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2000  Sydney Summer Olympics

2000 Summer Olympics - Olympic Torch relay

2000 Summer Olympics torch relay

 

 The 2000 Summer Olympics torch relay was the transferral of the Olympic Flame to Sydney, Australia that built up to the 2000 Summer Olympics. The torch travelled to various island nations as part of a tour of Oceania before beginning an extensive journey around Australia. For the first time the Flame was taken underwater, with a special flare-like torch taken on a dive down to the Great Barrier Reef. At the opening ceremony the cauldron was lit by Aboriginal athlete Cathy Freeman.  
  THE OLYMPIC TORCH RELAY

In 2000, as the Olympic flame travelled first through Greece, then through Oceania and finally around Australia, athletes across the world were beginning to make their way to Sydney for training and to celebrate the Games of the XXVII Olympiad.

In every Greek town and village that the torch relay passed through on its ten days in the country, the streets were lined with people.

On 20 May, the torch relay around Greece came to an end at the site of the first modern Olympic Games, the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens.

2000 5
Mike Hewitt - Allsport
Lambros Papakostas kneels in front of the chief priestess in 
Olympia. After a special lighting ceremony at the sacred site, the 
Greek athlete was the first runner to carry the flame toward Sydney.

Relay elements

A History of the Olympic Torch Relay has been written by Janet Cahill covering all relays to Sydney 2000. She is also author of the Olympic Torch Relay section of the "Official Report of the XXVII Olympiad, Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. Volume Two - Celebrating The Games".

Torch

The design of the torch reflected three famed areas of Australian culture: the boomerang, the Sydney Opera House, and the waters of the Pacific Ocean. The concept also reflected the elements of earth, fire, and water. This was achieved across three layers of the torch. The first, inner layer contains the fuel system and combustor, the second contains the fuel canister, and the outer layer is a specially textured aluminium shell. A combination of copper, brass, aluminium, and stainless steel was used in its construction, and the fuel comprised 65 percent butane and 35 percent propane. In total 14,000 torches were produced.

 

General torch and torch relay information 2000
Description: The tree layers represent earth, fire and water
Material: Three layers consisting of polished stainless steel, anodized aluminum and coated aluminum.
Fuel:  
Torch measure: Lenght: 77 cm      Weight: 1,000 gr
Torches total:  
Design by: Blue Sky Design
Manufacturer: G.A. & L. Harrington Pty Ltd.
Date of the torch relay: 10.05.2000 - 15.09.2000
Duration: 129 days
Numbers of runners: about 11,000
Distance total: about 27,000 km
Name of the last runner: Cathy Freeman
torch1 torch2 torch3
torch4 torch5
Images Copyright © by Stratos Klimou

Torchbearers

A total of 13,400 torch-bearers were involved in the relay. The Greek leg of the route saw 800 people carry the torch, while 1,500 people were involved across Oceania. As part of the vast traversal of Australia, 11,000 people carried the torch within the country.

The first Australian torch-bearer was Sophie Gosper, the daughter of International Olympic Committee (IOC) Vice-President Kevan Gosper. Her selection caused considerable controversy with accusations of corruption directed at the Hellenic Olympic Committee (HOC). Greek-Australian Yianna Souleles was originally due to receive the torch in Olympia but was replaced at late notice by Gosper. Kevan Gosper accepted the invitation for his daughter to carry the torch while claiming to be unaware that this would make her the first Australian to have the honour.

The HOC's invitation was seen as an attempt to curry favour with the IOC after being warned that its delays put the planned 2004 Olympics (scheduled to be held in Greece) in jeopardy. Gosper's acceptance of the invitation was portrayed by the media as being nepotistic and inappropriate, with Australian politicians, Olympic athletes, and officials from various Olympic Committees condemning the move. Gosper initially defended his actions but would go on to make a public apology, claiming that fatherly pride had clouded his judgement. He gave up his role in the relay at the Melbourne Cricket Ground despite having previously described it as "the most important moment of my life since I won a silver medal [there]".

Route

The Flame was lit during a ceremony in Olympia, as has been tradition at all the Summer Games since those in 1936. The Flame is initiated by using a parabolic mirror that concentrates the sun's rays. However, due to some cloud cover on the day of the ceremony, there was insufficient sunlight to create the required level of heat. A backup, lit on the previous day during rehearsals, was used instead. The remainder of the ceremony could then take place.

