Chinese President Hu Jintao declared the Games officially open shortly before the spectacular lighting of the flame at the Beijing National Stadium by retired gymnast Li Ning, a six-time medallist at the 1984 Los Angeles Games.

Li, whose presence had been kept a closely guarded secret by Olympic organizers, was raised by wires high above the crowd, and circled the stadium with the flame until he reached the cauldron.
It was the highlight of an awe-inspiring opening ceremony launching 16 days of Games competition.
With a production overseen by Chinese filmmaker Zhang Yimou, the ceremony itself incorporated 5,000 years of Chinese history into a 50-minute show, which, coupled with the closing celebration, reportedly cost more than $100 million US….[MORE >>]
Flashback: 1968 Mexico City Olympics
During the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, Kenya’s Kipchoge Keino sprinted for a kilometre to the stadium after his taxi was held up in traffic and still won gold (defeating American favorite and world record holder, American Jim Ryun by 20m, the largest winning margin in the history of the event) and a 5000m silver medal. Four years later in 1972, he won the 3000 m steeplechase gold and 1500 m silver at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany.

Picture: Kenyan legend, Kipchoge Keino beats favored American Jim Ryun during the 1968 Mexico Olympics. Keino’s form looked good for the high-altitude games of Mexico City, but stomach cramps forced him out of the 10,000m with just two laps to go.
He recovered to win a stunning gold in the 1,500m. Knowing that race favorite, Jim Ryun had a devasting kick in the final hundreds, Keino decided to hit the front early.
On August 27, 1965, Keino lowered the 3000m world record at Helsingborg in Sweden by over 6 seconds to 7:39.6 at his first attempt at the distance. He won two gold medals (1500 & 5000 metres) at the inaugural All-Africa Games. Later in that year he broke the 5000 m world record held by Ron Clarke clocking 13:24.2. At the 1966 Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica he won both the mile and three mile run. In the next Commonwealth Games, Keino won the 1500 m and was third in 5000 m.
Kipchoge (“Kip”) Keino (born January 17, 1940), chairman of the Kenyan Olympic Committee (KOC), retired in 1975 in Kenya. Kip Keino was among the first in a long circle of successful middle and long distance runners to come from Kenya and has helped and inspired many of his fellow countrymen and women to become the athletics force that they are today.
That Africans today so dominate distance running is in part testament to the career of Kipchoge (Kip) Keino. — He was the first black African to break onto the international stage at the beginning of the 1960s, and was a formidable force in the sport for 12 years.
Other athletes would win more golds, but few would win races and hold records at all distances from 1500 meters to 10,000m.
Keino was 24-years-old before he competed at his first Olympic Games in Tokyo in 1964 where he finished 10th and fifth in the 1,500m and 5,000m respectively.
Born to run
In the same year he also took a silver in the 5,000m. He had run six races in just eight days despite a gallbladder infection.
But it was at the Munich Games of 1972 that the untrained Nandi tribesman from Kipsano, in the high plains of Kenya, proved he was born to run.
In the steeplechase, with only one win from his previous four competitive attempts at the event and twenty-three others lining up with better personal times, Keino was not even expected to make the final.
Yet, somehow he staved off challenges from his more experienced compatriot, Ben Jipcho, and Finland’s Tapio Kantanen, to win in an Olympic record time of eight minutes 23.6 seconds.
Keino will be remembered for two things: opening up the latent athletic talent of Africa and his disquieting natural ability to conquer all-comers in five distinct events.

Keino’s win in the 3000m steeplechase, in the Munich Olympics, marked the beginning of Kenyan
dominance in the event.
When he finally retired after the All Africa Games in Lagos in 1975, he fittingly returned home to a daughter he and his wife had named Milka Olympia Chelagat.
Currently Kip runs a charitable organization for orphans, and is president of the Kenyan Olympic Committee. He is married to Phyllis Keino. One son Martin was a two-time NCAA champion and highly successful pace-setter. Another son, Andrew, a.k.a “Kippy”, is currently competing while attending Villanova University.
He built Kip Keino Primary School located near Eldoret, while Kip Keino Secondary School is under construction and due to open in 2008. Kipchoge Keino Stadium in Eldoret is named after him.
In 1996, he was inducted into the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame.
In 2007, he was made an honorary Doctor of Law by the University of Bristol. Earlier, Egerton University in Nakuru, Kenya had awarded him an honorary degree. His name, Kipchoge, is a Nandi language expression for “born near the grain storage shed.”
References:
Jim Ryun vs Kip Keino, London 1967
Revenge Time! — 1968 Olympics 1500m
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