August 14, 1936 – If I gave you a final sports score of 19-8 what game would you first assume was played? Football? Perhaps baseball? Well, how about Olympic Men’s Basketball? If you guessed hoops then you would be correct.
The United States beats Canada, 19-8 to win the gold medal in the inaugural men’s basketball competition at the Olympic Games in Berlin. It wasn’t that the athletes were inept at scoring, no there was another factor. The host Nazi Germans had the event scheduled outdoors and the conditions… were abysmal.
First of all the court was not concrete, clay, wood, or any other expected surface…it was played on compacted fine gravel! Try running and dribbling on that in a game. To make matters worse, it rained. The Montreal Gazette said that the court had been turned “into a skating rink by the incessant downpour” and that “a high wind did weird things with a soggy ball.”
There were reports that the contestants left the court that day: tired, wet, and muddy. Hardly a description we would expect from a world championship basketball game with the prize of Olympic Gold on the line.
To find more great daily sports history make sure to check out the Sports Jersey Dispatch and Pigskin Dispatch.
More From Sports History Network

1899: The Cardinals’ First Season
Before player drafts, salary caps, and heck, even before the National Football League, we

1969 New York Jets (A Year After The Guarantee)
Much has been said and written about the 1968 New York Jets, and with

NBA Rivalries: Golden State Warriors vs. Memphis Grizzlies
Most rivalries are decades old. They begin when the team is created or moved

1978 – The Second “World’s Strongest Man Competition”
In my last article, I wrote about the first World’s Strongest Man contest in

Lawrence McCutcheon and the 1975 Postseason
The featured halfback for the Los Angeles Rams in 1975 was Lawrence McCutcheon, a

Super Bowl L (Denver Broncos vs. Carolina Panthers): An Ultimate Recount of the Game
Today we have Super Bowl 50, held on February 7, 2016, between the second-time

1977 – The First “World’s Strongest Man Competition”
Mostly everyone, whether a fan or not, has seen some footage of the World’s

Masters of Delusion: Big John Studd and Dutch Doogan
As far back as I remember I always wanted to be six foot ten.