The relay always begins in Greece and travels from Olympia to Athens and the Panathenaic Stadium. The Hellenic Olympic Committee arranged for the torch to be taken to several Greek islands, a first in the history of Olympic relays. The torch arrived in Athens on 20 May, after which it began a tour of Oceania. The Flame was flown firstly to Guam, before moving to Palau, Micronesia, Nauru, the Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Samoa, American Samoa, the Cook Islands, Tonga, and New Zealand. The relay had been scheduled to visit Fiji but the country was omitted due to ongoing government instability at that time.

After the island tour the Flame arrived in Australia on 8 June. The relay was an extensive journey around the country, involving 11,000 torch-bearers and a variety of modes of transport. On 27 June the Flame was taken underwater, a first in the history of torch relays. Marine biologist Wendy Craig Duncan carried a special version of the torch for a three-minute trip around Agincourt Reef, a section of the Great Barrier Reef popular with divers. The torch was modified to carry a specially-designed flare that would burn at 2,000 degrees Celsius underwater while remaining as aesthetically similar to the normal flame as possible.

Route in Greece

May 10 (day 1)

  • Olympia, Pyrgos, Amaliada, Tripoli

May 20 (day 2)

  • Athens

May 20 (day 3)

  • Panathenaic Stadium
torch2000 poster

Route in Oceania and New Zealand

A special charter aircraft operated by the official carrier, Ansett, transferred the Olympic flame in a safety lantern directly from Athens to the Pacific Ocean island of Guam for the commencement of the Oceania segment of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Torch Relay, arriving there on 22 May.

On Day 11, as the relay came to the Cook Islands, the torch passed through a guard of honour of those who had contributed to the Olympic Movement in that country. The first bearer was carried on a royal platform while children sang a traditional chant.

The torch relay left behind the palm trees and beaches of Tonga on 2 June; next stop was the ski-fields of Queenstown on New Zealand's south island.

On the morning of 6 June, Day 16, at 10 am the torch reached Wellington Airport. The torch was greeted with a traditional Maori welcome, which with its tongue-poking, glaring eyes and spear-shaking can be rather alarming to the uninitiated.

The last stop on the New Zealand leg of the relay was at Auckland, sometimes described as 'the city of sails' for it, like Sydney, enjoys the distinction of a vast harbour.
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Route in Australia

Australia

In Australia the torch relay passed within an hour's drive of 85 per cent of the population, travelled over 27 000 kms and was carried by 11 000 torchbearers in the longest torch relay in Olympic history. The Olympic flame travelled by a variety of modes of transport, including a surf boat at Bondi, the Indian Pacific train across the Nullarbor Plain, a Royal Flying Doctor Service aircraft in the remote outback and by camel on Cable Beach at Broome in the north-west of the country. The journey began in Uluru, in the centre of Australia.

Northern Territory

The arrival of the Olympic torch was preceded by an entourage of international media, every move carefully orchestrated by local officials. On the eve of the flame's arrival guests attended a special staging of an award-winning tourist attraction, a 'Sounds of Silence' dinner, hosted by the President of SOCOG and New South Wales Minister for the Olympic Games, the Honourable Michael Knight.

On 8 June 2000 the Olympic flame arrived at Yulara, in Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park. Announcing Uluru-Kata Tjuta as the first place in Australia to receive the flame, the SOCOG President had declared it important that the site be an instantly recognisable, internationally known symbol of Australia.

"Uluru is not only known worldwide but is also a place of immense historical and cultural significance," he noted. "It is in the geographical heart of Australia, is of great spiritual significance to many Australians and is part of the outback character of Australians."

The next day the torch left town on a road train convoy, headed back to the airport for its journey into Queensland before returning to the Territory 19 days later.

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Queensland

On 9 June, Mount Isa became the flame's first stop in Queensland, when Frank Daisy, a rugby league football legend, became the first to carry the torch in the state. Citizens turned out in droves to greet the flame, the crowds larger than for the mining town's annual rodeo. Like so many towns along the route, Mount Isa's history has both shaped and reflected that of the nation. Last century there were bloody conflicts between its Kalkadunga Aboriginal people and the early European settlers. Now there's a diverse population, which includes Australia's largest Finnish community.

