In a few weeks, the greatest sporting event on the planet will officially begin with the Paris Olympic games opening ceremony.
The spectacle, which involves both artistic and cultural showcases from the host nation, is traditionally followed by a parade of some 10,000 athletes from over 200 countries.
For the first time in the history of the Olympic Summer Games, the Opening Ceremony will not take place in a stadium. Paris 2024 is breaking new ground by bringing sports into the city and the same will be true of the Opening Ceremony, set to be held in the heart of the city along its main artery: the Seine.
Many of our readers will be particularly interested in the role that some of the 280 or so water polo players that are at the games will have at the opening ceremony. Unlike previous games, each nation will have two flag bearers at the opening ceremony, one male and one female, in a concerted effort to promote gender equality.
Dusan Mandic makes Olympic Ceremonial History
Dusan Mandic is the latest water polo player to join the flag bearing club at the Olympic Games, with the two-time Olympic champion flying the flag for Serbia in Paris later this month.Â
Montenegro has had the most flag bearers with six, closely followed by Croatia (5) and Yugoslavia (5), while the Netherlands and Great Britain have three apiece, and Hungary have two. Nine other nations have all had one water polo flag bearer in their history at the Olympic games: Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Egypt, France, Italy, Singapore, Spain and the USA.
With Mandic bearing the flag in Paris, it keeps up a eight games streak with the presence of water polo flag bearers dating back to Atlanta 1996. Should another country name a water polo player as a flag bearer, it would become the sixth occasion that we will see more than one water polo player bearing the flag.
The first water polo player to carry their nation’s flag was Great Britain’s Charles Smith in 1912 (where he also held the flag for the closing ceremony too). Smith won three Olympic gold medals, including the Olympic games that he was the flag bearer (Stockholm, 1912). To this day, Smith is the oldest water polo player to appear at the Olympic games (45 years and 169 days) and the oldest water polo player to win a gold medal (41years and 216 days).
The only other water polo players to win an Olympic gold medal as flag bearer was Filip Filipovic in 2020, and Italy’s Carmella Allucci in 2004. Allucci was the first, and currently the only female water polo player to have had the flag bearing honour – albeit at the closing ceremony.Â
Belgium’s Victor Boin is currently the only water polo player to have held the flag of a host nation (Antwerp, 1920), however, he also competed in the Fencing contest at the same games, winning a silver medal.
Five of the twenty-five flag bearers have represented countries outside of Europe; Les Mckay represented Australia at London (1948), Joao Goncalves represented Brazil at Mexico City (1968), Ahmed Fouad Nessim represented Egypt at Oslo (1952), Lionel Chee represented Singapore at Melbourne (1956) and the well known Terry Schroeder represented the USA at Seoul (1988).
The all-time Olympic goal scorer, Manuel Estiarte, was honoured at his sixth Olympic games by carrying Spain’s flag at Sydney in 2000. He won the gold medal at Atlanta in 1996.
Water Polo Flag Bearers
Charles Smith (Great Britain) Stockholm, 1912
Victor Boin (Belgium) Antwerp, 1920
Arthur Hunt (Great Britain) Paris, 1924
Les Mckay (Australia) London, 1948
Bozo Grkinic (Yugoslavia) London, 1948
Ahmed Fouad Nessim (Egypt) Helsinki, 1952
Lionel Chee (Singapore) Melbourne, 1956
Zdravko Ciro Kovacic (Yugoslavia) Melbourne, 1956
Joao Goncalves (Brazil) Mexico City, 1968
Fred van Dorp (Netherlands) Mexico City, 1968
Mirko Sandic (Yugoslavia) Munich, 1972
Evert Kroon (Netherlands) Montreal, 1976
Istvan Szivos (Hungary) Moscow, 1980
Ton Buunk (Netherlands) Los Angeles, 1984
Terry Schroeder (USA) Seoul, 1988
Perica Bukic (Croatia) Atlanta, 1996
Igor Milanovic (Serbia and Montenegro/ FR Yugoslavia) Atlanta, 1996
Manuel Estiarte (Spain) Sydney, 2000
Dubravko Simenc (Croatia) Athens, 2004
Carmella Allucci (Italy) Athens, 2004
Veljko Uskokovic (Montnegro) Beijing, 2008
Peter Biros (Hungary) London, 2012
Josip Pavic (Croatia) Rio, 2016
Predrag Jokic (Montenegro) Rio 2016
Filip Filipovic (Serbia) 2020
Drasko Brguljan (Montenegro) 2020
More articles about the Olympic Games
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