Dick Fosbury, a gangly civil engineering scholar who shocked his friends, delighted sports activities followers and began a revolution in aggressive excessive leaping together with his backward leaps, died on Sunday at a nursing facility in Salt Lake Metropolis. He was 76.
The trigger was lymphoma, a spokesman introduced on Instagram.
Fosbury’s declare to fame was a signature leaping fashion: the “Fosbury Flop.” With a operating begin at a raised bar, he launched himself again first, appeared to hover for a second parallel with the bottom, and landed roughly on the again of his neck.
The method has been in comparison with a corpse being pushed out of a window. Like Fred Astaire dancing on the ceiling, Fosbury’s flopping struck many onlookers as residing someplace between a bodily feat and a joke. On the 1968 Summer time Olympics in Mexico Metropolis, the group oohed, aahed and laughed watching Fosbury compete.
However the final snigger was his:
The high-jump bar saved being raised, and Fosbury saved clearing it. He lastly executed a Fosbury Flop at 7 ft 4¼ inches — incomes him not simply the gold medal, however an Olympic report on the time.
“Even Fearless Fosbury is amazed,” The New York Occasions reported after his victory. “‘Generally I see films,’ he says, ‘and I actually marvel how I do it.’”
Inside a number of years, the Fosbury Flop was the usual technique of elite excessive leaping. (The present Olympic report is held by Charles Austin, who Fosbury Flopped 7 ft 10 inches on the 1996 video games in Atlanta.)
Extra broadly, the Flop set a regular for the form of innovation that may remodel a human endeavor. The Occasions has written about “the Dick Fosbury of ski leaping,” of racewalking, of golf, of angler fishing and of the sport present “Jeopardy!” When Piaget launched a line of watches marketed as a “daring departure,” the corporate made Fosbury its spokesman.
Richard Douglas Fosbury was born in Portland, Ore., on March 6, 1947. His father, Doug, drove a logging truck, and his mom, Helen (Childers) Fosbury, was a live performance pianist and secretary. He grew up in Medford, in southern Oregon.
In later years he usually mentioned that initially of his high-jump profession, in highschool, he was the worst jumper in his faculty, within the faculty’s convention and in all of Oregon. He was seemingly not even a gifted athlete, having did not make his faculty’s soccer and basketball groups.
Within the excessive bounce, he initially used the old style scissors fashion, wherein the athlete runs on the bar and hurtles over in a roughly sitting-up place, kicking one leg after the opposite over the bar.
In the future, Fosbury felt inclined to experiment with a brand new technique: making an attempt to clear the bars together with his hips. The Flop started coming to him naturally. Coaches weren’t so certain: They’d test the rule books to verify it was authorized, warn him that he may damage himself doing it or just assert that it was not a successful technique.
Fosbury ignored the recommendation. He improved his private finest by a whole foot in highschool alone. He started coaching tougher and discovering a brand new pleasure within the sport.
“Whenever you reached the elite stage within the excessive bounce, going over the bar at these excessive ranges, you actually really feel such as you’re flying,” he informed The Occasions in 2002. “You’re up there for under a second, however time actually does start to decelerate. Time expands. The thoughts does superb issues. And at that stage, it’s really 90 p.c psychological and 10 p.c bodily.”
It was not simply Fosbury’s type that made him an unconventional athlete. He wore mismatched trainers. He had the arm muscle groups of a chess participant. Earlier than making an strategy run, he rocked forwards and backwards, clenching and unclenching his fists.
He graduated from Oregon State College in 1972 with a bachelor’s diploma in civil engineering. He moved to Idaho, the place he based an engineering firm. His jobs included designing and constructing bike trails and operating paths. He finally turned a county commissioner in Blaine County, Idaho.
He additionally stayed concerned in sports activities, serving as a vp of the USA Olympic and Paralympic Affiliation and instructing the excessive bounce all over the world.
He took swing dancing lessons with a lady named Robin Tomasi. She turned his spouse, and so they grew hay and cared for horses on a farm close to the city of Bellevue in southern Idaho. He was in Salt Lake Metropolis to be handled for his lymphoma.
Fosbury’s survivors embrace his spouse; his sister, Gail Fosbury; his son, Erich; his stepdaughters, Stephanie Thomas-Phipps and Kristin Thompson; and a number of other grandchildren.
Even after his Olympic victory, it nonetheless appeared potential that the Fosbury Flop was a novelty act and that different methods, just like the straddle, may show superior in the long run.
“I feel fairly a number of youngsters will start making an attempt it my means now,” Fosbury informed The Occasions in 1968. “I don’t assure outcomes, and I don’t suggest my fashion to anybody. All I say is, If a child can’t straddle, he can attempt it my means.”