John Anderson (athlete)

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John Anderson (athlete) athletics
nation United StatesUnited States United States
birthday 4th July 1907
place of birth CincinnatiUSA
size 1.91 cm
Weight 97 kg
date of death July 11, 1948
Place of death Nankek
Career
discipline Discus throw
Medal table
Olympic medals 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
Olympic rings Olympic games
gold 1932 Los Angeles discus

John Anderson ( John Franklin Anderson ; born July 4, 1907 in Cincinnati , Ohio , † July 11, 1948 in Nankek , Alaska ) was an American discus thrower .

Career

At the Olympic Games in Amsterdam in 1928 , he was fifth. With its width of 44.87 m, it was more than two meters behind the medal ranks.

In his second Olympic start in Los Angeles in 1932 , he improved Bud Houser's Olympic record with 47.87 m in his first throw . With 48.86 m in the second attempt, 49.39 m in the third attempt and 49.49 m in the fourth attempt, he increased the Olympic record three times to then conclude his series with 48.72 m and 47.98 m. His four best attempts would have been enough to defeat his compatriot Henri LaBorde (48.47 m). The third American Paul Jessup , who had held the world record with 51.73 m since 1930, landed in eighth place with 45.25 m .

For the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin , Anderson could no longer qualify.

John Anderson was 1.91 m tall and weighed 97 kg during his playing days. During World War II he served in the US Navy in the Pacific, and after the war he became a navigation officer in a salmon fishing fleet. In 1948 he died of a fatal cerebral haemorrhage over 1,000 kilometers north of Anchorage .

literature

  • Bill Mallon & Ian Buchanan: Quest for Gold. The Encyclopedia of American olympians. Leisure Press, New York NY 1984, ISBN 0-88011-217-4 .
  • Ekkehard zur Megede: The Modern Olympic Century 1896-1996. Full results from AOHNA. Athens to Atlanta track and fields athletics. Series 100 years of athletics in Germany. German Society for Athletics Documentation eV, Neuss 1999

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Official Olympic port of the IOC, 1932 , p. 401, p. 415 the US participants, p. 467/468 all discus results and photos.