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| Event type

Pairs, Mixed

Date29 January 1964 — 19:30-22:30
StatusOlympic
LocationOlympiaeisstadion, Innsbruck
Participants34 from 7 countries
FormatEach judge ranked each pair by Ordinal Placement from first through last place. The Ordinal Placement for each judge was based on Total Points awarded by that judge to the pairs. Final placement was determined by a Majority Placement rule. Thus, if a pair were ranked first by a majority of the judges, that pair was placed first overall, and the process was repeated for each place. Ties broken by a Subsequent Majority rule, i.e., if the pairs were ranked for the same position by the same number of judges, Majority Placement for the next higher position for each pair determined who was ranked higher. The tiebreakers were then, in order, 1) Number of Majority Placements, 2) Total Ordinals of Majority, 3) Total Ordinals, 4) Total Points.
Judge #1Erika SchiechtlGER
Judge #2Néri ValdesFRA
Judge #3Michele BeltramiITA
Judge #4Suzi MorrowCAN
Judge #5Hans MeixnerAUT
Judge #6Walter FritzSUI
Judge #7Dagmar ŘehakováTCH
Judge #8Mary Louise WrightUSA
Judge #9Sergey VasilyevURS

The favorites were the German pair of Marika Kilius and Hans-Jürgen Bäumler. They were World Champions in 1963 and had won six straight European titles – 1959-64. At the 1963 Worlds they had defeated the Soviet husband-wife pair of Lyudmila Belousova and Oleg Protopopov, and a few weeks before the Olympics, they narrowly defeated them again. The competition in Innsbruck was very close, but the Soviet couple won with five first placements, to four for the Germans. The bronze medal was awarded to Canadians Debbi Wilkes and Guy Revell, who also received a silver medal, and another bronze medal went to American brother-sister Vivian and Ron Joseph, who placed fourth in the Official Report. Follow that?

Shortly after the Innsbruck Olympics, it was revealed that Kilius/Bäumler had signed a professional contract prior to the event to perform with Holiday on Ice. This should have disqualified them as professionals, but strangely no definite action was initially taken against them by the IOC or the International Skating Union. A few weeks later they won the World Championships, defeating Belousova and Protopopov. It was felt that the West German Olympic Committee, lobbying the IOC for the 1972 Olympic bid, wanted to present themselves in the best possible manner and encouraged the German skaters to return their medals. The IOC formed a special sub-committee to examine the case, and the minutes of the Executive Committee note, “A special sub-committee under Ivar Vind had studied the case of the German figure skaters. They had been found ‘non-amateurs’. Willi Daume said that ‘The German NOC will do what is necessary.’”

At the 65th IOC session the IOC passed a resolution, which was printed in the Olympic Review, volume 95, page 39, from 15 August 1966 which stated, “We have received the silver medals back, and we will award them to the original third-place finishers. The bronze medals will be awarded to the original fourth-place finishers.” In January 1966, Kilius/Bäumler returned their silver medals to the IOC. Silver medals were awarded to Wilkes and Revell by Canadian IOC Member James Worrall during the 1967 Canadian Figure Skating Championships, while the Josephs received bronze medals from USOC President Tug Wilson at a small private ceremony at the Sheraton Hotel in Chicago, during the 1966 USA Figure Skating Championships. However, no action was ever taken by the ISU, who continued to list Kilius/Bäumler as silver medalists and World Champions in 1964.

However, the controversy did not end there. In 1987, the German NOC rather surreptitiously requested the return of the silver medals to Kilius and Bäumler, which was in keeping with the ISU ruling as well. They asked the IOC to do this, stating that it was known that other skaters had signed similar contracts in that era. At the 1987 IOC Session in Istanbul, the IOC approved this request and the Germans received new silver medals on 5 December 1987, when German NOC president Willi Daume presented replicas of the originals to Kilius and Bäumler on the German television show “Sportstudio”.

Contacted in the late 90s, Debbi Wilkes and Vivian Joseph knew nothing of this, and still thought the German pair had been disqualified. Wilkes and Revell kept their silver medals, in fact, Revell’s medal was buried with him after his death, and the Josephs kept their bronze medals. Thus four silver medals were eventually awarded in this event. The IOC lists did not change the standings for many years, but recognizing that two sets of silver medals have been awarded in this event, now list Kilius/Bäumler and Wilkes/Revell as =2nd and as silver medalists, and have the Josephs in 3rd place with bronze medals. The ISU has never changed the original rankings, continuing to list Kilius/Bäumler 2nd, Wilkes/Revell 3rd, and the Josephs 4th.