As the torch headed south next morning along the highway through Greenmount and Allora to the agricultural town of Warwick, crowds again turned out in large numbers to cheer the runners on, even before breakfast. A local pub put on a champagne breakfast which proved so popular that people had to be turned away. Most were happy just to be there, with their Australian flags and fold-up picnic chairs. The route now turned towards the coast. The contrasting environments of sea and outback have figured prominently in the way Australians perceive themselves. It was fitting that the Australian leg of the torch relay begin in one environment and move towards the other. Locals were out in force as the torch and its convoy passed through Aratula, Boondah, Beaudesert, Canungra, Nerang, Tugun, Bilinga and Kirra, before arriving at the resort town of Coolangatta. Like so many of the towns the torch passed through on its Australian odyssey, Coolangatta got its name from the local Aboriginal language.

In Brisbane on 14 June, retired Australian cricket captain Alan Border ran the flame in Australia's third largest city. Another well-known runner, rugby league legend Wally Lewis, former Queensland and Australian captain, remarked, "You can pretend you're above all this stuff but no one who carries the torch is unaffected." All those who touched the torch were in turn touched by it, and not only on the day of their run. In Queensland and elsewhere many torchbearers would later take their torches to youth detention centres, nursing homes and schools to share them with others.

After proceeding through a chain of towns stretching northward from Brisbane to the Sunshine Coast, a flotilla of small watercraft greeted the torch in the resort town of Noosa, on Day 9, 16 June. Later, a few kilometres inland, Olympic sprinter Raelene Boyle lit the cauldron at Tewantin. And on the other side of the Pacific, in a symbolic gesture, Nova Peris-Kneebone, the first runner in Australia, handed a torch replica to Muhammad Ali, the last torchbearer of the 1996 Atlanta Games. Earlier on Day 9 Bob Tisdall, aged 93 and the oldest surviving Olympic champion in the world, admitted to being a bit puffed after his 500 m run into the Nambour showgrounds through a cheering crowd. In 1932 he was an Irish hurdles champion, competing at the Los Angeles Games; by now he had been an Australian for over a quarter of a century.

On Day 17, 24 June, legends of Australian swimming made a big splash at Townsville's Tobruk Pool, where they had set world records in training for the Melbourne 1956 Games. On this day, Murray Rose, John Konrads, Jon Henricks and Lorraine Crapp swam a relay in the pool against local schoolchildren, before swim coach Laurie Lawrence lit the cauldron. Next day, the sun shone in Tully for the arrival of the torch, in the town the locals boast is the wettest in Australia. It receives an average annual rainfall of 4200 mm. The torch relay continued north and finished the day in Innisfail, where champion triathlete Brad Bevan ran the final leg into the local park.

The next day, the torch relay travelled out to the Great Barrier Reef, an area of coral reef extending 2000 km along the east coast of Australia, made up of more than 2900 individual reefs and 900 small islands and home to more than 400 different types of coral. The best way to see the reef is by diving on it, so the Sydney 2000 Olympic Torch Relay team took the flame diving. On Agincourt Reef, Wendy Craig Duncan, a marine biologist, took the flame for a 2 minute 40 second diving adventure. A special flare burned at 2000°C, ensuring a bright flame easily visible to the local fish and underwater photographers.

Escorted by a flotilla of boats, the flame then entered the harbour of Port Douglas where elders of the Yalanji Aboriginal tribe sang a traditional song of the sea to welcome it to their shores. Next morning the flame was back on an aircraft; flown to Horn Island, it was put on a pearl lugger and ferried across to Thursday Island to be greeted by Joseph Wasaga, an elder of the Kaurareg people.

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 Northern Territory Reprise

First stop on the return to the Territory, which is sometimes described as Australia's equivalent of Texas, was Katherine. Settled in the late nineteenth century as an outpost on the Overland Telegraph line, Katherine is perhaps best known today as the gateway to Katherine Gorge in the Nitmiluk National Park. The Gorge, a series of spectacular water-filled ravines cut into a vast rock plateau, is one of Australia's most famous natural features. The torch travelled through the Gorge by boat.

Soon after dawn on 29 June, on Day 22 of the relay, the torch travelled the short distance to Tindal Royal Australian Airforce base. Here it joined a 40-minute flight to Cooinda in Kakadu National Park, one of the largest reserves of the Aboriginal people. A diversion was made into the Yellow Water Billabong and Paperbark Swamp, typical of the Park's lush wetlands, the existence of which was unknown to most of the outside world before the movie Crocodile Dundee featured them.

route_2000_4.JPG

Western Australia

The Olympic flame made its first stop in Western Australia at Kununurra, Aboriginal for 'big waters' on Day 23 of the torch relay. A remote town in the Kimberley region, Kununurra sits on the Ord River, gateway to the Bungle Bungle ranges and the world's largest diamond mine, the only place in the world where pink diamonds are found.

