Three Olympic Milestone Birthdays

Today Oldest Olympians has three milestone birthdays to celebrate, and thus we have even more reason than usual to discuss them all in a single blog post!

(Ernesto Sastre, pictured at El Magazín Cultural)

First, we are wishing fencer Ernesto Sastre a happy 98th birthday! Sastre represented Colombia in three events at the 1964 Tokyo Games, the individual and team épée, as well as the team foil, but was eliminated in the first round of each of them. He had better luck at the Central American and Caribbean Games, winning bronze and gold with the épée team in 1962 and 1966 respectively. Sastre is the oldest living Colombian Olympian, as well as the oldest survivor of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.

Next, we are wishing Canadian bobsledder Peter Kirby a happy 93rd birthday! Kirby represented Canada in two events at the 1964 Innsbruck Games, coming in fourth in the two-man, but winning gold in the four-man. Originally a skier, he also won a gold medal at the 1965 World Championships and, by career, was a geologist and businessman. He is now the oldest living Olympic bobsleigh medalist.

Finally, we are wishing a happy 95th birthday to Walter Neville Howell, the oldest living Australian Olympic medalist! Howell represented his country in rowing’s eights event at the 1956 Melbourne Games, where he won a bronze medal. He captured gold in that event at the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games and also competed in the coxed pairs at the 1960 Rome Olympics, but was eliminated in the round one repêchage.

Poul Svendsen

(Poul Svendsen, pictured at Sjællandske Medier)

Oldest Olympians is saddened to learn that Danish rower Poul Svendsen, born April 21, 1927, died January 2 at the age of 96. Svendsen represented Denmark in the coxed pairs event at the 1952 Helsinki Games, where he won a bronze medal alongside Svend Pedersen and Jørgen Frantzen. A member of the Frederiksværk Roklub, he was the last surviving member of his bronze medal-winning crew.

At the time of his death, Svendsen was also the oldest living Olympic rowing medalist. That distinction now goes to Giuseppe Moioli, born August 8, 1927, who was already the oldest living Olympic rowing champion. Moioli won gold in the coxless fours at the 1948 London Games, just missed the podium in fourth in 1956 Melbourne, and also competed in 1952 Helsinki. He was a five-time European champion in this event between 1947 and 1956, and also won with the eights in 1958, in addition to a coxless fours gold medal at the 1955 Mediterranean Games. He later worked as a coach.

(Lothar Milde)

Finally, as a small update, we received several sources demonstrating that a previous Olympic medal mystery, East German Olympic medalist Lothar Milde, was still alive, as recently as 2023, and thus we have added him to our tables! We have also received evidence that Jean-Claude Lecante, who we also featured in that entry, is still alive, which we hope to confirm shortly so that we can add him to our tables as well!

Richard Walpole and Jan Boutmy

For the first time in nearly two months, Oldest Olympians has two milestone birthdays to celebrate so, rather than choose between them, we are going to feature both in a single blog entry!

First, Australian cross-country skier Richard Walpole is turning 97! Walpole represented his country in the 15 kilometer event at the 1960 Squaw Valley Games, finishing 51st. Both during and after his active career, he coached for his Myrtleford Ski Club, and he is now the oldest survivor of the 1960 Winter Olympics.

We are also wishing a happy 94th birthday to fencer Jan Boutmy, the oldest living Olympian to have represented the Netherlands Antilles! Boutmy took part in the individual sabre tournaments at the 1964 and 1968 Summer Olympics, but was eliminated in the first round both times. He had much more success at the Central American and Caribbean Games, winning eleven medals between 1946 and 1970, including six golds. He later served as an international judge and coach.

Arnie Oss

Oldest Olympians is saddened to learn that American ice hockey player Arnie Oss, born April 18, 1928, died November 10 at the age of 95. Oss represented the United States in the tournament at the 1952 Oslo Olympics and won a silver medal. While this was his only international appearance, he had a successful college career at Dartmouth College.

At the time of his death, Oss was the oldest living Olympic ice hockey medalist. That distinction now goes to Swedish player Hans Andersson-Tvilling, born July 15, 1928. Andersson-Tvilling won bronze for his country at the 1952 Oslo Games, and just missed a second medal in 1956 after Sweden lost the bronze medal match to Canada. He won the World Championships in 1953, also taking silver in in 1951, and captured European Championship titles in 1951 and 1953, in addition to bronze in 1955. Domestically, he was a four-time national Swedish champion with Djurgårdens IF. His twin brother Stig had a similar record in the sport, including the Olympic bronze.

Finally, we have an Olympic mystery that we forgot to include in our previous post, regarding British sport shooter Steffen Cranmer. Cranmer represented his country in six events across three editions of the Games – 1952-1960 – but never reached the podium. He was a World Champion in the 50 m small-bore rifle prone team event in 1958 and was still alive in 2012. An unsourced Wikipedia edit claimed that he died in July 2019, but we have been unable to confirm this.

November 2024 Olympic Medal Mysteries

Today on Oldest Olympians we want to cover two recent Olympic medal mysteries. As a reminder, these are Olympians who won an Olympic medal during their careers, but for whom we have no indication of whether they are alive or deceased as of their 90th birthday.

First we want to mention East German discus thrower Lothar Milde, born November 8, 1934, who represented his country at three editions of the Olympic Games. In 1960 he was 12th, while in 1964 he was 14th and therefore eliminated in the qualifying round. In 1968, however, he was the silver medallist behind four-time Olympic champion Al Oerter of the United States. At the European Championships he captured four medals, while domestically he was a six-time East German champion. After being sentenced to prison for financial issues relating to a university sports post, he seems to have disappeared from the radar, and we have been unable to ascertain whether he is still alive.

Next we have French cyclist Jean-Claude Lecante, born November 12, 1934. Lecante represented his country in the team pursuit, 4,000 metres event at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, where France won the silver medal. His career was relatively brief, ending after 1958, and thus we have not been able to locate confirmation that he is still alive, although he does not appear in the French death index, which is relatively comprehensive.

(Baumann on the podium, in the center of the photograph)

Finally, we have an update to a previous Olympic medal mystery. Long ago, we covered Swiss wrestler Hermann Baumann, born January 23, 1921, who represented his country in the lightweight, freestyle event at the 1948 London Games and earned the bronze medal. Research by Connor Mah has uncovered that Baumann died February 19, 1999, at the age of 78.