Double 1960 Olympic champion American runner Otis Davis dies at 92

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Otis Davis, a two-time Olympic gold medallist and pioneering figure in American athletics, died at the age of 92, the University of Oregon’s track and field program announced Monday.

Davis, who made history at the 1960 Rome Olympics, was a trailblazer for his university and the broader world of track and field.

Davis’ remarkable athletic journey culminated in two gold medals at the 1960 Summer Olympics, making him the first athlete from the University of Oregon to achieve Olympic gold. It would take more than half a century before another Oregon Duck, decathlete Ashton Eaton, replicated Davis’ two-time Olympic gold feat in 2016.

Born on July 12, 1932, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Davis grew up in the segregated South, just miles away from the University of Alabama, which barred Black students until 1963. His early life was shaped by the racial tensions of the time, but his determination to excel transcended those barriers. After serving in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War, Davis enrolled at the University of Oregon at the age of 26. Initially arriving at a basketball scholarship, it wasn’t long before he transitioned to track and field, inspired after watching a workout from his dormitory window.

Davis quickly made his mark on the track, and in 1960, he earned a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. At the Rome Games, he secured victory in the 400 meters with a world-record time of 44.9 seconds, becoming the first man to break the 45-second barrier. Just two days later, Davis anchored the U.S. men’s 4×400-meter relay team to another gold medal, setting a world record with a time of 3:02.2 alongside teammates Glenn Davis, Jack Yerman, and Earl Young.

Reflecting on his triumph in the 400 meters, Davis once remarked, “I knew I had won… those up there in the booth, they were the only ones that didn’t know.” His confidence and resolve were clear, both on and off the track, as he competed against not just his athletic opponents but the societal injustices of his time.

In a 2020 interview, Davis spoke about the emotional and psychological challenges he faced as a Black athlete in America. “I thought I was running away from all of that negative stuff,” Davis said, recalling the bitterness, hatred, and second-class citizenship he encountered growing up. His success in Rome was not just a personal victory but also a symbolic triumph over the racial inequalities that had long plagued his life.

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