After an evening of celebrations the torch relay got off to an early start on 1 July for a day flight to Carnarvon, with celebrations en route at airports in Port Hedland and Karratha. These celebrations were brief, due to the long distances to be travelled on Day 24, but the reception by the locals in each town was warm and impressive. Another flight and after lunch at Geraldton the Olympic flame landed in Albany, a town facing the Southern Ocean on the southern tip of Western Australia. Albany is the site of the state's oldest European settlement and was a commercial whaling station until the 1970s. Today it is one of Australia's most popular holiday destinations. Leaving Albany on Day 26, 3 July, the flame returned to road travel, accompanied by the relay convoy.

En route to Busselton on Day 27, the relay passed through Bridgetown and Nannup. Running in Busselton, Munich 1972 Olympic Games swimming hero Shane Gould had to have her torch relit six times, due to the blustery winds. She passed over the flame to Wardani tribal elder George Webb to continue its journey.

On Saturday 9 July, the Olympic flame left Perth for its 600 km journey east to Kalgoorlie, following the path of the Perthto- Kalgoorlie water pipeline. Kalgoorlie, home to one of the richest ore bodies on earth, had adopted the motto 'Go For Gold'. The residents turned out to cheer the torch and farewelled it on its way across the Nullarbor Plain to Port Augusta in South Australia on board the Indian Pacific train, one of the great rail journeys of the world.

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South Australia

Cook was the train's first stopover in South Australia. Normally home to only three people and a three-legged dog, the outback town's population swelled to over 500 as they indulged in their own version of an 'Outback Games' for a few hours.

On Day 38, the Olympic torch relay wound its way to Adelaide, home to approximately one million people, a city of wide open spaces and green parklands. After a journey on a single scull rowed by Olympian John Bolt, the lunchtime celebration was held in Glenelg, an historic beachside suburb, where a crowd of 25 000 watched and cheered in warm winter sunshine.

On 18 July, Day 4 1 , the Olympic torch was carried through a three-million-year-old cave which houses 93 species of animal fossils. The World Heritage-listed Blanche Cave in Naracoorte was aglow with 1300 candles for the occasion. "It was like running through fairyland," torchbearer Phyliss Brophy commented, as the locals enthusiastically shared this little-known beauty with the world. The flame continued on south, through Coonawarra, another well-known wine growing region, before heading to Mount Gambier, its final destination in South Australia. A region renowned for dairy, wool and wheat, Mount Gambier is set amongst almost extinct volcanic craters and a limestone lake.
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Victoria

The flame crossed into Victoria on Day 42 of the torch relay, Wednesday 19 July. It was to travel through the state for 13 days before crossing Bass Strait to Tasmania and then returning to the mainland. Criss-crossing Victoria, the smallest mainland state, the Olympic flame visited desert, beaches, snowfields, cities and rural areas. Its total journey through the state lasted 21 days, covered 3464 km of road and included 2165 torchbearers.

Thursday 27 July marked the halfway mark for the Sydney 2000 Olympic Torch Relay in Australia. Arriving in Bendigo, the torch was carried by World War I digger Jack Lockett, who at 109 years of age, was born five years before the first modern Olympic Games was held in 1896. Standing tall and proud, and defying the statistics of his age, Lockett lit the cauldron as 15 000 residents turned out for the halfway mark celebration during the lunchtime stopover. On Day 52, 29 July, the torch relay travelled south-east, from Ballarat, the town where Australia's only civil uprising, the Eureka Stockade, occurred in 1854. The incident has become symbolic of the nation's attitude to authority - an attitude that appeared in themes of the Opening Ceremony performance.

The flame continued on its way to the historic Melbourne Cricket Ground, home of Australian Rules Football, and nearly 80 000 streamed into the stadium that also saw the 1956 Olympic Games. Cyclist Ian Browne carried the flame to the entrance and passed it to former Australian cricket captain Mark Taylor, who entered the stadium to a loud cheer. The torch passed to the national soccer team captain, Paul Wade, then to Australian Rules football legend Ron Barassi and finally to Ron Clarke, who as a young athlete lit the cauldron at the Opening Ceremony 44 years earlier and now re-enacted the moment to the cheers of the crowd. The second man to break the 4-minute mile, John Landy, again recited the athlete's oath that he had taken at the Melbourne Games.
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Tasmania

Located in the south-east of Australia, Tasmania is Australia's smallest state, an island separated from the mainland by Bass Strait. It is about the same size as the Republic of Ireland,

This first day of the torch relay in Tasmania was a huge journey across the north-west coast via Burnie, then south for the overnight stop at Queenstown. The early morning start on Day 56 from Queenstown was run through fog, which magically rolled away around 9 am.

