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Fosbury flop



         


Richard Douglas "Dick" Fosbury (born March 6, 1947) is an American athlete who revolutionised the high jump using a back-first technique, now known as the Fosbury flop. His method was to sprint diagonally towards the bar, then curve and leap backwards over the bar.

Dick Fosbury, born in Portland, Oregon, first started experimenting with this new technique at age 16, finding the variety of techniques used at the time - such as the "Eastern Cut Off", the "Straddle" and the "Scissors" - too complicated.

As a student at Oregon State University, he won the 1968 NCAA title using his new technique, as well as the US Olympic trials. At the 1968 Summer Olympics, which were held in Mexico City, he took the gold medal in a new Olympic Record, displaying the potential of the new technique.

Despite the initial sceptical reactions from the high jumping community, the new technique quickly gained popularity, and it is almost exclusively used by modern high jumpers.


Olympic medalists in athletics (men) | Olympic Champions in men's high jump
Ellery Clark | Irving Baxter | Samuel Jones | Cornelius Leahy | Harry Porter | Alma Richards | Richmond Landon | Harold Osborn | Robert King | Duncan McNaughton | Cornelius Johnson | John Winter | Walter Davis | Charles Dumas | Robert Shavlakadze | Valeriy Brumel | Dick Fosbury | Jüri Tarmak | Jacek Wszoła | Gerd Wessig | Dietmar Mögenburg | Gennadiy Avdeyenko | Javier Sotomayor | Charles Austin | Sergey Klyugin | Stefan Holm







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