Rome 1960 Olympic Games, athletic festival held in Rome that took place August 25–September 11, 1960. The Rome Games were the 14th occurrence of the modern Olympic Games.
The 1960 Olympics were the first to be fully covered by television. Taped footage of the Games was flown to New York City at the end of each day and broadcast on the CBS television network in the United States. Eurovision provided live television broadcasts throughout Europe. An Olympic Stadium, home to the opening and closing ceremonies and the track-and-field competition, and a Sports Palace were built for the Games, and several ancient sites were restored and used as venues. The Basilica of Maxentius hosted the wrestling competition. The Baths of Caracalla provided the site of the gymnastic events. The marathon was run along the Appian Way and ended under the Arch of Constantine.
Note: Medal count per the IOC website.
More than 5,000 athletes representing 83 countries participated in the Rome Games. The track-and-field competition starred Abebe Bikila of Ethiopia, who, with his victory in the marathon, became the first Black African to win an Olympic gold medal. Women’s athletics were dominated by American sprinter Wilma Rudolph, who won three gold medals. The decathlon featured a tightly contested battle between Rafer Johnson of the United States and Yang Chuan-kwang of Taiwan, close friends who both attended the University of California at Los Angeles and trained under the same coach. Although Yang outperformed Johnson in seven events, the American’s dominance in the throwing events made the difference, and he outscored Yang by 58 points to win the gold medal. Middle-distance runner Peter Snell of New Zealand won the first of his three career gold medals.
The swimming events were dominated by the U.S. and Australian teams, which between them won all but one of the gold medals. Ingrid Krämer of Germany won both of the women’s diving events. The U.S. basketball team took its fifth consecutive gold medal; the squad, which starred Oscar Robertson, Jerry West, Jerry Lucas, and Walt Bellamy, was considered by many at the time to be the best team ever assembled. American Cassius Clay (later known as Muhammad Ali) first gained international attention as the light heavyweight boxing champion.