On this day: Born June 6, 1944:
Tommie Smith, American sprinter
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[June 05, 2020]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Tommie Smith was once among
the fastest men on the planet but it is the raised-fist protest he
took part in at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, a gesture that
became a symbol of the civil rights era, that he remains most known
for.
After breaking the 200 metres world record, Smith and fellow
American John Carlos, who finished third, stood on the podium in
black socks with their heads bowed and black-gloved fists in the air
during the playing of the U.S. national anthem.
The image became an enduring symbol of the turbulent 1960s and the
fight for racial equality. It was widely interpreted as a black
power salute, but Smith later described it as a "human rights
salute."
Smith and Carlos, who said they wore the black socks to represent
black poverty, were suspended from the U.S. Olympic team and sent
home, where they received death threats and hate mail.
"I knew it would have an impact but I didn't know how far it would
go," Smith told Reuters in 2018 ahead of the 50th anniversary of the
fist-raising protest.
"It was a calling for me to do it ... A lot of people had died for
the sake of equality. That was my chance. I had a platform."
The protest, which occurred not long after the assassination of Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr., cost Smith and Carlos dearly as they were
heroes to their contemporaries but pariahs to the establishment.
For decades the two sprinters were left on the sidelines of the
official U.S. Olympic movement. Their 2016 visit to the White House,
along with U.S. Olympic committee leaders, marked the first official
event they'd been part of since their ouster.
"Without sacrifice, there can be no forward movement," Smith said in
2018. "You have to give up something before you can receive
something and usually that something is much better."
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Born on June 6, 1944: Tommie Smith, American sprinter Tommie Smith
poses at the Puma Headquarters in Herzogenaurach, Germany September
18, 2018. REUTERS/Emma Thomasson/File Photo
One of a sharecropping family of 12 children who grew up in Texas,
Smith had the ideal build for a long sprinter along with
trademark-accelerations down the stretch that made him one of the
most versatile sprinters in history.
Smith set 11 world records, including the 200- and 400-meter marks,
and was just 24 when his sprinting career was cut short.
In Mexico City, Smith completed the 200 metres in 19.83, a time that
stood for 11 years and one he said could have been even faster if he
had not lost speed by raising his arms in triumph over the final
strides.
A towering figure with the gift of speed, Smith was even drafted by
the National Football League's Los Angeles Rams in 1967.
He later signed to play for the Cincinnati Bengals of the American
Football League and for three years played on their practice squad
as a wide receiver. During the 1969 season, he played in two games,
catching one pass for 41 yards.
Last November, Smith and Carlos received the U.S. Olympic and
Paralympic Committee's highest honor as they were inducted onto the
organisation's Hall of Fame.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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