Yasuji Murata parodied this sporting success in Animal Olympics (pictured) a comic take on the Games. A pole-vaulting polar bear, an elephant whose javelin skills bring down a cheating pig, and a duck who outruns a camel to
Japanese animators kept up the animal theme with a string of films in the early 1930s: Animal Sumo in 1931 was followed by Olympic Games on Dankichi Island in 1932. This tied in with the Los Angeles Olympiad, where Japan dramatically increased its medal haul to eighteen, including seven golds. Sticking with a winning formula, Murata animated Sports Day at Animal Village in 1934.
In 1930 Murata animated and directed Our Baseball for the Yokohama Cinema Company. Japan had taken to America's national sport like Murata's duck to the 800 metres, and even when the nation's focus shifted from sporting conquests to more serious ones, baseball stayed Japan's number one sport. Seiichi Harada directed Baseball in the Forest in 1934. Later, in the post-war Occupation era, the American authorities saw baseball as a wholesome pursuit free of the taint of nationalism and militarism. Sanae Yamamoto was able to make a comeback with Animal Great Baseball Battle in 1949.
But once again, the real-world Olympiad triggered a new wave of anime and manga. In 1964, the Games came to Tokyo, 24 years after the 1940 Games were moved and then cancelled because of World War II. Japan was not invited to the 1948 Games, but competed in Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956, bidding unsuccessfully for the 1960 Games against Rome.
Japan did slightly less well at the 1968 Olympiad in Mexico City, the women's volleyball team coming away with silver after a tense final against the Soviet Union. The gymnasts and wrestlers scored most golds, and the footballers brought home a bronze medal, helping to boost interest in the anime version of manga Red-Blooded Eleven which screened that year.
1972 saw the screening of Road to Munich, starring the Japanese men's volleyball team, a combination of anime docudrama and attempt to bypass Olympic commercial restrictions on amateur athletes. Munich was also the scene of a terrible tragedy when eleven Israeli athletes and coaches and a German police officer were murdered.
The 1970s and 1980s saw a great wave of anime merchandising: always part of the TV anime mix, it became more potent as the arrival of giant combining robots made it even more irresistible to toy manufacturers. Motorsports held up better than most sporting anime in this new era, since toy cars are always good sellers. Baseball made a comeback largely
During this era Olympic sport was largely represented by the cute animal mascot of the 1980 and 1984 Olympiads. In a flashback to the anime of the 1920s and 1930s, Misha the Bear Cub (1979) and Eagle Sam (1983) flew the Olympic flag without much human assistance. But in 1986 a manga heroine who would inspire a generation of girls was created. Naoki Urusawa's Yawara! was animated and filmed in 1989, and watched by millions who would see sixteen-year-old Ryoko Tamura, nicknamed "Yawara-chan", go to Barcelona to take part in the first ever women's judo gold medal competition. She came home with the silver.
Since the early 1990s, sports anime producers have taken their sports into a sci-fi future with shows such as Battle Athletess (1997) and Eyeshield 21 (2005.) the old favourites - baseball, volleyball, soccer - still air occasionally, and the craze for anime about groups of cute boys made Prince of Tennis (2001) a huge hit. But if a cute and perky girl makes a hit on the gymnastics mat, or a determined young man overcomes all the odds in one of the martial arts disciplines, a new hit manga or anime could arise from the ashes of the London Olympiad.


