website statistics
Jump to content

Athletes Deaths Thread


Dragon
 Share

Recommended Posts

Deaths of Olympians in November.

 

:USA Don McDermott, 90 - Speed skating (1×S)

:TUR Yalcin Granit, 88 - Basketball

:FIN Matti Laakso, 79 - Wrestling

:CAN Anne Covell, 70 - Athletics

:ESP Taymi Chappe, 52 - Fencing

:URS Gennady Bukharin, 91 - Canoe sprint (2×B)

:PAK Abdul Rashid, 73 - Hockey (1×G, 1×S, 1×B)

:URS Leonid Osipov, 77 - Water Polo (1×G, 1×S, 1×B)

:AUS Barbara McAuley, 91 - Diving

:FIN Sakari Paasonen, 85 - Shooting

:GBR June Foulds, 86 - Athletics (1×S, 1×B)

:USA Willie Smith, 64 - Athletics (1×G)

:IRI Heidar Shonjani, 74 - Swimming & Water polo

:MAS Mohammed Bakar, 75 - Football

:ALB Shkelqim Troplini, 54 - Wrestling

:AUS John Kinsela, 70 - Wrestling

:ROU Virginia Bonci, 71 - Athletics

:ITA Fernando Atzori, 78 - Boxing (1×G)

:IRI Amir Yavari, 88 - Boxing

:AUT Gunther Pfaff, 81 - Canoe sprint (1×B)

:ITA Giuliana Minuzzo, 88 - Alpine skiing (2×B)

:ESP Jorge Llopart, 68 - Athletics (1×S)

:URS Boris Gurevich, 83 - Wrestling (1×G)

:HUN Attila Horvath, 53 - Athletics

:YUG Peter Florjancic, 101 - Ski jumping

:FIN Osmo Ala-Honkola, 81 - Shooting

:ITA Egidio Cosentino, 93 - Hockey

:IND Jagmohan Singh, 88 - Athletics

:USA Walt Davis, 89 - Athletics (1×G)

:JPN Eitaro Okano, 90 - Athletics

:AUT Anneliese Schuh-Proxauf, 98 - Alpine skiing

:TUR Resit Karabacak, 66 - Wrestling

:GBR Helen Morgan, 54 - Hockey (1×B)

:FIN Hannu Lahtinen, 60 - Wrestling

:FRA Jacques Deprez, 82 - Athletics

:MEX Ernesto Canto, 61 - Athletics (1×G)

:DEN Jens Sorensen, 79 - Cycling

:USA Billy Evans, 88 - Basketball (1×G)

:SUI Doris de Agostini, 62 - Alpine skiing

:PAK Anwar Aziz Chaudhry, 89 - Swimming

:POL Jozef Rysula, 81 - Cross-country skiing

:IRI Mohammad Khadem, 85 - Wrestling

:AUT Peter Lichtner-Hoyer, 93 - Equestrian & Modern pentathlon

:URS Yasil Yakusha, 62 - Rowing (1×S, 1×B)

:BUL Vladimir Ivanov, 65 - Athletics

:AUS Sir James Wolfensohn, 86 - Fencing

:FIN Paul Nyman, 91 - Cycling

:BUL Dimitar Largov, 84 - Football

:USA Kevin Burnham, 63 - Sailing (1×G, 1×B)

:TTO Clifton Bertrand, 84 - Athletics

:SGP Tan Eng Bock, 84 - Water polo

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I saw him at a UCLA Athletics meet a few years ago. He was a legendary athlete.

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/golf/55204070

 

Not an Olympian but legendary golf commentator Peter Alliss has died. At 89 he was still the BBC's chief commentator and last worked at November's US Masters. He was also a successful player on the European tour with numerous Ryder Cup appearances.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Professor Wojciech Zabłocki, one of the biggest Polish fencers and a great architect (he was the one to build the cycling track in Pruszków) has died recently. He was a widower after a famous Polish actress Alina Janowska.

 

With his dead we got to know that his teammate from 1950s, Jerzy Twardokens also died a few years ago. Twardokens emigrated to USA in 1958 and started using the name George, became a doctor at the University of Nevada, his daughter is Eva Twardokens, Olympic alpine skier who survived the plane crash last year.

 

The strangest thing about his death is that until he wasn't mentioned by one of the journalists as one of those "waiting for Zabłocki on a God's piste" yesterday. Apparently we've all thought it's a fake news as there was no news about it anywhere, not only from Polish or American media, but even on Olympedia, which is a strange thing for Olympian (Helsinki 1952) and World Championships medalist, being part of such a great team as him, Zabłocki or Pawłowski. But with a little bit of deeper research (which was needed after I asked for a dementi of that info and the editor-in-chief of the newspaper gave the date of 26th July 2015) we've found the confirmation - and @Dragon has already updated Olympedia thanks to that.

 

Still it sounds quite impossible that such a person's death remains unnoticed by the internet. And yet it shows the power of that certain journalist - he's celebrating 50 years of work for the biggest Polish sports newspaper this year and he is nominated to the most prestigious sport journalist award in Poland, which will be given tomorrow (it's the Bohdan Tomaszewski Award - you might know the patron from the official Olympic Movie from Moscow as he was shown commentating the gold of Malinowski in 3000 m steeplechase: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xipsGMJDVpw - I personally refer to the journalists awarded with it as "The Order of the Garter of the Polish Sports Journalism" - and there's not a single one I doubt deserve it).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

he never participated to the Olympic games, but I just can't stay away from reporting the death of Paolo (Pablito) Rossi, great striker of the Italian football and absolute hero of the 1982 World Cup triumph...

 

 

he was "only" 64, but cancer took him away from his family, friends and fans...

