individual
 Gold Axel Grönberg Wrestling (Greco-Roman) Men's Middleweight
 Gold Olle Anderberg Wrestling Men's Freestyle Lightweight
 Gold Viking Palm Wrestling Men's Freestyle Light Heavyweight
 Silver Ingemar Johansson Boxing Men's Heavyweight
 Silver Lars Glassér
Ingemar Hedberg
Canoeing Men's K2 1000 m
 Silver Gert Fredriksson Canoeing Men's K1 10000 m
 Silver Gunnar Åkerlund
Hans Wetterström
Canoeing Men's K2 10000 m
 Silver Bengt Ljungquist
Lennart Magnusson
Berndt-Otto Rehbinder
Per Hjalmar Carleson
Sven Fahlman
Carl Forssell
Fencing Men's Épée Team
 Silver Claes Egnell
Lars Hall
Thorsten Lindqvist
Modern pentathlon Men's Team
 Silver Knut Holmqvist Shooting Men's Trap
 Silver Olof Sköldberg Shooting Men's Running Deer, Single & Double Shot
 Silver Gustav Freij Wrestling (Greco-Roman) Men's Lightweight
 Silver Gösta Andersson Wrestling (Greco-Roman) Men's Welterweight
 Silver Per Gunnar Berlin Wrestling Men's Freestyle Welterweight
 Silver Bertil Antonsson Wrestling Men's Freestyle Heavyweight
 Silver Erland Almkvist
Sidney Boldt-Christmas
Per Gedda
Sailing Men's Dragon
 Bronze Gustaf Jansson Athletics Men's Marathon
 Bronze Ragnar Lundberg Athletics Men's Pole Vault
 Bronze Stig Sjölin Boxing Men's Middleweight
 Bronze National football team Football Men's Team Competition
 Bronze Hans Liljedahl Shooting Men's Trap
 Bronze Göran Larsson Swimming Men's 100m Freestyle
 Bronze Per Olof Östrand Swimming Men's 400m Freestyle
 Bronze Karl-Erik Nilsson Wrestling (Greco-Roman) Men's Light Heavyweight
 Bronze Rickard Sarby Sailing Men's Finn
 Bronze Magnus Wassén
Carl-Erik Ohlson
Folke Wassén
Sailing Men's 5½ m Class

Athletics[edit]

Boxing[edit]

Canoeing[edit]

Cycling[edit]

Road Competition

Men's Individual Road Race (190.4 km)

Diving[edit]

Men's 3m Springboard

  • Preliminary Round — 60.11 points (→ 23rd place)
  • Preliminary Round — 59.11 points (→ 27th place)

Equestrianism[edit]

Fencing[edit]

Ten fencers, all men, represented Sweden in 1952.

Men's foil
Men's team foil
Men's épée
Men's team épée
Men's sabre

Football[edit]

Gymnastics[edit]

Modern pentathlon[edit]

Three male pentathletes represented Sweden in 1952. Lars Hall won gold in the individual event and all three pentathletes won silver in the team event.

Individual
Team
  • Lars Hall
  • Thorsten Lindqvist
  • Claes Egnell

Rowing[edit]

Sailing[edit]

Shooting[edit]

Ten shooters represented Sweden in 1952. Sweden won silver and bronze in the trap event and silver in the 100m running deer.

25 m pistol
50 m pistol
300 m rifle, three positions
50 m rifle, three positions
50 m rifle, prone
100m running deer
Trap

Swimming[edit]

Water polo[edit]

Weightlifting[edit]

Wrestling[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sweden at the 1952 Helsinki Summer Games". sports-reference.com. Retrieved 15 February 2015. 

External links[edit]