Olympic Victor Monuments and Greek Athletic Art by Walter Woodburn Hyde

2. After this space was mostly filled, the next statues, those dating

from Ol. 77 (= 472 B. C., Kallias, 50) to Ol. 93 (= 408 B. C., Eubotas, 75), _i. e._, from about the time of the foundation of the temple to near the date of the battle of Aigospotamoi, fifty-one in number, stood between the Heraion and the _Victory_ of Paionios; only one stood as far south as the Altis wall, while seven stood around the _Chariots_, ten around the _Victory_, twenty around the _Bull_, and the rest further north (including 176, 185 of the second ἔφοδος, which stood north of the eastern end of the temple). Diagoras and his family (59-63), boxers and pancratiasts, had their statues near the older famous boxer Euthymos (56); Alkainetos and his sons (64-66), boxers, besides many other pugilists, had theirs near the Diagorids; Tellon (102) had his near that of his compatriot Epikradios (101); later Achæans had theirs near that of their countryman Oibotas (29), and Spartans near that of Chionis (111); some, as the three victors from Heraia (176, 177, 32),[2363] stood far apart only apparently, for the last one had his statue near the _Bull_, and so not far from the other two, though these are named in the second ἔφοδος.