On it went to Deloraine, then Devonport, where it boarded the Spirit of Tasmania for the return journey to Victoria. On Day 60, Sunday 6 August, the torch relay team and the Olympic flame took a well-earned rest.
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Victoria Again

Thousands of people on the Mornington Peninsula flocked to the early dawn return of the Olympic torch to Victoria on Day 61, 7 August. Olympic gold medallist Debbie Flintoff-King was the first to carry it from the pier.

On Day 64 the historic restored steam train, Puffing Billy, carried the flame through the Dandenong Ranges on a 45-minute trip from Emerald to Belgrave. Locally born singer Vanessa Amorosi entertained the crowds in Emerald in a warm up for her starring role in the Olympic Opening Ceremony.

After 67 days in Australia, on 13 August, the Olympic torch reached the 'high point' in its 100-day journey. At 1861 m above sea level, the flame burned bright against a darkening sky as three-time Winter Olympian Steven Lee skied with it down the summit ridge of Mount Hotham towards a crowd of 5000 in the mountain village.

Sandy Hollway, the CEO of SOCOG, carried the torch in his hometown. Hollway commented, "This is the finest moment I've had so far in the four years I've been involved in organising the Games." Rod McGeoch, head of Sydney's 2000 Olympic Bid, responsible for securing the Olympic Games for Sydney, had carried the torch earlier in the day as one of the last runners in Victoria.
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New South Wales

15 August, Day 69, was the first full day for the Olympic torch in the Olympic state. From the moment 88-year-old Merrick Webb set off in a dawn downpour from Albury in a wheelchair, thousands lined the long route all the way north to Griffith that evening.  From Griffith the flame continued south-east to Wagga Wagga for the evening celebration on August 16, greeted by most of the population of 50 000 in this regional hub that supports dairy, lamb and wheat industries. On the following morning, Day 71, the torch continued north-east to Junee and on to Cootamundra, the birthplace of Sir Donald Bradman, Australia's most famous sportsman and cricketer.

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2000 8
Grag Garry - SOCOG
The torch winds its way through the Blue Mountains,
part of the Great Dividing Range and a popular tourist
destination, by bicycle.

On 21 August, the torch headed to Armidale, a university city situated high in the northern tablelands in an area known as New England, for the evening celebration. Leaving Armidale on Day 76, the torch relay travelled north to Tenterfield, the birthplace of Australian Federation and the international entertainer Peter Allen. The celebrations included the singing of his popular song, 'I Still Call Australia Home', which resonates with a special meaning for many Australians.

The flame continued to South Kempsey for lunch on Day 79 and Port Macquarie for the evening fireworks. In Port Macquarie, Stephen Lyons, who was born with no legs and one arm, carried the torch. Like most torchbearers, he wanted to keep his torch as a souvenir, so his friends bought it for him. There were similar stories of courage and kindness in numerous other towns. Next day it was Taree for lunch and Tuncurry for dinner, after 80 days on the road in Australia. On Sunday 27 August, Day 8 1 , the torch relay ran south from Forster through Bulahdelah, Karuah and Raymond Terrace before it reached Newcastle for the evening rest.

On Day 90, Tuesday 5 September, the relay ran south to Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory. Canberra, the nation's capital, is a purpose-built city, elegantly landscaped, with innovative architecture. Canberra is also home to the Australian Institute of Sport, where many Olympic athletes have trained. Many athletes, including Olympians and Paralympians amongst their ranks, carried the Olympic torch throughout the Canberra region.

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On 10 September, as the flame continued north towards Sydney, it made its evening stop at seaside Kiama, home to the famous 'blowhole'. Australian surfing legend Tom Carroll, chosen because of his connection with South Coast surfing, lit the community cauldron. Further north, as the torch relay left the city of Wollongong, 100 Harley Davidson motorbike riders made a corridor through which the torchbearer ran.
route_2000_12.JPG

On Thursday 14 September, the day before the Opening Ceremony, the flame was at Bondi Beach, passing from one lifesaving boat to another in the famous surf before lifesaver Jessie Miley-Dyer rode a wave in her boat to carry the torch ashore.