Over the next four years, Belousova and Protopopov would become the greatest pair in the world, and possibly ever to that time. They would again win gold in 1968. They wished to continue competing thru the 1972 Sapporo Olympics, but Soviet authorities ruled they were too old and shunted them to the side. In 1979, the Protopopovs defected to Switzerland and then joined professional ice shows, where they became one of the most popular attractions, continuing to skate and entertain into their 60s.

PosSkaterNOCMaj. PlacementsOrdinalsMaj. OrdinalsPointsJudge #1Judge #2Judge #3Judge #4Judge #5Judge #6Judge #7Judge #8Judge #9
1Lyudmila Belousova / Oleg ProtopopovURS5×1+13.05.0104.411.7 (2)11.6 (2)11.5 (2)11.2 (1)11.5 (2)11.7 (1)11.8 (1)11.6 (1)11.8 (1)Gold
=2Marika Kilius / Hans-Jürgen BäumlerGER8×2+15.012.0103.611.7 (1)11.7 (1)11.6 (1)10.9 (3)11.6 (1)11.6 (2)11.5 (2)11.5 (2)11.5 (2)Silver
=2Debbi Wilkes / Guy RevellCAN6×4+35.520.098.511.3 (4)10.6 (5)11.0 (4)11.0 (2)10.8 (=4)11.1 (3)10.9 (4)11.1 (3)10.7 (6)Silver
3Vivian Joseph / Ron JosephUSA6×4+35.521.098.211.4 (3)11.0 (3)11.1 (3)10.8 (4)10.8 (=4)11.0 (4)10.8 (5)10.4 (5)10.9 (4)Bronze
5Tatyana Zhuk / Aleksandr GavrilovURS5×5+45.018.096.611.1 (6)10.6 (6)10.9 (5)9.5 (9)10.9 (3)10.8 (6)10.9 (3)10.8 (4)11.1 (3)
6Gerda Johner / Rüdi JohnerSUI5×6+56.027.095.411.2 (5)10.5 (=7)10.7 (7)9.8 (=7)10.6 (7)10.9 (5)10.7 (6)10.3 (6)10.7 (5)
7Judi Fotheringill / Jerry FotheringillUSA5×7+69.533.094.711.0 (7)10.5 (=7)10.6 (8)10.4 (5)10.2 (12)10.7 (7)10.5 (9)10.2 (7)10.6 (7)
8Cindy Kauffman / Ronnie KauffmanUSA5×8+74.034.092.810.8 (8)10.7 (4)10.0 (11)10.0 (6)10.4 (9)10.4 (8)10.4 (11)9.6 (9)10.5 (8)
9Agnesa Wlachovská / Peter BartosiewiczTCH5×9+84.041.091.810.5 (9)10.2 (10)10.1 (10)9.8 (=7)10.1 (13)10.4 (9)10.6 (=7)9.7 (8)10.4 (10)
10Milada Kubíková / Jaroslav VotrubaTCH5×10+97.044.588.910.3 (10)9.6 (13)10.2 (9)8.5 (14)10.5 (8)9.6 (=14)10.6 (=7)9.5 (10)10.1 (11)
11Brigitte Wokoeck / Heinz-Ulrich WaltherGER6×12+103.560.088.810.1 (=12)10.3 (9)10.8 (6)8.7 (12)10.3 (11)10.1 (12)10.4 (10)9.1 (14)9.0 (17)
12Gerlinde Schönbauer / Willy BietakAUT6×12+108.064.087.710.2 (11)9.9 (11)9.9 (12)8.4 (=15)10.7 (6)9.6 (=14)9.8 (14)9.3 (12)9.9 (12)
13Margit Senf / Peter GöbelGER5×12.5+113.554.587.910.1 (=12)9.2 (16)9.8 (13)8.2 (17)10.3 (10)10.1 (13)10.3 (12)9.4 (11)10.5 (9)
14Faye Strutt / Jim WattersCAN5×14+122.560.085.39.7 (14)9.8 (12)9.5 (=15)8.7 (=10)9.6 (16)10.2 (=10)9.9 (13)8.7 (16)9.2 (15)
15Inge Strell / Ferry DedovichAUT7×15+129.096.583.69.6 (15)9.3 (15)9.5 (=15)8.7 (=10)9.7 (15)8.8 (17)9.3 (15)9.2 (13)9.5 (13)
16Linda Ward / Neil CarpenterCAN6×15+128.565.584.29.4 (16)9.4 (14)9.7 (14)8.6 (13)9.9 (14)10.2 (=10)9.0 (16)8.9 (15)9.1 (16)
17Monique Mathys / Yves ÄlligSUI9×17+147.5147.581.59.3 (17)9.0 (17)9.4 (17)8.4 (=15)9.6 (17)9.1 (16)8.9 (17)8.5 (17)9.3 (14)