William Oscar Guernsey Grut was a Swedish modern pentathlete.
Background
Grut was born to the architect Torben Grut, who designed the 1912 Olympic Stadium in Stockholm, and Margit Torssell, the daughter of the Norwegian opera singer Olefine Moe. He qualified as a student in May 1932, the same year his father lost most of his earnings as a consequence of the Krueger crash. His father had been Swedish tennis champion around the turn of the century, but Grut did not follow in his footsteps, as his natural talent was swimming.
Education
Grut chose a career in the army instead, where the training was free and where he could fulfill his desire to contribute to his country"s defence.
Career
Grut"s first choice would have been to study medicine, and he had gained a place at Pembroke College, Cambridge, but that dream ended with the stock market crash. Until then, Modern Pentathlon gold medals had been the preserve of Swedish pentathletes: Liliehöök in 1912 (Stockholm), Dyrssen in 1920 (Antwerp), Lindman in 1924 (Paris), Thofelt in 1928 (Amsterdam), Oxenstierna in 1932 (Los Angeles). As a captain in the Swedish Artillery, Grut had plenty of opportunity to train in the five Modern Pentathlon disciplines, and he made the most of every opportunity: cross-country running, riding and swimming every single day, fencing three times a week and shooting during his daily lunchbreaks.
In February 1948, Grut took part in the Winter Olympic Games held in Street Moritz.
The team competed in an exhibition event, which consisted of downhill skiing, cross-country skiing, shooting, fencing and riding. Grut saw Saint Moritz as a "rehearsal" for the Summer Olympiads to be held the same year.
Grut arrived in London for the 1948 Olympic Games very well prepared. The modern pentathlon event was organized in Aldershot.
Grut"s Swedish team mates were Gösta Gärdin and Sune Wehlin.
Grut had an element of luck in drawing a good horse, Clarian Boy, for the riding event, and from then he went on to complete his best competition result ever. Modern pentathlon scores were calculated according to ranking in each event in those days (the lower the score, the better), and Grut"s final result was 1+1+5+1+8=16, an unbroken record. Sweden took home 17 Olympic s from London.
Grut stopped competing after the London Olympic Games and started managing the Swedish Modern Pentathlon team instead.
In 1960, Grut was elected secretary general of the International Modern Pentathlon and Biathlon Union (UIPMB), a post he held for 24 years. The same year he served as a flag bearer for Sweden at the 1960 Summer Olympics.
In his spare time, Grut took up golf – his handicap never fell below 12, but golf still brought him immense pleasure in later life.
Membership
He was a member of the Swedish Winter Pentathlon team, together with Claes Egnell, Gustaf Lindh and Bertil Haase.