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Fencing at the 1904 Summer Olympics – Men's foil

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Men's foil
at the Games of the III Olympiad
Ramón Fonst
VenueFrancis Gymnasium, Washington University in St. Louis
DateSeptember 7
Competitors9 from 3 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Ramón Fonst  Cuba
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Albertson Van Zo Post  United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Charles Tatham  United States
← 1900
1912 →

The men's foil was a fencing event held as part of the fencing programme at the 1904 Summer Olympics. It was the third time the event was held at the Olympics. The competition was held on September 7, 1904. Nine fencers from three nations competed. The medals were swept by "Cuban" fencers; only Fonst was actually Cuban, but the other two men (Albertson Van Zo Post and Charles Tatham) were marked as Cuban by the IOC despite being American. The mistake was corrected after more than 100 years in the early 2020s.[1]

Background

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This was the third appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1908 (when there was a foil display only rather than a medal event). None of the fencers from 1900 returned.[2]

Two of the three competing nations were making their debut in the men's foil: Cuba and Germany. Only the United States had previously competed, in 1900; the United States' two appearances matched France (1896 and 1900).

Competition format

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The event used a two-round format (semifinals and a final). The semifinal consisted of two pools, one of five fencers and one of four fencers, with each pool playing a round-robin. The top two in each semifinal advanced to the final; these four played another round-robin. Standard foil rules were used, including that touches had to be made with the tip of the foil, the target area was limited to the torso, and priority determined the winner of double touches.

However, the number of touches made was not determinative of the winner of a bout. Instead, each bout was evaluated by judges. Each judge assigned up to 100 points to each fencer, with the fencer having the higher average score winning the bout.[2]

Schedule

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Date Time Round
Wednesday, 7 September 1904 Semifinals
Final

Results

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Semifinals

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Each fencer in a group faced each other fencer in that group once. The top two fencers in each semifinal group moved on to the final.

Semifinal A

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Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Ramón Fonst  Cuba 4 0 Q
2 Albertson Van Zo Post  United States 3 1 Q
3 Fitzhugh Townsend  United States 2 2
4 Theodore Carstens  United States 1 3
5 William Grebe  United States 0 4

Semifinal B

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Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses Notes
1 Gustav Casmir  Germany 3 0 Q
2 Charles Tatham  United States 2 1 Q
3 Wilfred Holroyd  United States[3] 1 2
4 Arthur Fox  United States 0 3

Final

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Fonst continued to defeat all comers, including Post a second time, to win the gold. Post's only two losses in the event came against Fonst, as he took silver. Tatham, who had lost to Casmir in the semifinal pool, defeated him the second time around to take third place.

Rank Fencer Nation Wins Losses
1st place, gold medalist(s) Ramón Fonst  Cuba 3 0
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Albertson Van Zo Post  United States 2 1
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Charles Tatham  United States 1 2
4 Gustav Casmir  Germany 0 3

Final classification

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Rank Fencer Nation Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s) Ramón Fonst  Cuba Final
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Albertson Van Zo Post  United States Final
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Charles Tatham  United States Final
4 Gustav Casmir  Germany Final
5 Fitzhugh Townsend  United States 3rd in semifinal pool
Wilfred Holroyd  United States[3] 3rd in semifinal pool
7 Theodore Carstens  United States 4th in semifinal pool
Arthur Fox  United States 4th in semifinal pool
9 William Grebe  United States 5th in semifinal pool

Notes

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  1. ^ "St. Louis 1904 Fencing Foil Individual Men Results". Olympics.com. Retrieved 2021-09-03.
  2. ^ a b "Foil, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  3. ^ a b The IOC results database shows Wilfred Holroyd as American; however, he was British.

Sources

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