 

R.I.P. Paolino...:cry:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair” - Nelson Mandela

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Latest Posts around Totallympics

    • Out of curiosity, I listened to a few podcasts about Turkmenistan today. This country has very large deposits of natural gas. In the 1990s, a simple a ordinary people lived quite well there. In the early 21st century, Turkmenistan signed several unfavorable gas deals with China and has practically gone bankrupt since then. 1/3 of the population (about 2 million out of 6 million- mostly young people) emigrated, mainly to Turkey, India, etc. The future of this country is blacka and uncertain. I don't know what other options they have? Russia, Turkey, the EU? Of course, in terms of selling gas. Perhaps sanctions of Russia's and isolation due to the war in Ukraine would be a chance for Turkmenistan to establish economic relations with the EU, but the new president would probably have to loosen and a little liberate up his country's domestic politics.
    • A friend of mine who visited 97 countries of the world be in Turkmenistan (with Kunshamara, are the onlyones i know) and he tell me something that never see in another country: his presence was enough to make nervous to all the people, in restaurants, markets, etc, the presence of an "outsider" generate that.
    • 2024 Triathlon World Cup | Tongyeong, South Korea  (26 october)   Men’s: 1.  Dylan McCullough 2.  David Cantero 3.  Maciej Bruzdziak 4.  Maxime Hueber-Moosbrugger 5.  Roberto Sanchez 6.  Ben Dijkstra 7.  Aurelien Jem 8.  Nathan Grayel 9.  Sebastien Pascal 10.  Liam Donnelly   Women’s:   1.  Jolien Vermeylen 2.  Summer Rappaport 3.  Sian Rainsley 4.  Sandra Dodet 5.  Lea Coninx 6.  Gina Sereno 7.  Marta Pintanel 8.  Costanza Arpinelli 9.  Alissa Konig 10.  Beatrice Mallozzi    
    • 2024 African Championships | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia  (12-19 october)   Men’s Singles: 1.  Omar Assar 2.  Youssef Abdel-Aziz 3.  Mahmoud Helmy 3.  Darara Mokonen Dufera 5.  Milhane Jellouli 5.  Aly Ghallab 5.  Mohamed El-Beialy 5.  Kokou Dodji Fanny   Women’s Singles: 1.  Hana Goda 2.  Mariam Al-Hodaby 3.  Hend Fathy 3.  Yousra Helmy 5.  Marwa Al-Hodaby 5.  Fatimo Bello 5.  Malissa Nasri 5.  Lynda Loghraibi   Men’s Doubles: 1.  Muizz Adegoke & Abdulbasit Abdulfatai 2.  Matthew Kuti & Olajide Omotayo 3.  Mohamed El-Beiali & Youssef Abdel-Aziz 3.  Aly Ghallab & Mahmoud Helmy   Women’s Doubles: 1.  Hend Fathy & Hana Goda 2.  Yassamine Bouhenni & Malissa Nasri 3.  Mariam Al-Hodaby & Marwa Al-Hodaby 3.  Fatimo Bello & Hope Udoaka   Mixed Doubles: 1.  Youssef Abdel-Aziz & Mariam Al-Hodaby 2.  Milhane Jellouli & Amina Kessaci 3.  Mahmoud Helmy & Hend Fathy 3.  Matthew Kuti & Ajoke Ojomu   Men’s Teams: 1.  Nigeria (Aruna, Abdulfatai, Kuti, Omotayo, Adegoke) 2.  Algeria (Kherouf, Jellouli, Azzala, Bella) 3.  Ethiopia (Habteyes, Mindahun, Dufera, Bireba, Hadsh) 3.  Tunisia (Sabhi, Khaloufi, Essid, Chaieb)   Women’s Teams: 1.  Egypt (Goda, Al-Hodaby Mariam, Helmy, Al-Hodaby Marwa, Fathy) 2.  Nigeria (Sezuo, Rabiu, Ojomu, Udoaka, Bello) 3.  Uganda (Nangonzi, Nakawala, Anyango) 3.  Algeria (Bouhenni, Kessaci, Nasri, Loghraibi, Merzoug)
    • 2024 European Championships | Linz, Austria   (15-20 october)   Men’s Singles: 1.  Alexis Lebrun 2.  Benedikt Duda 3.  Dimitrij Ovtcharov 3.  Truls Moregard 5.  Felix Lebrun 5.  Patrick Franziska 5.  Dang Qiu 5.  Anton Kallberg   Women’s Singles: 1.  Sofia Polcanova 2.  Bernadette Szocs 3.  Maria Xiao 3.  Nina Mittelham 5.  Charlotte Lutz 5.  Jia Nan Yuan 5.  Yuan Wan 5.  Sabine Winter   Men’s Doubles: 1.  Alexis Lebrun & Felix Lebrun 2.  Anton Kallberg & Truls Moregard 3.  Maciej Kolodziejczyk &  Vladislav Ursu 3.  Mattias Falck & Kristian Karlsson   Women’s Doubles: 1.  Hana Matelova &  Barbora Balazova 2.  Sofia Polcanova &  Bernadette Szocs 3.  Izabela Lupulesku & Sabina Surjan 3.  Natalia Bajor &  Tatiana Kukulkova   Mixed Doubles: 1.  Alvaro Robles & Maria Xiao 2.  Robert Gardos & Sofia Polcanova 3.  Simon Gauzy & Prithika Pavade 3.  Annett Kaufmann & Patrick Franziska    
    • High levels of mercury found in tinned tuna posing a 'colossal risk to public health' in Europe   https://www.euronews.com/health/2024/10/29/colossal-risk-to-public-health-ngos-warn-about-risk-of-mercury-in-canned-tuna
×
×
  • Create New...