SportsAthletes' medal-biting tradition explained amid Paris Olympics

Athletes' medal-biting tradition explained amid Paris Olympics

Antoine Dupont bites his gold medal on the first day of the Olympic Games in France
Antoine Dupont bites his gold medal on the first day of the Olympic Games in France
Images source: © Getty Images | Eurasia Sport Images
Beata Bialik

1 August 2024 08:13

Photos of athletes celebrating their victory and biting into their hard-won gold medals are common at major sports events. On the occasion of the ongoing Olympic Games in France, a popular daily explains the phenomenon behind this mysterious custom.

The symbolic biting of the medal after a sports victory has become a recognizable gesture in the sports world. The specific Olympic discipline or type of sport practised does not matter here.

Football players, rugby players, cricketers, and Olympians all succumb to the magic of the ritual, yet few fans know what this gesture means.

Many iconic sports photos over the years have depicted athletes biting their medals after achieving glory in their respective disciplines.

According to the Daily Mail, several Olympians, including Tom Daley from the British team and Antoine Dupont, have bitten their medals at the Olympic Games in Paris.

Although it is not entirely clear where this trend originated, many believe it began in the 4 x 400 metre relay race in 1991. This team included Derek Redmond, John Regis, Kriss Akabusi, and Roger Black, who were supposedly the first to start the trend that is still popular today.

There is also an anecdote from 2010 when a German luger at the Vancouver Olympics chipped his tooth after biting his silver medal.

The custom allegedly refers to gold prospectors, who, wanting to verify the authenticity of the extracted precious metal, would bite it.

Some claim that because gold is softer than silver or bronze, one way to figure out whether your medal is authentic or not is to bite into it. Should your teeth leave a mark or dent on the precious accolade, you'd know you have a gold medal - writes the Daily Mail.
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