The crowds throughout the Sydney leg of the relay were almost overwhelming. Australian swimming legends from the Melbourne 1956 Games, Dawn Fraser and Murray Rose, renowned for their speed in the pool, refused to be hurried by officials and set their own idiosyncratic pace along the streets with the torch. The Opera House forecourt and surrounding Circular Quay were full to capacity with people straining to get a glimpse of proceedings.

2000 9
Mark Horsburgh - Sport the Library

Hours before travelling to Hemebush Bay via fery,
100.000 have gathered on the beach in Manly for the 
largest lunchtime celebration in the 100-day journey

Prince Albert of Monaco ran a section on the Sydney Harbour foreshore, and at the Sydney Opera House the flame was held by blind Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli, who would later perform at the special Opera House Torch Gala Concert. He was accompanied on the outdoor stage by torchbearers Olympian Melinda Gainsford-Taylor and pop star Olivia Newton-John. Newton-John carried the flame around the Opera House and met up with Australian tennis ace Pat Rafter. Their backdrop was the Harbour Bridge, lit for the first time with the five Olympic rings and highlighted by fireworks exploding off the bridge pylons.

Day 100, 15 September, was the last day of the torch relay. With the Opening Ceremony to take place in the evening, crowd excitement and exuberance surrounding the torch was reaching a crescendo. Thousands of people ignored security and broke barricades to get a closer view of the Great White Shark, Australia's golfing great Greg Norman, carrying the torch on the Sydney Harbour Bridge. After walking slowly through the crushing crowd, he passed the torch to Paralympian Louise Sauvage.
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Opening Ceremony and the Olympic Flame

Finally came the entry of the Olympic Flame as Tina Arena sang 'The Flame', signalling the last stage of a relay which had begun in Ancient Olympia nearly five months earlier, and had explored 27 000 km of Australia during the previous 99 days. It had been carried by nearly 11000 torchbearers in Australia, and generated enormous goodwill. Now, inside the stadium for its final lap, it was in the hands of a medley of some of Australia's greatest female athletes. This carriage of the last torch was designed to commemorate a century of women's participation in the Games. Appropriately, it also served as a reminder of the huge contribution women have made to Australian Olympic history.

Betty Cuthbert, heroine of the Melbourne 1956 Olympic Games and now a victim of multiple sclerosis, was the first torchbearer inside the stadium, in a wheelchair pushed by Raelene Boyle. The torch went then to legends Dawn Fraser, Shirley Strickland and Shane Gould before being passed to Debbie Flintoff-King, the last Australian woman to win gold on the athletic track before Sydney. Between them the members of that group have won 15 gold medals. Each had a short, dignified run with the precious cargo before a hug and a changeover.

When Flintoff-King handed the torch to Cathy Freeman, clad in a space-age body suit, the huge audience erupted with a massive roar of delight and excitement. For more than a year the identity of the last torchbearer had been the subject of intense speculation and anticipation. The choice of Freeman meant that the Australian relay, which had begun with one indigenous Australian, Nova Peris-Kneebone, had ended with another. At the end of a ceremony that had emphasised Aboriginal heritage and addressed the issue of Reconciliation, the presence of Freeman in such a vital role made a powerful statement. Many saw it as representing a special moment in the nation's history.

Freeman ascended four flights of stairs, carrying the torch, then walked across a shallow circular pond to an island in the centre, where she dipped the torch low, then swept it around her to ignite a ring of fire. The pond in fact concealed the submerged cauldron, and the circle of fire consisted of 150 nozzles around the rim of its gas-burner. As she stood motionless, the now-flaming cauldron rose around and above her. The whole tableau amounted to a lovely marriage of fire and water. Freeman walked from the pond and stood solitary, torch aloft, for what seemed an eternity, as the cauldron waited to be transported towards its place above the stadium. Finally it made its slow, majestic voyage upwards, via a winch system, against a waterfall background. The Games of the XXVII Olympiad had their flame for the next 16 days. Sydney, and Australia, had a memory that would last for at least 110 000 lifetimes.

 

(Source document:   Official Report 2000,  vol. II )
Read more: Vol. II, page 21 - 49
© 2001 by Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games

 

 Bearing the flame:
firing the spirit

Thank you to the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney
 www.powerhousemuseum.com
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